Silence followed Hercules' halted punch.
It wasn't the awkward hush of embarrassnt, nor the confused quiet of a trick gone wrong. It was reverence—raw, stunned, bone-deep reverence—descending on the training grounds like an invisible second sky. The air itself seed to thicken, pressing down on thousands of shoulders, forcing breaths to shallow and hearts to stutter.
Atlas stood exactly where he had stopped, wooden axe held loosely in one hand, body angled in the precise aftermath of evasion. The rack behind him lay in ruins—splintered timber and shattered stone still crumbling, dust billowing outward in slow, lazy waves that rolled across the pale floor. Pebbles skittered past boots; a few demigods blinked as grit stung their eyes.
No one spoke.
Hercules straightened slowly, fist still extended for a heartbeat longer, as if savoring the mont. Then he laughed.
The sound bood across the expanse—rich, genuine, utterly devoid of mockery. It carried approval, delight, and sothing rarer: recognition. He clapped Atlas once on the shoulder. The contact was casual, almost brotherly, yet the air vibrated with restrained force, a reminder that this hero could pulp mountains if he wished.
"Well done," Hercules said, voice projecting effortlessly so every ear caught it. "Very few here could have dodged that. Fewer still without a trace of fear in their eyes."
Atlas inclined his head, asured and respectful. "Thank you."
Hercules studied him a second longer—amber eyes sharp, probing, trying to peel back layers of flesh and restraint to glimpse whatever storm churned beneath. Then, satisfied for now, he turned away, striding back toward the center of the field as if nothing monuntal had just shifted the hierarchy of the entire grounds.
The mont his back turned, the world exploded.
"Did you see that?!"
"He actually dodged Hercules!"
"That punch—I felt the wind from the back row!"
"Who in the nine realms is he?"
"Who's his divine parent—really?"
The questions cascaded like an avalanche. Demigods pressed forward in a living tide, auras flaring with excitent, envy, curiosity. So radiated raw competitive hunger, eyes narrowed in calculation. Others carried open reverence, almost worshipful. A few flickered with suspicion, whispers of "trick" or "illusion" already forming.
Atlas barely had ti to draw a steadying breath before he was surrounded—bodies close enough that he could feel the heat of their mana, sll the ozone of barely contained power.
"How did you move like that?"
"Are you really just Ra's blood? That didn't look Egyptian."
"That wasn't luck, was it? Or so artifact?"
Atlas lifted one hand, palm out. The gesture was subtle, but the crowd quieted just enough—respect born from the display they'd just witnessed.
"Training," he said simply, voice calm and even.
The single word only fueled the fire.
Laughter rippled—disbelieving, excited. A tall demigod with copper skin and faintly glowing runes etched along his arms stepped forward, grin wide and challenging. "Spar with . I want to feel it."
Another pushed in beside him, gripping a wooden hamr. " too. Let's see if you can do it twice."
A third, eyes gleaming with mischief, added, "Or was that a fluke? Prove it."
Atlas sighed internally, the sound lost in the rising clamor.
Veil's voice murmured from the shadows trailing his feet—cool, cautious. *Careful, Atlas. Give them too much, and you paint a target on your back for every ambitious scion here. Give too little, and they'll swarm you forever, testing until sothing breaks.*
Bela's presence coiled tighter in his shadow, a faint warmth of amusent. *Let them co. It's good practice. Just don't kill anyone—Middle Heaven frowns on that.*
Atlas exhaled once, steadying. "Fine," he said aloud, voice cutting through the noise. "One at a ti. Line up if you must."
They didn't listen.
The first lunged almost imdiately—a spear-wielding demigod with the lithe build of Hers' line, movents sharp and practiced, thrust aid to test rather than harm. Atlas didn't even raise his axe fully. He stepped inside the reach, fingers tapping the wrist in a precise strike that numbed nerves. A twist, a pivot, and the spear clattered away as its owner hit the ground flat on his back, staring up at the eternal light of Middle Heaven in stunned silence.
