The Guide had been with Atlas since the beginning—
since the first clash with the Dreaming,
since the first night the stars dimd
and the boundary between a mortal mind and divine will blurred.
The voice had whispered, commanded, pleaded, argued.
Sotis it was a ntor.
Sotis a tyrant.
Sotis a shadow wearing Atlas’s own shape.
And sotis, in the quiet between battles,
it had sounded almost... lonely.
Atlas rembered the first ti the Guide tried to take his body—
the choking pressure in his lungs,
the weightless pull behind his eyes,
the sensation like a second heartbeat trying to replace his own.
He fought it then.
And strangely, the Guide had relented.
Not in defeat—but in sothing like respect.
A strange bond had ford between them.
Not trust, not friendship...
but sothing in between,
a tether forged in blood, war, and shared existence.
But now—
now was not the ti for old doubts.
Those mories were rain on a distant window:
a sound he heard but could not reach.
The Elder walked ahead of them,
staff clicking against living stone,
as he brought them deeper into the Genesis Chamber’s inner paths.
The place breathed around them.
Every wall, every corner humd like a great beast asleep beneath the world.
They descended into a narrow alley—
a corridor carved from red stone and shadow.
The air grew warr.
Sound gathered in faint ripples.
At first, it was only an echo—
a single cheer, far away.
Then two.
Then a rising wave.
Aurora glanced around uneasily.
Lara touched her arm, voice small.
"Where... where are we exactly?"
Atlas’s chest tightened.
The sound was growing—
not random cheering, but organized.
Rhythmic.
Like a chant carried on the breath of thousands.
He stepped closer to the Elder.
"Where are we going?" Atlas asked.
"And what needs to be changed? You haven’t answered—"
But the noise swelled, swallowing his words whole.
A blinding light blossod at the end of the alley.
It wasn’t sunlight—
it pulsed with color, heat, breath.
A heartbeat of the world.
The Elder slowed.
His smile stretched wider,
not with cruelty,
but with sothing like religious joy.
"This," he called over the echoing cheers,
his voice amplified by the alley’s living stone,
"is your humble faith."
His staff lifted, glowing from within.
"The Layer of the Elders who worship you."
Aurora froze.
Michael inhaled sharply.
Even Eli took a half-step back.
The Elder continued—
"The place where you belong."
"Where your journey leads."
"The place from which we will swallow all of Hell—"
"—with the faith of the One Below All."
The words hit Atlas like a falling moon.
Son of Lilith.
Chosen avatar of the Guide.
Instrunt of the will beneath everything.
The alleyway burst open into light.
And the world roared.
The sound slamd into them—
a wave of cheers so vast, so hungry,
that even the Genesis Chamber trembled.
Light washed over them,
swallowing every shadow.
They stepped into an arena.
Not a human arena—
not stone seats or carved pillars—
but a stadium grown from the very substance of this realm.
Tier upon tier of living balconies—
woven from flesh-like marble and crystal veins—
rose in a circle that stretched beyond sight.
And filling every seat—
Demons.
Fallen.
Beastfolk.
Scaled warriors, horned mystics, winged creatures of smoke and bone.
Thousands.
Tens of thousands.
All turned toward Atlas.
All cheering his na.
The sound hit him in waves—
faith pouring into him in a storm of heat and pressure.
His system pulsed—
120 Faith
190 Faith
220 Faith —
The numbers burned behind his eyes,
running hot through every vein.
His breath caught.
For a mont, he felt the weight of their belief—
raw, overwhelming, absolute.
Above them—
fourteen silhouettes hovered,
hoods draped like sacred shadows.
The Elders.
The ruling council of this layer.
Each one radiating enough power
to split a continent
or silence a god.
Their cloaks fluttered in wind that did not exist.
Their eyes glowed beneath their hoods,
fixed entirely upon him.
Lara stumbled to Atlas’s side, gripping his sleeve.
"Atlas... is everything going to be okay?"
Her voice trembled, barely above a whisper.
He placed a steadying hand on her shoulder,
though his own heart hamred like a war drum.
Michael approached next,
clutching his Book of Acclaim to his chest.
"Oh prophet..." he said, breathless,
"...is it happening? One of the prophecies?"
His eyes glistened with hope, fear, awe.
"The union of demons and fallens," Michael whispered,
"the gathering under one banner...
the prophecy you wrote—
the one you said was from the God above all—
is it coming true?"
Atlas inhaled slowly.
He felt the truth coiling in his chest like smoke.
He had written those prophecies.
Lies, half-lies, stories twisted into divine mandate.
