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Chapter 68 - Chapter 68 - Peace Was Never the End

By the time the clouds parted over New Jersey, the fury of Olympus had faded into an uneasy truce.

Harry and Teddy materialized at the edge of the Black Mansion's wards in a burst of quiet gold—Hera's last blessing marking their safe return.

The mansion stood unchanged, peaceful as if nothing divine had trembled hours before. But Harry's heart still echoed with thunder.

He had faced Zeus. He had faced every Olympian. And somehow, they had left the council without starting a war.

The meeting had ended not in victory, but in weary compromise.

After long arguments that shook the marble of Olympus, Zeus himself had stood, his eyes like stormlight cutting through smoke.

"There will be no blood today," he declared. "The child shall live, and Olympus will not raise a hand against him—so long as he does not raise one against Olympus."

And under the watch of the River Styx, Zeus swore the words aloud.

Each god, bound by that ancient current, repeated them in turn. Even Ares, begrudgingly.

Then the oath turned upon Harry.

"You," Zeus said, pointing his bolt toward him, "will swear in kind. No war against Olympus. No more weapons forged in defiance. And you will return what has already been made."

Harry had hesitated. For a heartbeat, the entire Hall waited for him to rebel, to summon the scythe again and challenge the gods themselves.

But Teddy's small hand had slipped into his.

And that was enough.

"I swear," Harry said at last. "By the River Styx, by the blood of Thanatos within me—no war, no more blades of death. As long as Olympus honors its word, I will honor mine."

Thunder rumbled in acceptance. The river glowed faintly along the Hall's edge, binding every vow. The peace—fragile, shimmering—was made.

Now, back at home, Harry stepped through the great doors, exhaustion trailing behind him like a cloak. The lights of the mansion welcomed him—warm, steady, unthreatening.

Andromeda rushed forward first. "Harry—what happened? What did they say?"

He smiled faintly, though it didn't quite reach his eyes.

"They promised peace," he said. "For now."

She looked down at Teddy, who was already running toward the kitchen to tell Creature about "big golden people who talked too much."

"And you?" she asked softly. "You swore something too, didn't you?"

Harry nodded, staring at his hands—the same hands that once forged god-killing blades.

"Yes. I swore to give up my forge… to destroy what I made."

That night, long after everyone slept, Harry went down into his workshop. The forges still glowed with faint heat, the tools neatly arranged. On the table lay the blades he had promised to surrender—each one glimmering faintly with runes that pulsed like a heartbeat.

One by one, he touched them, whispering a spell.

Each weapon shuddered, folded in on itself, and faded into glowing ash. The air filled with sparks like dying stars.

When the last blade vanished, Harry stood alone in the dark, the silence ringing in his ears.

"It's over," he murmured. "At least for now."

But even as the forge cooled, a single ember on the table refused to die—

a tiny red spark, pulsing softly in the dark, as if waiting.

Swearing by the River Styx was supposed to be the ultimate bond — a sacred promise that even the gods feared to break.

But Harry knew better.

The Olympians had made and broken oaths for centuries. They swore by the Styx as often as mortals breathed, and while the punishment for breaking it was severe, it didn't stop them.

Even the Big Three — Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades — had sworn never to father any more demigod children after the last great war. Yet, they broke that oath without hesitation, bringing new children into the world and chaos along with them.

So as Harry walked through the halls of Black Mansion, the air still humming faintly with divine energy from his own oath, he knew better than to relax.

Yes, Zeus had promised not to harm Teddy.

Yes, the gods had sworn peace.

But oaths could crack like glass when ambition pressed too hard.

Harry would not be caught unprepared.

He sat by the window, the moonlight spilling over the table where maps of both mortal and divine realms lay open. His eyes were sharp and thoughtful.

He would need allies — strong ones, those who didn't bow to Olympus or fear its wrath.

"If Zeus or any of them decide to break their word," Harry murmured, "I'll need more than oaths to protect my family."

He already had names forming in his mind — powerful beings who owed Olympus nothing:

the Primordial gods, the Titans who still hated Zeus, and even a few minor deities who had suffered under Olympus' rule.

