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I Am Zeus - Chapter 163: African

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  2. I Am Zeus
  3. Chapter 163: African
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Chapter 163: African

The horizon of Africa spread before him like an endless drumbeat.

The air here was different—not heavy with hymns like India, nor steeped in incense like Egypt. It was alive. The soil itself hummed with rhythm. Rivers whispered like voices carrying old names, and the trees swayed as if listening to ancestors speaking in the wind.

Zeus stood at the threshold of that realm, sparks crawling across his shoulders, his cloak snapping faintly in the storm that curled around him. He had left the silence of Egypt behind, left his kin to their own war in the east. Hades had gone where only abyss belonged. Zeus had chosen this path instead—the west, the cradle of drums and fire, where gods no one dared call minor waited with blades of thunder and roots of earth.

His eyes narrowed. “Africa.”

The word cracked with weight.

–––

The first to rise was no god of palace or sky. He came out of the river, shoulders broad, skin glistening with water that shimmered like gold. A spear rested in his hand, not forged of iron but of riverstone sharpened by centuries. His presence bent the current behind him, as though the Nile itself remembered his name.

Osunmaru, guardian of waters.

Behind him came Ogun, iron burning in his fists, scars running down his chest where flames had once tested him. He held no shield—his body was iron itself. Sparks hissed off his skin, brighter than Zeus’s lightning.

Shango followed, wrapped in storm, eyes burning with fire and thunder both. Every step cracked the ground. His double axe gleamed, heavy as mountains.

The earth itself rumbled, and Ala rose, her body the shape of soil and clay, her hair crowned with vines, her gaze endless. The ground bent to her with each breath.

And higher still, on winds that smelled of incense and dust, Obatala stood—white as dawn, his robe woven with light, his staff glowing like a sun caged in wood. His eyes saw everything, past and present.

One by one, they stepped forward. The Orishas, pillars of the Yoruba, guardians of fire, iron, rivers, storm, earth, sky. Around them others gathered—spirits of ancestors, masks carved from memory, warriors born from drums. The African pantheon had not waited in silence. They had prepared.

–––

Zeus looked at them, sparks crawling down his arms. His lips curved faint, more tired than amused.

“Good. You stand together. Better than Egypt. Better than the east. But together only means I crush you all at once.”

His storm flared, thunder rolling in black clouds above. The sky trembled, lightning bleeding silver across the plains.

Ogun stepped first, his iron fists striking against each other, sparks roaring. “You are not welcome here, sky-thief.”

Zeus tilted his head, eyes sharp. “Not welcome? Then I am home.”

–––

The first clash split the rivers.

Ogun charged, fists glowing red-hot, iron burning with the heat of forges. His punch landed against Zeus’s chest with a crack that split the air. Sparks screamed, rivers shattering under the impact.

Zeus gritted his teeth, sparks burning along his jaw. He caught Ogun’s second strike, lightning coiling down his arm. The ground exploded under their clash, iron and storm tearing the earth apart.

Then Shango leapt in, axe burning with fire and thunder. His strike split the clouds, the sky itself screaming. Zeus twisted, lightning spiraling around his body, his fist meeting axe. The shockwave hurled rivers into the air, tore trees from their roots.

–––

Obatala raised his staff, and light poured outward, weaving a dome across the battlefield. Inside it, rhythm tightened. Every god moved sharper, faster, their power pressed into unity.

Zeus snarled, his sparks fighting against the cage. His storm bent against the light, but Obatala’s gaze stayed steady.

“You cannot unmake us,” Obatala said softly. “We are root. We are drum. We are memory. Even if you kill, we remain.”

Zeus spat blood into the soil, his grin curling cruel. “Then I will kill memory itself.”

His storm exploded, silver chains of lightning tearing through the dome, shattering its rhythm. Obatala staggered, blood trickling from his lips.

–––

Ala stepped forward. The earth rose with her, mountains thrusting upward, roots twisting into spears. Her hand closed, and the ground itself bent around Zeus, trying to crush him in the grip of soil.

