Shadow of the Abyss

Chapter 27: Athena



Chapter 27: Athena

There she stood upon the highest peak of Olympus. Her eyes affixed upon a mirror that revealed a child, small with effeminate features, his dark eyes seemingly an abyss of emptiness. Yet there was a sse of innocce. A ting of naivete brought on by youth.

"So this is the child my half-sister has be looking after?" The Goddess of War, Atha mused, a hint of wonder in her amber eyes that shone like flames. "How boring. Has she forgott her vow of chastity?" Atha resisted the sneer upon her lip. "Perhaps I'm being too hasty. Yes. That must be it.

But why does this child... this boy interest her? It's the first time in Cycles she's shown interest in anything aside from the Hunt. How peculiar its a man, rather than a woman."

Atha closed her eyes before her bronze mirror, a weary sigh sinking into her bones as she fell into thought about her Half-Sister Artemis. The two wer't close, but neither of them were emies. But Atha, in all her wisdom, had tak it upon herself to know all those she sured herself with.

The Goddess of the Hunt, Artemis, was no exception.

Knowledge was power, and Atha understood this quite well, for she sought perfection in all things: Herself most of all, from the strands of hair that had no place on her face to her armor neatly bound to her sublime figure. Perfection was needed.

"I needn't worry of Artemis nor this boy. But I shall keep an eye on him." She rose her palm over the bronze mirror, shifting the image to a young man, eyes a burning furnace of flames, so profound Atha herself felt as though she was before him, bound by his intt. His hair, a deep black, was neatly tied as he sat on a throne sured by paperwork capable of drowning the average man.

"Uncle," she said, the words like ash upon her lips.

"Atha," Hades called, lifting his calm chilling gaze, narrowing them towards the mirror upon his wall, ssing her stare. "Don't you know it's rude to spy?"

"How else does one seek an audice? You've cut ties with our Pantheon." She said, a heated look in her eyes as she pondered his intt.

"I'd have thought the message was clear," Hades said, lowering a documt. "Or should I have st the message through Hermes?" He said through his teeth, his voice deeping with irritants.

"Uncle..."

"Don't toy with me, Girl. My days are torn betwe all of the Myriad Heavs. I have neither the time nor the patits to deal with your Olympian bullshit. Now, Speak. Why have you so rudely interrupted me?"

"Oh, Hades, must you be so rude?" A hidd voice from beyond the view of the mirror echoed. "And you know there is something called a computer, right? Why are you still working like a caveman?"

"So you're stationed there," Atha noted, a sparkle returning to her eye.

"No, I'm on the same floor as you. The Tower connects Myriad and Arcadia. I hav't the need to directly ter that land. Not yet, anyway." He rose, lifting the youthful Nyx, whose cheeks grew flush at his touch. She giggled, a mischievous glow shimmering through her dark eyes.

"Th you'll help—"

"If you are in need of help to combat the New Gods, find Freya. As a Goddess of Wisdom, you should know War is the dumbest form of diplomacy."

"Odins Wife—"

Hades smirked, "As one who loves to spy. You seem quite ignorant of the storm that struck the Northic Pantheon. Freya has long since be a free woman." He said, shattering the mirror, along with Atha's connections.

"Damn, that Monster!!" she roared, fist clching as she glared at her image within her chambers. She whirled towards the chalice beside her bed, filled to the brim with wine procured by Dionysus. "Persephone is useless to me now. She can't compare to Nyx, whether it be looks, personality, loyalty, or power. Useless woman. She was the only one Hades loved.

Literally, the Only God in our damn patheon who believes in monogamy. Why did she have to— Useless." She spat, downing the chalice.

Her mind raced through hundreds of calculations, hundreds of schemes. She paused, sding her gaze towards the Mirror of Actum.

"Altair..." she muttered, startled as to why his name tered her mind. The very name her half-sister had tak an interest in. She folded her arms, cheeks flushed with a color from the wine. "Yes... Altair. He will do. A champion.

A champion of Justice, a champion of War: If Artemis has tak an interest, the boy must surely have pottial. And he is young. This could work."

Atha grew calm, the creases along her bewitching exterior fading as she stepped toward the bronze mirror.

'Zeus can't be trusted, Hera, that jealous shrew is ev more unhinged. We are without any leaders. Be it for the Mortals or the Gods.' She stood before the Mirror of Actum, lifted a hand towards it, and said:

"Show me Altair's Past."


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