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The God of Underworld-Chapter 59 - 14: To Each Their Own
Chapter 59: Chapter 14: To Each Their Own
In the dimly lit halls of the Underworld’s Core Section, the divine city of Nox pulsed with muted activity.
Soul after soul moved like wisps under the ever-glowing lanterns of judgment.
Temples for the great dead loomed in the distance, and the divine towers of the gods glimmered with ethereal majesty.
But not all was peaceful.
"Another petition?" Hera groaned, lifting a golden scroll from a table already stacked too high.
Her elegant brows twitched in annoyance. "This one is from a greater god complaining that the judging system is biased because he cannot be with his mortal lover."
"That’s the fourth today." Hecate sighed beside her, her midnight cloak rippling even without wind.
She held a silver scepter that pulsed faintly with magic, indicating a new request.
Again.
"What in Tartarus does Hades deal with daily?" Hera muttered, setting the scroll down and massaging her temples. "No wonder he looks like he’s aged five eons in the last decade."
"Not really, he looks more beautiful than ever," Hecate corrected with a smile. "But yes. His work is....stressful."
Their workspace was a massive chamber filled with magical devices floating in the air—each representing different domains, biomes, souls, and divine territories.
There are also projection showing Souls lined up in ethereal queues, overseen by divine spirits with clipboards and tired expressions.
Divine Spirits fluttered in and out, dumping scrolls of petitions, territorial disputes, biome expansion requests, worship management, and afterlife infrastructure planning.
"He needs another thousand divine secretaries," Hera muttered. "This is madness."
"I think a thousand wouldn’t even be enough," Hecate mused, sarcastically. "I should’ve brought more wine."
The self-proclaimed queen of Underworld and the goddess of magic were many things—powerful, cunning, wise.
But today, they were glorified managers in an afterlife metropolis run by one overworked god, who is currently on leave.
"I swear, if one more minor god complains about the temperature of the lava pools in the Torment Section—" Hera began.
But then she stopped.
Her golden eyes narrowed.
Something... shifted.
Something subtle, but wrong.
She looked up from the scrolls, her posture tensing. Her divine senses, ever sharp, extended out across the Underworld up to the overworld.
Hecate noticed immediately. "What is it?"
"I felt a ripple," Hera murmured. "A presence entered my territory."
Hecate raised an eyebrow. "Enemy?"
"I guess, yeah." Hera said, though her frown deepened. "Feminine. Immensely powerful. But not part of our domain."
"An Olympian?" Hecate’s voice dipped cold. "What goddess would dare trespass into the Underworld without permission?"
Hera stood from her obsidian throne, golden threads tightening around her wrists like gauntlets.
"Who said it’s an intruder of underworld?" she questioned.
Hecate blinked. "Then what are you talking about?"
Hera turned, fire in her gaze. "I mean, some, fresh-born goddess is trying to lay her lecherous hands on my dear brother?"
Hecate blinked, then chuckled. "You’re really starting to sound like a wife."
"I am his sister, Queen of the Underworld," Hera retorted, adjusting her divine robes. "And someone must protect him from opportunistic divine harlots."
"And here I thought you didn’t care."
Hera crossed her arms, golden aura blooming behind her. "He’s one of the few gods who’s remained noble through the centuries. I do care."
Hecate smirked. "Should I bring the scythe or the curses?"
"Neither," Hera said, walking past her. "We’re simply going to observe. And if we find some golden-haired seductress trying to wiggle her way into Hades’ shadow, we’ll have a conversation."
No one is touching her man!
"I’ll get the wine," Hecate said, smiling wickedly as she followed.
And thus, the goddesses of marriage and magic marched toward the divine courtyard—scrolls forgotten, petitions left unread—as a new ripple echoed across the Underworld’s stillness.
The Queen of Underworld had sensed competition.
And she would make sure no one touched what wasn’t theirs.
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Hades’ garden was silent, save for the gentle rustling of leaves—real leaves. A scent, sharp and refreshing, danced lightly through the stale air, contrasting against the heavy scent of ash and still souls.
Demeter stood in the middle of Hades’ private garden, sweat glistening on her brow. Her once-pristine robes were muddied with black underworld soil, and her fingers were stained with traces of mana-infused dirt.
She frowned deeply, glaring at the dry patch of ground in front of her. Her magic pulsed, and from it, a small stalk sprouted...
...and died moments later.
"Ugh!" she groaned, flinging her hands up and falling backwards onto the dark grass. "Why is this place so difficult?"
Not far from her, Minthe knelt by a neat row of glistening green stalks—mint plants, healthy and thriving, their leaves dancing under an artificial breeze crafted by enchanted glyphs.
She tilted her head and smiled softly as she watched Demeter writhe in frustration.
"You’re using too much divine energy" Minthe said, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear. "The ground here doesn’t respond to overwhelming force. It’s like... trying to raise a child by yelling at them."
