ToZ Bk 1: These Three Kings
Copyright© 2024 by Carlos Santiago
Introduction
Action/Adventure Sex Story: Introduction - In the aftermath of the Great Titan War, the sons of Cronos—Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades—draw straws to determine their realms. Zeus claims Greece and Olympus, Poseidon takes the sea, and Hades becomes the ruler of the Underworld. Follow their personal journeys as they acclimate to their new responsibilities and face the challenges that come with their newfound power.
Caution: This Action/Adventure Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa Consensual Romantic Heterosexual Fiction Fan Fiction High Fantasy War Alternate History Far Past Paranormal Magic Incest Mother Son Brother Sister Grand Parent Cream Pie Exhibitionism Big Breasts Body Modification Nudism Revenge Royalty Violence
Disclaimer:
This story is the first volume in the series The Time of Zeus. While reading the previous works (The In the Beginning Trilogy) is not required to understand the narrative or character arcs presented here, familiarity with them may provide additional context that is helpful to the reader. Future installments will include brief content notices, but the foundational one will only be in the Book 1 of any of the Series.
This work contains depictions of explicit sexual encounters, incestuous relationships, graphic violence, manipulation, and magic. These elements are presented within a mythological framework and are integral to the world and characters portrayed. The prologue alone depicts incestuous impregnation between siblings, and later chapters include relationships between siblings, between aunt and nephew, and an interrupted threesome. This is an advanced warning so readers may know what to expect and choose whether to continue or not.
All Olympian gods in this narrative are related because they spawn from a single source: Chaos (with a few notable exceptions). This is not an invention of the author, but a reflection of Greek mythological source material.
Warner Brothers has a disclaimer that reads:
“The cartoons you are about to see are products of their time. They may depict some of the ethnic and racial prejudices that were commonplace in American society. These depictions were wrong then and are wrong today. While these cartoons do not represent today’s society, they are being presented as they were originally created, because to do otherwise would be the same as claiming these prejudices never existed.”
So too as these myths products of their time, and for some the incest is fantasy fuel (I am not here to judge), but I want to present these stories as honest as possible.
Hesiod, Apollodorus, Plato, and many other ancient writers depicted the gods in this manner, and to try and muddle these genealogies would be dishonest to the myths themselves. While some modern retellings attempt to shift divine lineages to soften these elements (which I entirely understand), doing so often merely displaces the incest rather than removes it (implying gods are cousins rather than brother and sister, for example). This work chooses instead to acknowledge the mythology as it was told and build the narrative honestly from there.