Chapter 166: The 13 Gods
Constellations wheeled overhead according to his will, following patterns that would govern navigation, agriculture, and the measurement of time itself.
He was cosmic order, the divine mathematics that underpinned reality, the understanding that the universe followed rules that could be mapped and predicted.
Cronus understood cycles in a way his father Chronos never had.
Where Chronos was time’s passage, Cronus was time’s harvest.
He saw that all things had their appointed hour, that growth must be followed by reaping, that nothing could escape the eternal cycle of beginning and ending, planting and harvest.
He was seasons incarnate, the patient understanding that what was sown would eventually be reaped.
Against his inevitability stood Mnemosyne, who refused to let anything be forgotten.
She was memory itself, the thread that connected past to present, the preservation of knowledge across generations.
Without her, nothing could be learned from what came before. She was continuity, the assurance that the past would inform the future, that wisdom would not die with those who possessed it.
Themis brought something the younger world desperately needed, order.
Not the cosmic order of constellations, but the social order that would allow beings to coexist.
She was divine law, the natural principle that some actions were right and others wrong. She was balance, the understanding that civilization required rules, that freedom without structure was simply chaos wearing a different mask.
Iapetus alone among his siblings looked not to the divine but to the mortal.
He understood limitation, the beauty of impermanence, the value of things that could be broken and remade.
He was mortality’s patron, seeing in finite existence a purity that eternity could never possess.
And he was the craftsman, teaching that even the temporary could create works of lasting meaning, that mortal hands could shape wonders despite their brief time in the world.
Finally came Rhea, and with her, the promise of continuation.
She was fertility and motherhood, the assurance that life would renew itself, that each generation would birth the next.
She was not merely physical abundance but the creative force that ensured existence would never stagnate, that the divine bloodline would continue to grow and spread and evolve.
Under the rule of these twelve Titans, Erebon flourished. Mountains rose at their command. Seas teemed with life they had imagined into being.
The cycles of day and night, season and harvest, birth and death, all turned according to their will.
From them came more Titans, children and grandchildren who inherited fragments of their progenitors’ domains and claimed territories of their own.
The divine bloodline spread like roots through the world, touching every aspect of existence.
Some governed specific mountains. Others claimed individual rivers. Still others held dominion over abstract concepts, minor forces that nonetheless shaped how mortals would live and die.
But the most significant children of the Titans were yet to come.
From Cronus and Rhea came six children who would reshape the divine order entirely.
From Coeus and Phoebe came daughters of terrible power.
From Iapetus came sons who would teach mortals the secrets of fire and foresight.
The third generation of divinity was born not as primordial concepts or Titanic forces, but as gods in the truest sense, beings of individual will and ambition and desire.
They were twelve in number, and they would form what mortals would call the Pantheon.
The youngest, born of Cronus and Rhea, commanded sky and thunder.
His was the storm’s fury, the lightning that split darkness, the thunder that announced divine judgment. He was authority itself, the voice that expected obedience, the power that could shatter mountains with casual gestures.
His second sister claimed marriage and sovereignty as her domain.
She was sacred bonds, solemn vows, the commitment that bound souls together.
She was structure, the understanding that even power required order to be anything more than destruction.
The second born son took his grandfather Oceanus’s domain and made it his own. But where Oceanus had been boundary, this was raw force.
He was the wave that destroyed fleets, the earthquake that toppled cities, the reminder that nature’s power could not be tamed no matter how much mortals believed they controlled it.
The third born daughter brought the harvest, and with it, civilization’s foundation.
She was grain and growth, the patient cultivation that turned wild plains into farmland. Her blessing meant prosperity, full granaries, children who would not starve.
Her wrath meant famine, the slow death that claimed more lives than any war.
The first born son received a kingdom none of his siblings wanted.
The realm of the dead. He was the inevitable ending, the destination all mortals shared regardless of how they lived.
His domain was not punishment but certainty, the understanding that life’s journey ended in his halls for everyone, without exception or mercy.
The first born daughter, eldest of them all, chose the hearth over glory.
She was home and fire, the center around which families gathered, the warmth that made civilization possible. Where her siblings sought dominion over vast territories.
She found power in the simple act of maintaining peace, of creating spaces where mortals could rest and be safe.
From them and Titans, came more gods that would shape the foundation of Erebon.
The Goddess of Wisdom, the God of the Sun, The Goddess of the Hunt, The God of War, The God of Travel, The Goddess of Love, and The God of Fire.
These twelve Old Age Gods represented something new in Erebon’s history.
They were not concepts like the primordials, nor forces like the Titans.
They were individuals, each with their own desires and ambitions and flaws.
They loved and hated, helped and destroyed, created and ruined according to their own natures rather than following the predetermined patterns their parents had represented.
Three generations of divinity had shaped Erebon. Chaos had birthed the primordials, who established the fundamental laws of existence.
The primordials had given rise to the Titans, who governed the great forces of the world. And the Titans had produced the gods, who would walk among mortals and shape civilization itself.
The world had been born from the void. It had grown through divine will. And it would be ruled by beings of terrible power and individual choice.
But despite there being 12 gods, all gods and titan feared by one being.
The 13th God. This was a god who had control of everything. He started with nothing, was blessed by his parents, and other Titans because they believed him to be what this world needed.
Balance, but also the one that everyone feared.
In all of history between the primordials, the titans, and the gods.
The God of Time. The First beginning. The first steps. Loved this son more than anything. Was willing to give him anything.
But he was cast down to mortals flesh by his own siblings.
Fearful of what their brother could do. He was destined to stand above all, to make life better or to destroy life in of itself.
But this only happened after he sealed the God of Time away in a paradox because of his growing greed with his son.
This was the foundation upon which all that followed would rest.
This was how existence began.