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Now reading: Chapter 116: Celebration of Atlas from Modern Weapons Cheat in Fantasy World, a Fantasy novel by Faux1231.

The Black Hawks were shut down one by one. Rotor blades slowed above the landing zone until the heavy chopping sound faded into a soft chanical ticking. Ground crews moved in with fuel lines, inspection kits, and maintenance sheets. Infantryn unloaded crates, rifles, ammunition boxes, and personal equipnt from the cabins.

The returning soldiers looked tired.

So had dust on their uniforms.

So had dried mud on their boots.

Others had that quiet expression n carried after coming back from combat.

Not fear.

Not shock.

Just the tired realization that they had survived sothing real.

Marcus stood near the edge of the landing zone while watching the base return to rhythm. Reports were already being gathered. Weapons were being checked back in. Vehicles were being logged. A few officers moved toward the command building with docunts from Falmouth.

Everything looked normal.

Almost.

But the way people looked at the returning unit was different.

Word had already spread.

Falmouth was safe.

The brigands were destroyed.

The Black Hollow was gone.

And Atlas had returned victorious.

Elaina stood beside Marcus, still holding onto his arm like she refused to let him walk too far away without her noticing.

Marcus noticed.

He did not ntion it.

Honestly, he liked it more than he wanted to admit.

Rolf walked past them carrying his rifle case over one shoulder. He looked exhausted, but there was a grin on his face that refused to leave.

"You know," Rolf said, "for a one-day rest order, this place still looks like it’s about to make us fill reports."

Elaina looked at him.

"It is."

Rolf stopped walking.

His grin disappeared slightly.

"...You’re joking."

"I’m not."

Tomas, walking behind him, calmly replied, "Operational reports first. Celebration after."

Rolf stared at him.

"You’re becoming Marcus."

Tomas adjusted the strap on his gear without reacting.

"Good."

Rolf looked offended.

Marcus almost smiled.

Almost.

Elaina noticed it and nudged him lightly with her elbow.

"You’re enjoying this."

"A little."

"You’re not supposed to enjoy watching your n suffer paperwork."

"They survived Falmouth. They can survive forms."

Rolf heard that and pointed at Marcus.

"That’s cruel, sir."

"Dismissed."

"Yes, sir."

Despite the complaint, Rolf walked toward the armory with the others.

The returning infantry moved in groups now, no longer the loose adventurers they had once been. Six months of training had changed them. Combat had changed them more. The n from Falmouth carried themselves differently from the ones who had left.

They were still tired.

Still human.

Still capable of joking.

But there was a sharper edge to them now.

They had fought under night vision.

They had manned machine guns on city walls.

They had watched a dieval raiding force collapse before reaching striking distance.

They had seen what Atlas doctrine ant in the field.

And they had survived their first serious deploynt.

That mattered.

Marcus watched them for a mont longer.

Elaina did too.

"They’re different," she said quietly.

Marcus nodded.

"They should be."

"You’re proud of them?"

He did not answer imdiately.

Then he said, "Yes."

Elaina smiled faintly.

"That was hard for you to admit."

"No, it wasn’t."

"Yes, it was."

Marcus looked away.

She laughed softly.

For the next two hours, Atlas stayed busy.

The command building filled with movent. Reports were submitted. Casualty logs were confird. Ammunition expenditure was recorded. Equipnt was checked for damage. The Falmouth contingent sent a short ssage through the radio confirming that the city remained calm and the stay-behind squad had settled into its assigned post near the southern wall.

There were no Atlas deaths.

A few minor injuries.

So bruises.

So cuts.

One infantryman had burned his hand slightly on a hot weapon barrel during the second assault, which Rolf had described as "losing a fight to his own gun."

The man did not find it funny.

Everyone else did.

By sunset, the official work was finished enough for Elaina to finally close one ledger with a firm sound.

THUNK.

She looked across her office at Marcus, who was sitting near the window with a cup of coffee he had barely touched.

"You’re done."

Marcus looked up.

"With what?"

"Work."

"There’s always work."

"Not tonight."

He stared at her for a second.

"Elaina."

She raised one finger.

"No."

"I didn’t say anything yet."

"You were about to say sothing annoying."

"That’s not fair."

"It’s accurate."

Marcus leaned back in his chair and sighed.

Outside the window, the base was slowly changing.

The harsh work rhythm softened as evening settled in. Lanterns lit up across the compound. The chanics near the hangars had already stopped heavy work. Soone was dragging long tables out near the ss hall. Another group carried crates from storage.

Marcus narrowed his eyes slightly.

"What’s happening outside?"

Elaina did not even look.

"A celebration."

"I didn’t authorize that."

"I did."

Marcus slowly looked back at her.

"You did?"

"Yes."

"That’s not standard procedure."

"Neither is destroying a mountain cri base with an A-10."

Fair.

Very fair.

Elaina walked around the desk and stood in front of him.