Harry's plan was simple but dangerous:

to gather his own side, not for war, but for survival — a coalition strong enough that the Olympians would think twice before breaking their promise.

He looked toward Teddy's room, where the boy was sleeping peacefully under a nightlight shaped like a moon.

"You'll be safe," Harry whispered softly. "Even if Olympus forgets its oaths, I won't forget mine."

Outside, a faint wind stirred — and somewhere far above, on Mount Olympus, the gods who had sworn peace could almost feel that promise being tested.

For days after the uneasy truce with Olympus, Harry's mind refused to rest. Peace made by Zeus was only ever a pause—never a promise. And Harry knew that sooner or later, the gods would test their oaths again.

He needed allies. Not mortals, not demigods—but beings the Olympians feared to even name.

That's when his research turned toward Atlas—the Titan who once led armies against Olympus and was condemned to hold the sky itself.

Late into the night, Harry scoured the enchanted library beneath Black Mansion. Old scrolls floated before him, whispering in Ancient Greek. Every myth, every clue pointed somewhere different—until he began cross-referencing divine records with magical star charts.

And then, one anomaly appeared: a pulse of celestial energy, undying, consistent, unlike anything on the planet.

It wasn't in Greece.

It wasn't even near the original Titan strongholds.

It was west. Far west.

Off the coast of California, hidden behind enchantments older than Olympus itself, there was an island cloaked in mist. On that island rose a mountain so high it pierced the clouds—Mount Othrys, reborn and relocated after the Titan War.

And beneath that mountain's summit, the readings said, a power of immeasurable endurance pulsed in rhythm with the heavens.

Atlas.

The Pacific night was calm—too calm. The waves glowed faintly beneath the moonlight as Harry's enchanted ship cut through the water without leaving a wake. His wand rested beside him, glowing with soft blue runes, each symbol pulsing in time with his heartbeat.

He had told no one where he was going.

This mission wasn't for Olympus, or for his family.

It was something that only he could do — something that would either give him an ally powerful enough to balance Olympus itself, or destroy him in the attempt.

As dawn began to color the edge of the horizon, Harry saw it — a vast formation of mist on the sea's edge, where the Pacific shimmered like molten glass. The air around it felt strange, thicker somehow, as though magic was bending the sunlight itself.

"There you are…" Harry murmured, standing on the ship's deck. "Mount Othrys."

The island was invisible to mortal eyes, cloaked in layer upon layer of divine illusions. To a mortal, it was just ocean — endless and empty. But Harry saw it for what it was: a sleeping giant wrapped in fog.

He raised his wand. "Revelare Divinitas."

The spell pulsed outward, its wave of power slamming against unseen walls. Instantly, the sea erupted — lightning streaked across the horizon, waves reared up like beasts, and a cyclone of wind and storm surrounded him.

"The first barrier," Harry muttered grimly. "Let's see what Hephaestus built for his father."

He thrust both his hands forward, summoning glowing runes that spread like chains through the air. Each rune spun faster, gathering force until it collided with the invisible wall before him. The barrier shivered, then cracked like glass, dissolving into silver mist.

The winds died. The sea grew calm.

Harry exhaled. "One down."

But the second ward was worse.

Without warning, the world warped — the ocean stretched endlessly in every direction, the stars above turning in dizzying spirals. Harry recognized the enchantment immediately.

"A labyrinth illusion… meant to trap intruders in an eternal loop."

He closed his eyes and centered his breathing. He could feel the rhythm of the magic, the pulse of time folding in on itself. He whispered an ancient incantation in the language of death — the tongue of Thanatos himself. The illusion rippled, resisted, then shattered like a reflection breaking apart.

And then he saw it.

A colossal island — crowned by a mountain that pierced the clouds. Its slopes glowed faintly with divine runes that stretched from summit to sea. Mount Othrys.

As his feet touched the rocky shore, the ground itself vibrated. He could feel it — the power that chained the Titan. The final barrier wasn't made of magic. It was made of will.

