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Chapter 80

  Harry hardly had time to finish half his soup before the front wards of the Black Mansion shimmered like glass that had been struck.

  Kreacher abruptly paused mid-cleaning.

  Andromeda immediately turned towards the entrance hall.

  Harry sighed.

  “Of course, they’re already here.”

  A moment later, the double doors swung open without a knock.

  Not because they forced their way in, but because Harry granted them entrance as soon as they arrived at the gate.

  Three figures entered, radiating a divine presence despite their efforts to conceal it.

  Artemis, Athena, and Hestia.

  They all visibly relaxed at the sight of Harry alive, yet their expressions were filled with anger.

  Teddy squeaked and hid behind Harry's leg.

  Hestia was the first to act.

  She rushed forward and embraced Harry with a strength that only a goddess who had tended hearths for centuries could muster.

  “Don’t ever do that again!” she exclaimed, her voice trembling. “Don’t disappear without telling anyone! Don’t vanish for months like a ghost! We thought— we thought—”

  Harry gently placed a hand on her back.

  “I know. I’m sorry.”

  Athena crossed her arms, struggling to hide her own relief.

  “You were gone for ninety-two days, sixteen hours, and seven minutes,” she said stiffly. “During that time, the sea defied all divine influence. You need to understand how suspicious that is.”

  Artemis stood beside her sister, her silver eyes keen.

  “The last thing we needed was Zeus calling another war council because he thought you were awakening ancient forces against him.”

  Harry winced.

  Of course, Zeus would think that.

  Hestia finally withdrew, discreetly wiping her eyes.

  “You scared us, Harry,” she murmured. “You frightened Teddy.”

  Teddy peeked out from behind Harry.

  “But he’s back now,” the child insisted. “Daddy always comes back.”

  Athena's expression softened at that.

  Artemis even sighed, nearly laughing.

  Harry crouched down to ruffle Teddy’s hair.

  “And I always will.”

  Standing once more, he faced the three goddesses.

  “Alright,” he said, his tone serious. “Ask away.”

  Athena wasted no time.

  “Did you instigate the disturbances in the sea? The return of ancient creatures? The impossible storms? The near-tsunami that Poseidon had to handle?”

  Harry remained unfazed.

  He had rehearsed this response all the way home.

  “I didn’t mean to cause anything,” he replied earnestly. “But… I did encounter something in the ocean. Something old. Something powerful.”

  Artemis frowned. “What kind of ‘something’?”

  Harry shook his head.

  “Nothing with a name.”

  Nothing he could safely disclose, at least.

  “It was more like a presence,” he continued cautiously. “A force that tried to trap me and manipulated my mind. I fought against it for weeks.”

  That part was true.

  He still felt a dull ache behind his eyes.

  Athena scrutinized him for a moment, her golden-gray eyes assessing every movement, every breath, every flicker of magic.

  Eventually, she nodded slowly.

  “You’re not lying,” she murmured. “Your mind is still… unsettled. You were attacked.”

  Hestia placed her warm hand on his arm.

  “Are you safe now?” she asked gently.

  Harry hesitated for just a moment too long.

  Artemis caught the slip.

  “You brought something back with you, didn’t you?”

  Harry managed a smile.

  “Just some trauma,” he said drily. “Nothing else.”

  The huntress narrowed her eyes but remained silent.

  Hestia let out a shaky breath.

  “Well… whatever it is, I’m just glad you survived.”

  Athena stepped forward again, her posture resolute.

  “Harry Potter,” she said, “I have one last question — and I need your honest answer. Not as an Olympian, but as your friend.”

  Harry nodded.

  “Did you awaken a threat that endangers Olympus?”

  Silence filled the room.

  Andromeda peered from the doorway, her heart racing.

  Teddy clutched Harry’s hand.

  Kreacher stood frozen like a gargoyle.

  Harry met Athena’s gaze directly.

  “No,” he stated firmly. “Whatever attacked the sea is not coming for Olympus.”

  He omitted the most critical detail:

  Because it’s now mine.

  Athena scrutinized him for a few more seconds before finally exhaling.

  “Very well. We will address the aftermath with Poseidon.”

