Gold t red.
Atlas's eyes burned like twin suns against the inferno glare of Ares's gaze, and for a breathless mont the entire arena seed to forget how to exist. Sound dulled, stretched thin like fabric about to tear.
Light bent inward, curling toward the two figures at the center of the world. Even the eternal radiance of Lower Heaven dimd, as if the sky itself leaned closer—wary, reverent, afraid.
The air grew heavy.
Not with heat alone, but with intent.
Ares stood three feet taller than Atlas, his body carved from violence and conquest. He was broader, heavier, built like a siege engine given flesh—every inch of him radiating the god's unshakable certainty that the universe existed to be broken beneath his boots.
Fire licked along his skin, not summoned, not controlled, but emitted—the natural exhalation of a being who embodied war itself. His red eyes glowed brighter with every heartbeat, twin furnaces stoked by endless bloodshed.
Countless battlefields had fed that fire.
Countless screams.
Atlas did not move.
Height did not matter.
Size did not matter.
He had stood before Titans who blotted out horizons, beings whose shadows swallowed cities, whose footsteps split continents open like wounds. He had braced the sky itself upon his shoulders and endured. Compared to them, this god—this Olympian—was simply another obstruction between Atlas and the future he intended to carve out with his own hands.
And Atlas had never tolerated obstructions.
Pegasus, slumped near the edge of the ruined arena, stirred just long enough to feel the pressure spike. His breath hitched as divinity crashed down like a descending mountain. His eyes fluttered open in ti to see Ares's aura bloom—an expanding sun of violence, its corona licking the edges of reality.
He smiled faintly.
A crooked, satisfied thing.
"Figures," he murmured, barely audible even to himself.
Then darkness took him.
Whatever followed, he would not witness it.
But he had seen enough.
In the stands, panic finally erupted.
Demigods scrambled back, wings flaring, magic sputtering as instinct overrode pride. Lesser gods retreated in a rush of fear too old to reason with, faces pale as they realized what they were standing too close to. Barriers flared and cracked. Ancient sigils scread as they struggled to hold.
This was no longer a tournant.
No longer spectacle.
No longer entertainnt.
This was war.
Raw.
Unfiltered.
Unrestrained.
At the far end of the arena, Veil stood half-subrged in shadow, darkness coiling tighter around his form like a living thing. His expression wavered—alarm flickering beneath sothing far more dangerous.
Anticipation.
"…You told him not to make a ss," Bela muttered, arms crossed tight, wings twitching with restless tension. Her jaw was set, but her eyes never left Atlas.
Veil's lips curved into a slow, wicked grin. "Yes," he said softly. "And he agreed."
Bela snorted. "Liar."
Veil chuckled under his breath. "Atlas has always been a hypocrite," he said fondly. "Just… in the best way possible. That's why he's my best mate."
Bela's gaze drifted back to the arena—to Atlas, hovering now at eye level with Ares, his boots no longer touching the shattered clay.
Gravity bent around him.
Uncertain.
Yielding.
The air trembled, as if unsure which laws still applied.
Her fingers brushed absently against her thigh as mory flickered—heat, strength, defiance. The way Atlas never truly bowed. Not to gods. Not to fate.
"Yes," she murmured.
"A hypocrite."
Her hypocrite.
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
Flight.
True flight.
No wings.
No incantations.
No divine constructs.
Atlas simply rose.
A skill so rare among demigods it bordered on legend. Even among gods, true unaided flight marked not privilege—but power. The ability to deny the world's claim over you entirely.
Ares noticed.
His sneer deepened, lips peeling back in contempt.
"So," he bood, voice rolling like distant artillery across a battlefield littered with corpses, "you think that makes you special?"
Atlas said nothing.
Ares's mana surged.
It slamd outward like a tidal wave—an oppressive force that crushed breath from lungs and bent knees unwillingly. Bones groaned. Divine blood rang in ears. The arena scread as pillars fractured and heavenly clay disintegrated into glowing dust, spiraling upward like ash caught in a storm. High above, the clouds twisted into violent spirals as the sky itself recoiled from the god's unleashed authority.
"You think you're chosen?" Ares roared, drawing his fist back as flas coiled tighter, denser, hotter around his arm—compressed war, forged rage. "You think you're anything more than a bug that crawled too high?"
