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Now reading: Chapter 453 - 450: Catalyst from The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss, a Fantasy novel by JaggerJohns101.

The white sands still smoked faintly where the void had spat them back into the world, thin curls of acrid vapor rising like ghosts unwilling to depart. The arena’s marble tiers lay cracked and blackened, as if the ground itself had recoiled from what it had witnessed.

Atlas stood motionless, the axe resting against his shoulder. Its edge, once mirror-bright, was now dulled by divine blood that refused to drip—thick, luminous, clinging like tar.

The air tasted of ozone and copper, sharp enough to sting the back of his throat. His chest rose and fell in slow, deliberate breaths, but beneath the rhythm sothing else moved—sothing ancient and patient that had been waiting since the day he first drew breath in this world.

A pulse.

Not his own.

The demon god heart stirred, uncoiling like a serpent that had finally tasted prey worthy of its hunger. Heat spread through his veins—not burning, but feeding, greedy and intimate. Each beat carried fragnts: the echo of Ares’s final roar, the mory of a continent-shattering fist, the raw, red concept of WAR itself distilled into sothing he could almost taste.

A translucent panel flickered into existence before his eyes, pale gold letters on void-black.

[Demon God Heart has absorbed the Remnants of Ares — God of War]

[Divine Combat Authority significantly increased]

[Conceptual Resistance: WAR — PARTIALLY INTEGRATED]

[Warning: Alignnt drift detected. Predatory instincts rising.]

Atlas dismissed it with a thought, the panel vanishing like mist.

He had expected power.

He had not expected agreent.

Violence no longer felt like a tool he picked up and set down. It felt like a language he had always known but only now rembered how to speak fluently. The thought of conflict—of eting resistance and breaking it—sent a quiet, satisfied hum through his bones. A low, predatory contentnt.

He smiled, small and private.

The smile died quickly.

Power had never been the problem.

Witnesses had.

He looked up.

The white city of Lower Heaven rose in tiered rings of marble and gold, its towers catching the eternal light like unsheathed blades. Balconies, plazas, archways—every vantage point crowded with silent figures. Demigods in half-armor stood rigid. Lesser divinities with wings folded tight against their backs. Servants frozen mid-step, platters of ambrosia still balanced on trembling hands.

No cheers.

No prayers.

Only the hush that follows an execution.

They had all seen it.

A god had died begging.

Atlas felt the weight of ten thousand stares and, for the first ti since stepping into this world with nothing but rage and a stolen na, hesitated.

If he walked toward the gate to Middle Heaven now, would the sky itself open and pour judgnt upon him? Would Zeus finally deign to look down from his throne of clouds and thunder?

Bela’s voice cut through the silence, dry and casual as desert wind.

"Half the city’s dead."

Atlas turned.

She was wiping golden ichor from her keys with the hem of her cloak, thodical, as if cleaning up after a minor chore rather than a divine assassination. The keys clinked softly—each one a stolen fragnt of authority.

"What?"

"The loyalists tried to flee when the scrying feed cut out," she said, still not looking up. "Panicked. Thought the end had co. The rebels didn’t let them. Old grudges. New opportunities. Blood answered blood. Your sa old rebellion story."

She finally t his eyes, expression unreadable.

"You didn’t start the fire, Atlas. You just removed the lid."

Veil rippled beside her, darker than before, edges feathered with new depth and weight. He said nothing aloud, but the shadows around his feet pulsed once, slow and heavy—Ares’s devoured essence settling like sedint in deep water.

Atlas started walking.

The others fell in behind him without command, footsteps echoing on the cracked marble.

The gates of the city stood open, unguarded. Golden blood painted the broad avenues in long, deliberate streaks. Bodies lay arranged in neat rows along the main thoroughfare—executed, not slaughtered. Throats opened with surgical precision. Halos cracked and set aside like discarded crowns. Sigils torn from breastplates and piled in mocking cairns at every intersection.

It slled tallic and hot, divine ichor steaming where it pooled in the crevices between stones.

Atlas passed a young man in the armor of Hers’s courier legion—barely more than a boy—eyes wide and staring at the eternal sky. A single thrust through the heart. Clean. Professional.

Another: a daughter of Aphrodite, golden hair matted with her own blood, arranged almost gently on her side as if sleeping. Her killer had closed her eyes and folded her hands across her breast.

This was not chaos.

This was purge. Deliberate. Ritual.

Atlas’s stomach turned—not from the gore, but from the intention behind it. These people had watched him kill a god and decided the old order was already dead. They had taken his act as permission, as prophecy.

He had given them license without ever speaking a word.

In the central plaza, Pegasus waited.

The son of Zeus stood in shape: tall, broad-shouldered, white-haired now, lightning scars tracing his bare arms like living tattoos that occasionally sparked. The bolt he once carried as ornant now crackled between his fingers, alive and hungry, casting blue-white flickers across his face.