"The n need it. The staff need it. You need it."

"I’m fine."

"You look like you slept inside a truck."

"I’ve slept in worse."

"That’s not a defense."

Marcus opened his mouth.

Then closed it.

She won again.

Elaina smiled.

"Good. Co on."

By the ti they stepped outside, the base had already turned into sothing warr than usual.

The open space near the ss hall had been cleared. Wooden tables were lined up beneath lanterns. Crates had been stacked into temporary seats. Large cooking pots sat near the side where kitchen staff prepared stew, roasted at, bread, and whatever supplies could be spared without harming the ration schedule.

Beer had appeared too.

A lot of it.

Marcus imdiately looked at Elaina.

She looked innocent.

"You planned this."

"Yes."

"How long?"

"Since the Falmouth contract was confird."

Marcus stared at her.

"You planned a victory celebration before the battle?"

Elaina smiled calmly.

"I had confidence."

"That’s dangerous."

"You’re rubbing off on ."

That made Marcus pause.

Then he gave a small breath that was close to a laugh.

The celebration began simply.

No formal announcent at first.

People just gathered.

Infantryn sat with chanics. Drivers sat with radio operators. Logistics clerks shared food with guards. So of the new recruits who had not deployed to Falmouth listened closely while the returning soldiers told parts of the story.

Naturally, Rolf beca the loudest one.

"So there we were," Rolf said, standing with one boot on a crate and a mug in one hand. "Pitch black outside the walls. City guards shaking beside us. Brigands crawling through the fields thinking nobody could see them."

One chanic leaned forward.

"But you could see them?"

Rolf grinned and tapped the side of his head.

"Night vision."

Another soldier at the table corrected him.

"Thermal feed caught them first."

Rolf pointed at him.

"You’re ruining the story."

"You’re exaggerating the story."

"I’m improving it."

Tomas, seated nearby with a mug in his hand, said flatly, "You said earlier there were two hundred brigands."

Rolf looked at him.

"Emotional estimate."

The table broke into laughter.

Marcus and Elaina sat at the central table, not far from the infantry. Marcus did not drink much at first. He mostly watched.

The n needed this.

He could see it clearly now.

Combat had pressure.

Even when they won, even when they had overwhelming firepower, there was still pressure. They had aid at living n. They had heard screams. They had watched bodies fall. They had held the line while a city depended on them.

Celebration helped release so of that weight.

Not erase it.

Nothing erased it.

But it helped.

A chanic raised a bottle toward Marcus from across the tables.

"To Falmouth!"

Several others imdiately raised their mugs.

"To Falmouth!"

Then soone shouted, "To Atlas!"

That spread faster.

"To Atlas!"

Mugs lifted across the yard.

Marcus looked around at the soldiers, chanics, clerks, drivers, and staff.

Elaina nudged him gently.

"You should say sothing."

"No."

"You’re the commander."

"I said sothing in Falmouth already."

"This is your base."

Marcus looked at her.

She looked back with a sweet smile that did not give him any choice.

He sighed and stood.

The noise faded slowly once people noticed.

Rolf imdiately sat down like a student caught by a teacher.

Marcus held his mug but did not raise it yet.

For a mont, he looked across the gathering.

Not at a crowd.

At his people.

Six months ago, many of them were not here.

The base was smaller.

The infantry was still untested.

Atlas was a growing idea with too many moving parts.

Now, it had defended a city.

It had destroyed a criminal network.

It had left a contingent behind as a real security presence.

It had beco sothing more than a company taking contracts.

Marcus spoke clearly.

"Falmouth was Atlas’s first full defensive deploynt."

The yard stayed quiet.

"No one died. That matters."

Several infantryn lowered their eyes briefly, understanding the weight of that.

"We faced an enemy that thought fear and numbers were enough to win."

Marcus looked toward Tomas and Rolf’s table.

"They were wrong."

A few quiet chuckles followed.

Marcus continued.

"The infantry held the wall. The command staff tracked the enemy. The maintenance crews kept the aircraft and vehicles running. Logistics moved supplies fast enough that nobody waited for what they needed."

He paused.

"That victory did not belong to one man."

That line made the whole yard still.

"It belonged to Atlas."

Elaina watched him quietly from beside the table.

Marcus raised his mug.

"To the n who held the line."

Mugs rose.

"To the crews who kept us moving."

More mugs.

"To the staff who kept this base alive while we were gone."

Several clerks looked surprised at being ntioned.

Marcus’s voice remained steady.

"And to coming ho."

That one hit hardest.

The yard answered together.

"To coming ho!"

The mugs clinked.

People drank.

And after that, the celebration truly began.

Music started not long after.

Bad music.

A chanic brought out the sa string instrunt from the last celebration and began playing sothing that might have once been a folk song before alcohol damaged it.

Rolf imdiately shouted, "Still terrible!"

The chanic shouted back, "Still better than your singing!"