  Artemis added, “Father will still blame you for something, but at least he can’t hold you accountable for everything.”

  Harry chuckled.

  “That’s the most comfort I’ve heard all month.”

  Hestia hugged him once more.

  “You’re alive, and that’s what matters.”

  Then Artemis stepped forward, lowering her voice.

  “If you ever vanish again,” she said quietly, “tell someone. Tell me. Tell Hestia. Tell Athena. Tell Aphrodite. Just… don’t disappear.”

  Her silver gaze softened a bit.

  “We’re not your enemies, Harry.”

  Harry swallowed hard.

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  For the first time since returning, the heavy pressure in his chest eased.

  “I know,” he whispered. “And I’ll do better.”

  Athena nodded.

  Hestia offered a warm smile.

  Artemis gave a faint smirk.

  Then she looked down at Teddy.

  “And you, young warrior — make sure you keep him in line.”

  Teddy puffed out his chest proudly.

  “I will!”

  Harry laughed.

  For a brief moment, everything felt almost normal.

  But deep down — hidden beneath his calm exterior — the First Trident pulsed softly.

  A reminder:

  The gods might be at ease for now…

  …but the sea had chosen a new champion.

  And the Olympians wouldn’t remain ignorant forever.

  The Black Mansion rested peacefully that night.

  Andromeda’s light footsteps faded down the hallway after checking on Teddy one last time.

  Hestia had already returned to Olympus.

  Teddy slept curled around his stuffed dragon, breathing quietly.

  But Harry…

  Harry couldn’t sleep.

  He lay on his back, staring at the dark ceiling, feeling restless stirrings within him — like rising tides beneath his ribs.

  It had been calm earlier.

  Manageable.

  But as the moon reached its peak, the Trident began to stir.

  Harry Potter…

  A whisper glided through his mind, like a current brushing past his ear.

  Harry clenched his jaw and sat up.

  “Not tonight,” he muttered. “I’m done fighting for today.”

  But the whisper swelled, evolving into something vast and ancient.

  You wield me now.

  You are heir to the Sea.

  Why do you deny your true nature?

  Harry pressed his hand against his forehead. The pressure was building again, a relentless pounding.

  “It’s not my nature,” he growled.

  You chose me.

  You claimed the currents and the monsters.

  The sea answers to you.

  Harry swung his legs out of bed.

  He needed water.

  Cold water.

  Something to numb this encroaching power.

  But as soon as his feet hit the floor, the wooden boards beneath him rippled as if they had briefly become liquid.

  Harry froze.

  The Trident’s voice rumbled through his bones.

  You are more than a mortal.

  More than a wizard.

  More than a Titan’s child.

  You are the Master of the Primordial Sea.

  Harry’s fists clenched.

  “I don’t want that title.”

  Want?

  The whisper echoed, resonating like storms across an endless horizon.

  Power is not want. Power is necessity.

  Harry breathed slowly, trying to regain his composure.

  He thought of Teddy’s face when he returned.

  Artemis and Athena’s concern.

  Hestia’s tears.

  He couldn’t let this power take over him.

  He couldn’t allow it to transform him into something else.

  He had just made it halfway down the hall when a wave of dizziness struck him, and suddenly the corridor around him became a flood of illusions — or perhaps memories.

  Water surged over the floors.

  Salt filled the air.

  He saw towering waves crashing toward him, roaring as they rose higher than mountains.

  Harry staggered, gripping the wall for support.

  “Stop!”

  But the sea didn’t obey.

  Instead, the waters parted, revealing countless creatures staring back at him… bowing.

  Leviathans.

  Sea dragons.

  Megalodons in spectral form.

  Creatures that no living or dead god had ever named.

  They bowed to him.

  Their king, the voice whispered. Their rightful master.

  Harry’s heart raced painfully.

  “No. I refuse to be controlled by you.”

  You misunderstand, the voice said softly. I do not control you. I awaken what has always belonged to you.

  His vision lurched again, immersing him in a vast underwater throne hall made of obsidian coral.

  A throne pulsed with blue light, beckoning him.

  Currents swirled around his feet like servants.