He punched.
The strike was catastrophic.
The air detonated.
Space warped.
Sound ceased to exist—swallowed by a concussive void that erased everything in its path. Reality folded inward like paper under a hamr. Even Atlas—Atlas, who had shattered monsters and broken gods—felt the sheer mass of it bearing down.
Instinct took over.
His arms crossed as LAW flared violently.
Not magic.
Not force.
Authority.
Reality bent around his form in screaming protest, lines of causality snapping taut as the universe itself tried—and failed—to decide how to respond.
The punch landed.
Atlas was hurled backward, boots skidding through the air itself before he slamd into the arena floor. The impact carved a canyon through the clay, a trench hundreds of ters long that ended in an explosion of pulverized stone and blinding light.
The shockwave rolled outward.
Walls collapsed.
Spectators were thrown like leaves.
Silence followed.
One heartbeat.
Two.
Three.
The crowd stared.
Atlas had been driven back.
By Ares.
Ares laughed.
The sound was booming, triumphant, filled with the certainty of a god who had never truly been opposed. "There," he thundered. "That's reality. Feel it? That's the difference between a god and—"
Atlas rose.
Slowly.
Calmly.
Dust rolled off his shoulders as he rolled his neck once, vertebrae popping softly. He spat blood to the side, then looked up with a faint, almost disappointed smile.
"That it?" he asked.
The smile vanished from Ares's face.
They collided again.
This ti, Atlas didn't brace.
He charged.
Fist to fist.
Force to force.
Will to wrath.
The impact split the arena clean in half.
The ground ruptured beneath them, massive slabs of heavenly stone tearing free and drifting upward as gravity failed under the strain of their clash. Shockwaves rippled outward in layered rings, smashing remaining barriers, hurling spectators back as they fled in blind terror.
Ares roared and swung again.
Atlas t the blow.
And returned it.
They traded strikes midair, each punch a natural disaster—thunder cracking, fla screaming, gold light tearing through crimson fire. Atlas felt bone vibrate beneath divine force, felt heat scorch his skin, felt LAW strain as it rewrote physics around every movent.
But beneath the pain—
Control.
Ares was stronger.
But Ares was furious.
"You ruined everything!" Atlas shouted, driving his fist into Ares's side hard enough to bend the god's torso and send him skidding backward through the air, fire tearing loose in burning arcs. "You and gods like you!"
Ares snarled, flas exploding outward as he caught himself. "You dare lecture ?"
Atlas didn't dodge the next punch.
He took it squarely to the jaw—felt his head snap sideways, felt teeth rattle—then stepped inside the god's reach and drove an elbow into Ares's ribs with surgical precision. Sothing cracked.
"I will take, everything from you lot." Atlas growled, blood at the corner of his mouth, eyes blazing gold. "For every life you touched in lust."
Ares laughed.
The sound was vicious.
Feral.
"Oh, so you did had eyes on her." he spat. "I'll take her first."
Atlas froze.
Just for a fraction of a second.
"I'll take Iris," Ares continued, savoring every syllable. "Break her. Use her. Cast her aside like the rest."
Sothing snapped.
The air scread.
Atlas moved faster than thought—faster than reason—faster than rcy. His fist slamd into Ares's face with a sound like a cathedral bell struck by a godslayer. Fire erupted outward as Ares reeled, blood and fla scattering like teors.
In the stands, Iris flinched.
Her cheeks burned—not with sha, but with sothing far more volatile. Rage. Resolve. Sothing ancient and dangerous awakening in her chest. Hearing Atlas nad—even falsely—sent heat coursing through her veins.
Bela noticed.
And did not like it.
Ares straightened.
And changed.
He grew.
Muscles swelled. Armor of living fla crawled over his body like molten plate, locking into brutal lines of conquest and dominance. His hands ignited completely, fire condensing into weapons forged from wrath—axes, blades, shapes that rembered every war they had ever tasted.
"I am the God of War!" Ares roared. "And you are nothing!"
Atlas hovered before him.
Unshaken.
Unyielding.
"No," he said quietly.
Then he smiled.
"You're just another enemy. Another enemy I will trample."
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