A voice echoed from the air itself, deep and mechanical:

"None may pass the prison of the sky."

Harry didn't reply. He simply stepped forward.

The air thickened, pressing against him like liquid stone. His every step was a battle. His magic flared in bursts, carving through invisible resistance until at last, the mountain trembled beneath his feet.

He whispered softly, "I'm not here to destroy the prison. Only to speak to the one inside."

The pressure lessened slightly — just enough to let him through.

He continued up the mountain, climbing through ash-colored fog and fractured runes until he reached the summit.

There, beneath a vault of swirling clouds, stood Atlas.

He was immense — taller than mountains, broader than fortresses. His skin gleamed like bronze and stone fused together, and on his shoulders rested a dome of stars and sky that shimmered with the colors of the cosmos. His muscles tensed beneath the weight, trembling like tectonic plates.

When he spoke, his voice made the world tremble.

"Another god come to laugh at my burden?"

Harry stood at the base of the Titan's pedestal, the wind tearing at his cloak. "Not a god," he said quietly. "Something else."

Atlas's gaze fell upon him, and his burning eyes narrowed. "You smell of the divine," he growled. "And yet… there is death in you."

Harry smiled faintly. "Close enough."

Then, slowly, deliberately, he lifted his hand — and the illusion of mortality fell away.

Light erupted around him, dark and golden at once, like a sunset frozen in motion. His body expanded, glowing with the faint shimmer of divine energy, his presence filling the air with the cold weight of inevitability.

Atlas's brows furrowed. "Thanatos," he whispered. "You are his son."

"I am," Harry said. "And I came here to make you an offer."

"An offer?" Atlas scoffed, his laughter like falling boulders. "The gods have made me offers before. Freedom, glory, forgiveness — all lies. What could a half-blood promise me that Olympus could not?"

Harry raised his wand, and glowing runes formed in the air — geometric patterns of blinding complexity, interwoven like threads of starlight.

"I can build this," he said. "A magical construct — a bridge between the heavens and earth strong enough to hold the weight you carry. You could be free, Atlas. Free to walk the world again."

Atlas's eyes widened slightly. For the first time in millennia, his shoulders trembled—not from strain, but from hope.

"You… could truly make it?" he asked, voice low and uncertain.

Harry nodded. "I can. But it'll take time. Power. And I'll need your word — when I call upon you, you'll stand by me."

Atlas's expression hardened again. "Why would I help you? What do you gain from freeing a Titan?"

Harry's tone was calm, but his gaze burned. "A friend strong enough to stop Olympus if they break their word."

The Titan stared at him for a long while, then a bitter smile crept across his face. "You are braver than I thought, child of Death. But freedom for me is nothing without her."

Harry frowned. "Her?"

Atlas closed his eyes. For a moment, the entire mountain seemed to sigh with him. "My daughter," he said quietly. "Calypso. She was cursed by the Olympians — bound to an island she can never leave. She waits for the one fated to appear, only to watch him sail away. Again and again."

His great voice faltered, thick with grief. "I have carried the heavens for eons, but her loneliness is a heavier weight than any sky."

Harry's heart tightened. He knew that kind of pain — the feeling of being trapped by fate.

"I'll find her," he said firmly. "And I'll break her curse."

Atlas's eyes, glowing like twin suns, turned toward him. "You would do that for me?"

"I'll do it for justice," Harry said. "And for the future."

The Titan leaned forward, his immense face casting a shadow over Harry. "Then, son of Thanatos," he rumbled, "you have my word. Free my daughter, and when you call for me… I will make Olympus tremble."

Harry extended his hand.

Atlas laughed once, softly, then reached out with a single finger larger than a tree and touched it to Harry's palm. For an instant, the mountain shuddered, and the stars above them flickered like they knew a pact had been forged.

As Harry descended the mountain, the wind carried the faint echo of Atlas's voice:

"Find her, Harry Potter. Find my daughter. The curse of Calypso must end."

And as he vanished into the mist once more, Harry whispered back,

"I will, my friend."

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