Chapter 562: Shadows and Starlight
In the realm of Nyx, where darkness wasn't the absence of light but the presence of something far older and more fundamental, three goddesses watched Olympus tear itself apart.
The realm itself defied description in any language mortals—or even most gods—could understand. It wasn't black. Black was a color, and this place existed before color had been invented. It was the concept of space between stars given form, the quiet pause between one heartbeat and the next, the gentle darkness behind closed eyelids when sleep finally came.
Floating islands of crystallized night drifted through an endless expanse that somehow felt both infinite and intimate.
Stars hung like scattered diamonds, but these weren't distant suns—they were memories of light, preserved in amber-dark eternity. The air itself whispered with the voices of dreams that had never quite made it to waking.
Aphrodite, Goddess of Love and Beauty, sat on what might have been a throne made of petrified starlight, her perfect features marred by something that looked suspiciously like worry. Her usual golden-pink radiance was muted here, not diminished but... respectfully dimmed, like a guest remembering their manners in someone else's home.
"They're really going to do it," she said, her voice carrying the kind of disbelief that came from watching family members stick their heads in a blender and call it strategy. "Zeus is actually going to try to hunt us down."
Artemis, Goddess of the Hunt and the Moon, stood with her silver bow in hand, though she wasn't quite sure why she'd drawn it. Her huntress instincts were screaming that something was wrong, but the wrongness wasn't coming from outside—it was coming from the family she'd grown up with apparently losing their collective minds.
"Father's pride has always been his weakness," she said, her voice sharp as the arrows in her quiver. "But this? This is something else. This is desperation wearing the mask of righteous anger."
She paced across the strange not-ground of Nyx's realm, her footsteps making no sound but somehow still carrying the rhythm of a predator measuring the dimensions of a trap.
"He's bringing Poseidon and Ares. Of course he is. Uncle's been looking for an excuse to hit something ever since Theseus died, and Ares..." She shook her head. "Ares thinks every problem can be solved with sufficient violence."
"And Hephaestus," Aphrodite added quietly. "Is coming too."
There was something in her voice—not quite guilt, not quite regret, but the complicated emotion that came from realizing your personal choices were about to drag people you cared about into cosmic warfare.
Nyx herself sat—if sitting was the right word for what she was doing—in the center of the realm, her form shifting between presence and absence like smoke given consciousness. Sometimes she looked like a beautiful woman with skin dark as the space between galaxies and eyes that held the light of stars not yet born.
Sometimes she was just... darkness. Aware darkness. Darkness with opinions.
When she spoke, her voice carried the weight of eons and the gentle intimacy of a mother tucking her children into bed.
"They fear what they don't understand," she said, and somehow her words felt like they were coming from inside their own thoughts rather than from outside. "And they don't understand that this was never about choosing sides."
A ripple passed through the realm, and suddenly they could see Olympus as clearly as if they were standing in the great hall. The gods arguing, splitting into factions, Zeus's lightning crackling with fury while Hades tried to talk sense into stone-deaf ears.
"Look at them," Nyx continued, and there was something almost maternal in her voice. "Children. So young. So convinced that power is the answer to everything."
Artemis snorted. "Children? Zeus is older than most civilizations."
"Age is not wisdom, dear one. And to me, they are all very, very young." Nyx's form solidified slightly, becoming more woman-shaped than concept-shaped. "I have watched stars be born, live their entire lives, and die in supernovas that paint new colors across the cosmos. The Olympians are children playing with forces they barely comprehend."
Aphrodite shifted uncomfortably. "But they're not wrong about one thing. We are connected to Parker. All three of us."
The admission hung in the darkness like a confession at midnight.
"Yes," Nyx said simply. "We are. More than you know, Oh, Goddess of Love."
"Why?" Artemis demanded, finally voicing the question that had been eating at her since she'd first felt the pull toward Earth, toward him. "Why him? What makes Parker Black worth betraying our own family?"
Nyx was quiet for a long moment, and in that silence, the realm itself seemed to lean in to listen.
"Because," she said finally, "he is what they could have been. What they should have been. What they chose not to be."
The words hit like physical blows.
"The Olympians have power," Nyx continued. "Vast, terrible, beautiful power. But what have they done with it? They've used it to demand worship. To punish mortals for the crime of being mortal. To play games with human lives because they were bored. And just a few months, hundreds of thousands died and a city was nearly annihilated because of them in their games."
Around them, the crystallized night pulsed with something that might have been anger or might have been sorrow.
"Parker (Nyxlith) Black has power that dwarfs theirs. Power that could reshape existence itself. And what does he do with it?" Nyx's smile was visible even in her more abstract moments. "He protects. He nurtures. He gives his strength to those who have none and asks for nothing in return except the chance to love and be loved by his family. Doesn't take any glory even where he should. Fixed what Olympus broke before it shattered any further and gave humanity a chance when he could have chosen not to."
Aphrodite's eyes were bright with unshed tears. "That's why I..."
"Yes," Nyx said gently. "That's why you fell for him, Goddess of Love, when you first met him, not just because of his beauty. Because he is what love looks like when it has the power to change the world."
Artemis lowered her bow, the tension finally leaving her shoulders. "And that's why I respect him. He's a hunter who only hunts monsters. A predator who protects the prey from the worst predators. No, he is a predator than hunts down predators threatening the helpless prey without seeking any glory in doing so."
"And I..." Nyx's form became more solid, more present. "I see in him the darkness that nurtures rather than destroys. The night that brings rest instead of fear. The shadow that shields instead of smothers."
They watched in silence as the argument in Olympus reached fever pitch. Zeus was gathering his faction, preparing for what could only be described as a family war.
"They're going to come for us," Artemis said, stating the obvious.
"Yes," Nyx replied, unmoved.
"They think they can take you," Aphrodite added. "All of us."
"Yes," Nyx said again, and this time there was something that might have been amusement in her voice.
"Are they wrong?" Artemis asked, her huntress instincts finally focusing on the real question.
Nyx was quiet for a moment, and when she spoke, her words carried the kind of certainty that came from being one of the fundamental forces of existence.
"Let them come," she said, and the darkness around them pulsed with anticipation. "Let them learn the difference between ruling through fear and ruling through absolute power without preying on other. Let them discover what happens when you hunt something that was hunting before the first god drew breath. I will teach Olympians a lesson"
Her form solidified completely, becoming a woman of impossible beauty with skin like polished obsidian and eyes that held the secrets of eternity.
"Besides," she added, and her smile was sharp enough to cut through destiny itself, "I have been wanting to have a conversation with my dear children about how to instill respect in arrogant fools. This seems like the perfect opportunity."
Aphrodite and Artemis exchanged looks that held entire conversations.
They were about to witness something that would be talked about until the heat death of the universe.
And in the depths of their hearts, they weren't entirely sure who they should be more worried for—Zeus and his hunting party, or the Primordial Goddess of Night who had just decided to teach them a lesson about the natural order.
The hunt was coming.
But as any good huntress knew, sometimes the prey was more dangerous than the predator.
And sometimes, the thing you thought you were hunting had been watching you all along.