  Harry gasped and squeezed his eyes shut.

  “This isn’t real. This is not real!”

  But the voice remained calm.

  Reality is what you create.

  Sit upon the throne.

  Embrace the sea.

  Wage war against Olympus for what they’ve done — to you, to the Titans, to the world.

  Harry’s breath quickened sharply.

  “My battle is not with Olympus,” he stated through gritted teeth. “And I don’t want a throne.”

  Then give Teddy one.

  Harry froze.

  The vision shifted.

  Now Teddy — small, innocent Teddy — sat on the glowing throne, legs swinging, a bright smile on his face as immense waves bowed to him.

  Harry felt a chill run down his spine.

  “Get him out of this,” Harry growled. “Now.”

  He is the heir of Titans.

  He is loved by the weapons of gods.

  He is strong enough to govern the oceans.

  Let him rise—

  “ENOUGH!”

  Harry slammed his fist against the illusion — causing his entire Mindscape to crack like fragile ice.

  The throne hall vanished.

  The roaring sea fell silent.

  The voice receded, hissing in discontent.

  Harry stumbled backward, nearly collapsing.

  He steadied himself against the wall of the mansion as reality reasserted itself.

  His skin felt cold.

  His breath quivered.

  From around the corner, a small voice called softly:

  “…Daddy?”

  Harry turned quickly.

  Teddy stood in the hallway, clutching his stuffed dragon, eyes wide with concern.

  Harry swallowed hard and tried to steady his voice.

  “I’m alright, Teddy. Just a bad… dream.”

  Teddy moved closer, reaching out with little fingers.

  “Daddy, you’re glowing.”

  Harry froze.

  A faint blue light pulsed beneath his skin.

  He inhaled sharply, suppressing it with sheer determination.

  The light dimmed… but barely.

  He knelt and scooped Teddy into his arms.

  “I’ll be okay,” he whispered into the child’s hair. “I promise.”

  Teddy hugged him tightly.

  “Don’t go away again.”

  Harry pressed a trembling hand to the back of Teddy’s head.

  “I won’t,” he promised. “I swear it.”

  But deep within his mind, beneath the surface of his thoughts, the Trident whispered once more — quieter now, patient and yearning:

  You cannot flee from the sea, Harry Potter.

  You can only postpone the tide.

  Harry tightened his hold on Teddy.

  Because he understood the truth the weapon wouldn’t voice:

  If he ever lost control…

  The entire world would drown.

  Harry didn’t linger.

  Not for dawn.

  Not for his strength to return completely.

  Not for the Trident to settle within him like a conquered beast.

  He needed answers.

  He needed grounding.

  He needed Atlas.

  With Teddy finally asleep and the mansion quiet, Harry slipped into the backyard, inhaling the cold night air. The ocean within him still roared, twisting under his skin like an unrelenting storm.

  He raised a hand, whispered a word, and vanished.

  Mount Othrys, a jagged peak emerging from the sea near California, greeted him — a dark tooth against the horizon. The air here was imbued with an ancient scent — a blend of dust, starlight, and magic that persisted through the ages.

  Atlas sensed him immediately.

  Even in the dead of night, even with his back bent under the invisible weight he had chosen to bear, Atlas knew the moment Harry landed on the rocky ledge.

  The Titan raised his weary eyes — sharp despite their fatigue.

  “Harry Potter,” Atlas rumbled, adjusting his size to human proportions. “You return sooner than anticipated… and significantly changed.”

  Harry swallowed and stepped forward.

  “I found it.”

  Atlas blinked, astonished.

  A rare moment of surprise crossed his weathered face.

  “You discovered the Trident of the First Sea,” he breathed, voice reverent. “Impossible.”

  Harry remained silent.

  He simply raised his right hand.

  The Trident materialized in a ripple of dark, liquid light — an obsidian black, glowing blue at the edges, humming like a creature barely held in check.

  Atlas stepped back.

  The mighty Titan — the General of the West, the bearer of the sky — took a step back.

  “By the First Currents…” he whispered. “You truly did it.”

  The weapon throbbed gently, responding to Atlas' ancient essence.

  Harry tightened his grip, urging it to calm.