Words he needed to gain faith,
to build power,
to push the fallens and demons toward unity.
But he did not speak any of that.
He nodded.
Soft.
Controlled.
"Yes," he said.
"It begins now."
Michael nearly collapsed with relief,
eyes shining with ecstatic devotion.
Faith surged again—
90 Faith
110 Faith
Atlas exhaled shakily.
He glanced around,
feeling the worship,
the hunger,
the fierce adoration crashing into him
like waves of molten gold.
The Elders descended.
Their hoods flared like wings of darkness
as they drifted down from the sky,
their presence pressing the air into submission.
One by one,
they landed in a circle around Atlas,
their auras vibrating like ringing bells.
The Elder who guided them here
stepped forward.
"This," he declared,
voice booming through the stadium,
"is him."
He pointed his staff at Atlas.
The ground beneath them glowed.
"The Guide returned."
"The one we have awaited."
"The avatar chosen by the One Below All."
"The son of Lilith.
The Architect of what is to co."
A shiver rippled through the crowd.
Every throat shouted as one.
"GUIDE! GUIDE! GUIDE!"
Atlas felt the Guide inside him stir—
a pulse of emotion he couldn’t na.
Pride?
Anger?
Recognition?
Fear?
Perhaps all of them at once.
One Elder stepped forward, voice a rasp of living shadow.
"We feel him," the Elder said.
"The spirit of the Guide... inside this vessel."
Another Elder leaned in,
eyes gleaming with an unnatural light.
"Yes..."
"A reincarnation so complete it tears through the air around him."
Atlas swallowed.
The Guide’s voice whispered in his mind—
{{{{ They already know too much. }}}}
Another whisper, darker—
{{{{ And yet... not enough. }}}}
A third—
{{{{ Don’t let them na you. Nas are chains. }}}}
Atlas stiffened.
A mory flickered—
the first ti the Guide had said those words.
During the Dreaming War,
when Atlas nearly accepted a title from an ancient phantom king.
"Nas are chains."
The warning echoed again now
as the Elders circled.
The Elder who brought them here raised his staff once more.
"Atlas," he said,
"you stand in the heart of our faith."
The stadium dimd—
light gathering into a single glowing sphere above them.
The Elder continued:
"This is the place where your destiny begins."
"The place where we shape the future of Hell."
"The place where your role will be declared."
The sphere pulsed.
"We will publicly na you—"
The Guide’s voice cut through Atlas’s skull—
{{{{ No...STOP HIM. }}}}
Atlas’s breath hitched.
The Elder continued—
"—as the True Guide reborn."
The air tightened.
Pressure built like a collapsing star.
Aurora stepped toward Atlas,
eyes wide with a silent question:
What do we do?
Atlas didn’t know.
But he did know this—
Whatever they nad him here...
whatever title they branded onto him...
whatever destiny they carved—
it would shape the entire future.
Not just of Hell.
Not just of the fallens.
Not just of demons.
But of him.
Atlas.
The one who bore Lilith’s will.
The one who carried the Guide inside.
The one who wrote prophecies knowing they were lies—
yet now watched them co true.
The Elders lifted their hands.
The stadium roared.
"GUIDE! GUIDE! GUIDE!"
The Guide’s voice whispered—
{{{{ Don’t let them claim you. Like they claid ...}}}}
But the faith pouring into Atlas
grew hotter, brighter, heavier,
until it felt like a crown burning against his skull.
Lara clung to his arm.
Michael kneeled beside him. Tears, actual tears.
Aurora’s hand hovered at her blade.
And the Elders,
fourteen beings of absolute authority,
raised their staffs—
Light spiraled around them,
forming a halo above Atlas.
"Atlas," they intoned as one.
"The Guide returned."
"The one who will lead us to swallow all of Hell...and all of heaven."
"The one who carries the will of the One Below All."
"Our ssiah."
Atlas’s heart slamd against his ribs.
The Guide whispered—
{{{{ Say nothing.
Let them commit. }}}}
And so Atlas stood silent.
The halo descended.
Heat licked his skin—
electric, holy, terrifying.
The crowd scread.
The Elders chanted.
Faith pulsed into him like a tidal wave.
And as the halo touched the top of Atlas’s head—
his vision snapped white.
A thousand mories that weren’t his
exploded behind his eyes:
A throne made of shadows.
Lilith’s hand resting on his shoulder.
A world collapsing into a single point of light.
The Guide, standing alone in a wasteland of dead gods.
A voice whispering—
"Rewrite the cycle."
"Break the loop."
"End the heaven’s ddling."
"Beco what you already were."
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