Rebels knelt in loose formation around him—demigods, exiles, minor spirits who had hidden their resentnt for centuries beneath servile smiles. Their armor was mismatched, scavenged from fallen loyalists, but their eyes burned with the sa clear, fierce purpose.

Pegasus dipped his head as Atlas approached. Not deep. Just enough.

Recognition. Respect between equals who had both defied the heavens in their own ways.

"A god-killer will always win," he said quietly. "That’s what we bet on."

His report was crisp, military, delivered without flourish.

"Resistance pockets eliminated within the first hour. Loyalist commanders rounded up and executed publicly in the amphitheater—sa stage where they once held gas in Ares’s honor. Survivors offered choice:

swear to the new order or leave with nothing but the clothes on their backs. Most chose exile. A few begged to stay and serve. We let them live—for now. ssengers already dispatched to sympathetic houses in Middle Heaven. The story spreads faster than any army could march."

Then, softer, almost reluctant:

"Lead us."

Atlas t his gaze steadily.

"No."

The refusal was flat, final. No explanation offered, no apology.

Pegasus searched his face for a long mont, eyes narrowed as if trying to read sothing written in a foreign script. Then he nodded once, sharp.

"As you say."

But the nod carried no disappointnt. Only understanding. Perhaps even relief.

The rebellion no longer needed his permission.

It had taken his example and run with it, faster and farther than he ever intended.

Atlas turned from the plaza and kept walking, Iris falling in at his right side without a word, Bela and Veil trailing like twin shadows.

They climbed broad marble stairs toward the great gate that led upward—the ascent to Middle Heaven. It towered above the city: twin pillars of orichalcum and pearl, etched with the nas of every god who had ever passed through, glowing faintly with residual power. Between them hung a veil of light, shimring, opaque, waiting for the proper key.

Atlas raised the key taken from Ares’s belt.

It was heavy, warm, still faintly pulsing with the war god’s lingering essence—angry, resentful, diminished.

He channeled mana.

The air trembled. Dust sifted from ancient carvings. Light flared along the pillars in cascading runes.

Then—nothing.

The veil remained undisturbed, serene and indifferent.

Iris stepped forward, voice steady but gentle.

"It won’t open for you."

He looked at her sharply.

"Middle Heaven’s gates answer only true divinity," she said. "Olympian blood unmixed. Recognized by the World System itself. Not mortals. Not half-bloods. Not even god-slayers who carry stolen hearts."

She didn’t say it cruelly.

Just fact. Inescapable as gravity.

Atlas stared at the shimring veil, fist clenched around the useless key until his knuckles whitened.

All the power thrumming in his chest—the heart that had devoured a god, the LAW that rewrote reality itself—and Heaven still looked at him and said: less.

The humiliation was brief, sharp, clarifying. A blade slipped between ribs.

He let the key fall into his pocket with a soft clink.

"Then we wait," he said, voice calm.

Pegasus’s warning ca later, delivered on a high balcony as the city settled into its strange new order.

"Ouserous will co."

Atlas paused, gazing down at the burning temples—flas rising gold and crimson against the eternal daylight.

"Son of Thor," Pegasus continued, arms folded. "Appointed Judge of Lower Heaven by the three main gods themselves. He cannot ignore this upheaval. It will be official. Sanctioned. He will bring witnesses, heralds, perhaps an honor guard of einherjar. He will demand accounting—for the dead god, for the broken order, for the blood in the streets."

Atlas nodded once.

The next fight would not be an ambush in the dark void.

It would be daylight and ceremony. Trial by divine law.

Lower Heaven never truly darkened, but night fell anyway—an artificial twilight cast by ritual fires and the smoke of burning temples.

Rebel banners—rough cloth painted with broken halos, crossed axes, and new sigils of defiance—replaced divine standards on every pole. The streets filled again, cautiously at first, then with growing confidence. Only with those who had chosen the new way.

Survivors erged from hidden cellars and forgotten shrines.

New voices rose in the plazas—arguing structure, law, distribution of power, the shape of a heaven without gods lording over it.

The city breathed rebellion, deep and steady.

Atlas stood on a high balcony overlooking it all, wind tugging at his cloak. Iris beside him, silent for a long while, hands resting on the balustrade.

Below, torches moved like rivers of light through the avenues.

She spoke first, voice low.

"This was always my plan."

He turned his head slightly.

She stared out over the city, expression unreadable in the firelight.

"Chip away at the foundations. Find the cracks. Wait for soone who could break the keystone." A pause, almost wistful. "I simply never expected the keystone to be an Olympian himself. I thought it would take decades. Generations, maybe."

Atlas said nothing.

She glanced at him sidelong, rainbow wings shifting restlessly.

"You called yours."

The words hung in the air between them, soft but edged like a blade drawn slowly from its sheath.

Not a confession.

Not quite a question.

He rembered saying it—flat, certain, possessive—in the mont before he ended Ares. A claim spoken in the language of war.

She pressed, carefully.

"Was that just war talk... or did you an it?"

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