  “I came to thank you,” Harry said quietly. “If you hadn’t shared that knowledge, if you hadn’t trusted me with that secret… I would never have found it.”

  Atlas chuckled softly, though the sound contained no humor.

  “Trust?” he replied. “No, young Titan… that was desperation. If war ever comes between you and Olympus, the Trident is the only thing that can tip the scales.”

  Harry exhaled slowly, not denying it.

  “I’m still learning to master it,” he admitted. “It’s… not straightforward.”

  Atlas studied him closely, his ancient eyes narrowing.

  “What happened when you touched it?”

  Harry hesitated.

  His fingers twitched against the weapon.

  “Everything,” Harry whispered. “Memories. Anger. Power. It tried to engulf me. But when I broke free, the sea submitted to me. Completely.”

  Atlas nodded grimly.

  “That is the essence of a primordial weapon. It does not merely grant power — it awakens it.”

  “And the ocean reacted,” Harry continued. “Poseidon felt it. The waves nearly reached South India.”

  Atlas scoffed.

  “Let Poseidon tremble. The sea was never his to command.”

  A heavy silence stretched between them — contemplative, almost sacred.

  Finally, Atlas spoke again.

  “You handle it differently,” he murmured. “Most would be consumed. You resist.”

  Harry let out a bitter laugh.

  “I barely managed.”

  “Yet you did.”

  Atlas’s voice hardened with respect.

  “You are not your father’s son for nothing.”

  Harry stiffened.

  “Thanatos wouldn’t want this,” he said. “He wouldn’t want me to wield something capable of annihilating entire continents.”

  Atlas shrugged.

  “Perhaps not. But power does not consider our desires. It asks what we are willing to do.”

  Harry lifted the Trident again, feeling its weight and its hunger.

  “I refuse to be controlled by it.”

  Atlas stepped closer, placing a massive hand on Harry’s shoulder — heavy, grounding, as cold as mountain stone.

  “You will not,” Atlas affirmed. “Because unlike the gods, unlike the Titans… you have something greater than mere power.”

  Harry looked up.

  Atlas’s expression softened.

  “You have someone worth living for.”

  Teddy.

  His son.

  His anchor.

  Harry inhaled deeply, feeling the truth of those words settle within him.

  Atlas continued, his voice deepening:

  “The sea knows no restraint. It only comprehends hunger and eternity. But you… you are human enough to fear its potential. That is your advantage.”

  Harry lowered the weapon.

  “Thank you,” he said again, quietly but sincerely. “You didn’t have to reveal the Trident’s secret. You didn’t have to trust me.”

  Atlas smirked.

  “You freed my daughter. You broke her curse. You gave her a chance at a life beyond loneliness. There aren’t enough words to express how grateful I am.”

  He paused.

  “And should you ever need my strength — for yourself, for the boy, or for the world — it’s yours.”

  Harry nodded.

  “I may require your help sooner than I’d prefer.”

  Atlas’s expression darkened.

  “Zeus?”

  “And Ares. Possibly others.” Harry sighed. “They see me as too dangerous.”

  Atlas huffed. “You are indeed dangerous. That is why they fear you. But heed my words, Harry Potter…”

  He leaned in, voice low.

  “When the gods fear something, they do not leave it be. They attack.”

  Harry understood that.

  He had sensed it from the moment Zeus’ promise appeared too easy.

  He gripped the Trident.

  “If they target Teddy… I will drown Olympus.”

  Atlas laughed.

  “Good. That’s a Titan’s response.”

  Harry shook his head.

  “No, that’s a father’s response.”

  Atlas straightened once more, gripping the invisible sky for the last time that night.

  “Go,” he commanded. “Return to your child. The Trident will whisper. It will tempt. But you must conquer it — before the Olympians realize what you’ve done.”

  “I will.”

  Harry turned, and the Trident dissipated into faint blue light, returning to his soul.

  Atlas called after him:

  “And Harry… when the storm arrives… I will stand by you.”

  Harry didn’t look back but smiled.

  He was not alone.

  He was not powerless.

  And most importantly —

  Teddy would be safe.

  Author's Note:

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