Zeus planted his feet, his storm rooting into the cracks. He pressed his palm against the ground, sparks flaring.

“Earth bends to thunder,” he growled.

Lightning surged down, splitting the soil. Mountains cracked apart, roots burned black, the ground itself trembling as if afraid. Ala cried out, her clay body fracturing.

–––

But the Orishas did not falter.

Osunmaru’s spear swept across the river, water twisting into blades. They sliced across Zeus’s chest, cutting deep. Blood spilled red into the river, mixing with gold.

Zeus staggered, sparks dimming for a moment. His jaw clenched, his storm pressing harder. He raised his hand, lightning spearing into the river, boiling it to steam. Osunmaru screamed, his body searing, his spear cracking.

–––

Shango struck again, his axe biting into Zeus’s shoulder. Zeus roared, his storm detonating outward. The axe shattered into shards, but Shango’s fist caught Zeus’s jaw, breaking sparks from his mouth.

The two clashed like storms colliding, thunder tearing across the sky. Every strike was fire, every counter lightning. Blood sprayed across the plains, rivers boiled black.

–––

Ogun came again, iron fists cracking into Zeus’s ribs. Zeus’s storm wrapped around him, sparks burning into the iron. Both screamed as their bodies cracked under the clash.

Obatala raised his staff once more, light surging, trying to weave rhythm back into the fight. But Zeus hurled his lightning into it, shattering the staff in two. Obatala fell back, his robe burning white to ash.

–––

The battlefield shook, chaos rolling like drums beaten too hard. Ancestor spirits cried from the winds, their voices trembling through the trees. Warriors of memory struck with spears of bone, masks gleaming with painted rage. They rushed Zeus from every side, their blades cutting sparks from his body.

Zeus roared, his storm bursting outward. The spirits shattered, masks cracking, bones dissolving into dust. The drums faltered, silence swallowing rhythm.

–––

But still the Orishas stood.

Osunmaru bleeding, spear broken.

Ogun scorched, iron cracking.

Shango’s axe shattered, his fists raw.

Obatala’s staff ruined, his robe torn.

Ala’s body fractured, her clay bleeding dust.

They gathered again, their eyes burning.

And Zeus stood before them, chest bleeding, storm raging, sparks crawling across his broken skin. His grin widened, sharp and merciless.

“You bleed well,” he said. “But I bleed better.”

–––

They charged as one.

Ogun’s fists hammered like iron storms.

Shango’s fire roared with thunder.

Osunmaru’s rivers rose, spears cutting sharp.

Ala’s mountains crashed down.

Obatala’s light surged once more, steady and unyielding.

The plains broke apart. Rivers boiled. Mountains split. Trees turned to ash. The storm and the Orishas tore the world open.

–––

Zeus’s storm thickened, silver chains of lightning curling around his arms. He caught Ogun’s fists, broke them apart with thunder. He hurled lightning into Shango’s chest, burning fire into silence. He crushed Osunmaru’s spear, sparks drowning the river. He split Ala’s mountains with a roar, his storm ripping soil apart. He shattered Obatala’s light, sparks devouring it whole.

One by one, they fell back, broken, bleeding, but unyielding.

–––

Zeus stood tall, sparks crawling across his body, his storm burning brighter. His voice rolled heavy, terrible.

“This is not your age. It is mine. Pantheons fall. I rise. And from your ashes, I will take what I need.”

The sky cracked above him. The plains trembled. The rivers screamed.

The Orishas staggered to their feet, their bodies broken, but their eyes burning still. They raised their weapons, their fists, their roots.

And Zeus raised his hand, lightning spearing into the heavens, his storm howling like the voice of a god who had stopped playing defense.

–––

The war in Africa had begun.

And no one watching—god, spirit, or ancestor—could tell if the land itself would survive.

Source: Webnovel.com, updated by AiKurou

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