Demeter groaned again. "I’ve literally made jungles rise from stone. I cultivated floating fields in the skies! I am the goddess of the harvest. And yet here I am, being humbled by... by this garden of death!"
Minthe stood up and walked over, crouching beside her. "Technically, it’s a garden of life now."
Demeter turned her head, resting her cheek on the cool soil. She stared at one of the mint plants nearby. The soft green shimmer, the scent that reminded her of summer breezes and meadows—it didn’t belong here, and yet, it flourished.
A paradox in leaf form.
"...How?" she whispered.
Minthe tilted her head. "How what?"
Demeter stared at the plant. "How did this happen? How did you do it? Even I couldn’t make a single blade of grass grow down here for years. And you... you made this entire row of mint."
Minthe sat down beside her, picking a leaf and rubbing it between her fingers. "I used the notes you left behind. From when you visited. And I experimented for decades. I failed more times than I could count. But I just... kept trying."
Demeter blinked, surprised. "You... used my notes?"
Minthe chuckled. "Of course. You’re the expert, after all. I just... listened to the Underworld. It has its own rhythm, you know. It’s not dead—the underworld is alive, and just like lord Hades, it prefers silence. So I learned how to whisper instead of shouting."
Demeter was quiet for a moment. Then, finally, she sighed in defeat. "Would you mind... helping me?"
Minthe’s eyes widened. "You want my help?"
Demeter groaned again. "Don’t make me say it twice."
Minthe beamed, and without another word, helped the goddess up from the soil. "Alright. First rule: no raw divine force. Think subtle. Like cradling an ember instead of blasting a torch."
Demeter dusted herself off. "You’re enjoying this far too much."
"I am," Minthe admitted with a grin. "Now, come. Let’s plant something together. Maybe not mint—we already have too much of that. How about... underworld poppies?"
Demeter blinked. "There’s such a thing?"
"There is now," Minthe said playfully. "They glow at night."
As the two goddesses knelt side by side, their fingers combing the soil and coaxing life from the depths of death, something rare bloomed between them—respect.
Even in the land of the dead, growth was still possible.
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At the end of space, where the stars had long since dimmed and reality began to fray into formless threads, there drifted a shadow cloaked in silence and mystery.
She was Nyx—the Primordial of Night—older than light, deeper than silence, eternal and unknowable.
She moved without motion, a silhouette against the void, wandering through the hollow seams where existence began to crumble.
Eons passed with each step, or perhaps no time at all. Here, at the edge of all things, time was a suggestion rather than a law.
Then—finally—a whisper echoed through the abyss, deep and reverberating, as if the fabric of reality itself were speaking.
"Why have you come, Nyx?"
Nyx halted. Her form, vast and cosmic, folded in upon itself until she appeared as a tall woman shrouded in endless night, her eyes two glowing crescents of silver.
She crossed her arms, her voice smooth but firm. "I have questions, Khronos."
The voice responded with a weary hum. "I cannot answer them."
Nyx’s brow twitched. Few ever dared to deny her. Fewer still survived it. But she wasn’t here to wage war. She was here for clarity.
She looked beyond the folds of time, seeing glimpses of what had passed—what shouldn’t have passed.
"I’ll break this dimension if you refuse to answer."
"...how unreasonable. Very well." ƒreewebɳovel.com
"Now, why did ’it’ happen earlier?" she asked, her voice lowering like the hush before a storm. "Why now?"
There was silence. Not emptiness, but a silence pregnant with meaning. The silence of hesitation. Of guilt.
Then, a whisper—a ripple through reality.
"Because I willed it so."
Nyx narrowed her eyes.
"This cycle is dying, Nyx," the voice of Khronos continued—low, ethereal, barely distinguishable from the dimension itself. "The threads are weakening. This will be the final chance. I cannot undo our mistakes anymore."
Nyx’s fingers twitched.
"So you accelerated the process," she murmured. "You let ’them’ discover this universe early."
"Yes," came the reply, simple and unapologetic.
Nyx frowned deeply, the starry aura around her dimming like a dusk eclipsed by cloud. "You risk everything, Khronos."
"I know. But now, please leave," Khronos said softly. "Before your shadow unravels the root of time itself."
Even now, this place—this sacred veil—is tearing apart just from Nyx’s presence.
Nyx stood silent for a moment longer, her eyes shimmering with ancient light. She wanted to ask more. She wanted to defy him.
But even she—Night itself—knew not to tamper too long here.
She gave a final nod. "Then I will go. But remember, Khronos... if this fails, your burden will be heavier than any other’s."
The voice whispered no reply.
And with that, Nyx turned. Her shadow collapsed in upon itself and vanished, like a dream recalled too late.
Behind her, the space where she stood twisted briefly—then stitched itself shut like a wound.
And once more, only Khronos, the Primordial of Time, remained in that unformed place, waiting.
Watching.
Silently praying this would be enough.