"I haven’t sung!"

"And the gods are grateful!"

Laughter rolled across the tables.

Food moved fast. Bowls of stew were passed around. Roasted at disappeared from trays almost as soon as it arrived. Bread was torn apart and shared between groups. Beer bottles piled near table corners.

Even Tomas relaxed eventually.

Not fully.

But enough.

He sat with his squad, listening as one younger infantryman tried to explain to the non-deployed recruits what it felt like to fire from the walls under night vision.

"It’s strange," the young man said. "You’re looking at darkness, but through the device, everything appears green. You can see movent clearly. Then you rember the enemy can’t see you back."

One recruit swallowed.

"That sounds unfair."

Rolf leaned in.

"It is."

The table laughed again.

Tomas added calmly, "That’s why training matters. Equipnt helps, but discipline keeps you from wasting fire."

Rolf groaned.

"Can you not teach during drinking?"

"I can teach anywhere."

"You’re worse than Marcus."

Marcus heard that from the next table and looked over.

Rolf imdiately raised his mug.

"Complint, sir."

"Didn’t sound like one."

"It was in spirit."

Elaina laughed beside Marcus.

The night grew warr despite the cool air.

At so point, Cedric’s paynt was ntioned, and soone asked how much the Falmouth contract brought in.

Elaina answered before Marcus could.

"Enough."

That beca the official answer.

Enough.

Nobody needed to know the full numbers while drunk.

Marcus agreed with that.

Later, one of the chanics asked about the A-10 strike, and the whole table turned toward Marcus.

He shook his head.

"No."

Rolf looked betrayed.

"Sir, the people need to know."

"The people are drinking."

"Exactly. Perfect ti."

Marcus gave him a flat stare.

Rolf slowly sat back.

"Never mind."

But one of the technical staff quietly described it anyway from the drone feed perspective.

The room listened in awe as he explained how the Warthog approached from altitude, aligned with the target, and used the GAU-8 to destroy surface structures before switching to rockets against reinforced sections.

He tried to keep it simple.

Most listeners still stared like he had described a god striking the mountain.

One cook whispered, "So that’s why they call it thunder."

Marcus took a slow drink from his mug.

Elaina leaned closer.

"You know this is how legends start."

"I know."

"Does that bother you?"

"A little."

"Why?"

Marcus looked toward the gathered people.

Because legends exaggerated.

Because stories removed details.

Because people would eventually stop seeing Atlas as trained personnel, logistics, fuel, ammunition, planning, and risk.

They would see miracles.

That was dangerous.

But also useful.

He answered honestly.

"Because legends make people careless."

Elaina nodded slightly.

"Then we keep them grounded here."

Marcus glanced at her.

She smiled.

"That’s what I’m for."

He held her gaze for a mont.

Then nodded.

"Yeah."

Later into the night, the celebration softened.

The loudest n beca quieter. A few soldiers dozed off sitting upright. chanics argued lazily over engine maintenance. So infantryn sat near the edge of the yard watching the stars.

Marcus eventually stood and walked away from the tables for a mont.

Elaina followed him.

They stopped near the edge of the compound where the sounds of celebration beca softer behind them.

The base stretched around them under lantern light.

Hangars.

Barracks.

Watchtowers.

Vehicle bays.

Training fields.

A place that did not exist a year ago.

Now it felt real.

Elaina stood beside him with her arms folded loosely.

"You’re thinking again."

"I always think."

"I noticed."

Marcus looked toward the distant dark horizon.

"Falmouth changes things."

"How?"

"People will start seeing Atlas as more than a hired force."

Elaina nodded.

"They already do."

"That brings attention."

"Yes."

"From rchants. Nobles. Criminals. Maybe kingdoms."

Elaina stayed quiet for a mont.

Then said, "Are you worried?"

Marcus thought about it.

"Yes."

That seed to surprise her slightly.

But only slightly.

He continued.

"Not afraid. Worried."

"There’s a difference."

"Big one."

Elaina looked at the base.

"Then we grow carefully."

Marcus glanced toward her.

"That easy?"

"No."

She smiled faintly.

"But you weren’t planning to stop anyway."

He almost laughed.

True.

Very true.

Behind them, Rolf’s voice suddenly shouted, "Commander! Tomas is trying to make us do a post-celebration cleanup roster!"

Tomas shouted back, "Because soone has to clean this ss!"

Rolf answered, "That’s tomorrow’s problem!"

Marcus closed his eyes briefly.

Elaina laughed softly.

"You should go settle that."

"No."

"You’re the commander."

"I’m off duty. You ordered it."

Elaina paused.

Then smiled wider.

"Fair."

They stayed there a little longer while the celebration continued behind them.

For once, Marcus did not rush back to maps, reports, or the system.

For once, he let the base breathe.

Falmouth was safe.

Atlas had returned.

Elaina was beside him.

And his people were laughing again.

That was enough for tonight.

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