The second lasted longer—three quick exchanges, blade flashing in controlled arcs. Atlas parried once, twice, then hooked a leg behind the knee and sent the challenger tumbling in a controlled fall.
The third tried magic—a burst of crackling lightning from a son of Zeus, forked and hungry. Atlas stepped *through* it, body blurring slightly as demon heart essence diffused the energy harmlessly around him. He closed the distance, tapped the demigod's shoulder, and whispered, "Yield."
One by one, they ca.
One by one, they fell.
Not broken. Not humiliated—just defeated with ruthless efficiency. No wasted movent, no flourish for show. Each bout ended in seconds, leaving opponents breathless but unhard, staring at Atlas with newfound respect.
Whispers grew louder, spreading like wildfire across the grounds.
"Too efficient…"
"He's reading every tell."
"No excess power—no wasted motion."
"Look at his eyes. He's already three steps ahead."
From the edge of the field, Aron watched with fists clenched tight enough to whiten knuckles.
Aron was a son of Apollo—radiant, proud, golden hair catching the light like a halo. His bow rested against his shoulder, quiver humming with latent solar mana. He had arrived in Middle Heaven shining: top marks in marksmanship drills, Hercules himself nodding approval twice already. Demigods had begun gravitating toward him, whispering about the "golden child" who might climb fastest.
Now every gaze was fixed on Atlas.
Irritation flared hot in Aron's chest, mingled with ambition sharper than any arrow. He stepped forward, voice carrying clear and commanding. "Enough gas," he called. "If you want attention, earn it properly. Against soone who matters."
The crowd parted instinctively.
Atlas turned.
Their eyes t across the stone—Aron's burning with competitive fire, Atlas's calm and unreadable. There was no malice in Aron's gaze, only the pure, unrelenting drive to prove himself. Atlas recognized it imdiately; he had worn that sa hunger once, before the world had taught him its cost.
"Go ahead," Atlas said, voice steady.
Aron drew his bow in one fluid motion, string singing as light coalesced into an arrow of pure solar mana—blinding, searing, precise. The crowd held its breath collectively, auras dimming in instinctive deference to the power.
He loosed.
The arrow streaked forward, a cot of gold.
Atlas moved—not away, but forward. He shifted his head a fraction; the arrow passed through the afterimage, exploding harmlessly against a warded pillar in a shower of sparks. In the sa heartbeat, Atlas crossed the distance—too fast for most eyes to track—hooked the bowstring with his axe haft, twisted sharply to disrupt balance, and brought the flat of the blade to rest gently against Aron's chest.
The entire exchange lasted less than two seconds.
"Yield?" Atlas asked calmly, no triumph in his tone.
Aron stared up at him from his off-balance stance, golden eyes wide with shock. Then, unexpectedly, he laughed—a short, breathless bark of genuine amusent and respect.
"Yeah," he said, straightening as Atlas lowered the axe. "I yield. Well fought."
Atlas stepped back and offered a hand. Aron took it without hesitation, pulled to his feet, and dipped his head in a shallow but sincere bow—acknowledgnt between equals, or near-equals.
The crowd erupted in cheers this ti—approval for both combatants.
Hercules watched it all from his vantage, arms crossed, expression thoughtful. His gaze lingered on Atlas longer than before, weighing, asuring.
Then the air changed.
It sharpened to a razor's edge.
The eternal light of Middle Heaven seed to reorganize itself, bending inward as a presence descended—one infinitely more precise than Hercules' raw, heroic power. Subtle. Inevitable.
A woman stepped onto the training grounds from nowhere.
Athena.
No thunder heralded her. No chariot of fla. No announcent. She simply *arrived*—fully manifested, armor gleaming with understated perfection, grey eyes calm and calculating, seeing every detail at once: every stance, every flicker of aura, every hidden thought.
Every demigod in the field dropped to one knee instinctively, heads bowed in perfect unison. The motion rippled outward like a wave.
Atlas did not kneel.
He inclined his head—respectful, but not subservient. A subtle distinction, but in Middle Heaven, distinctions like that echoed.
Athena's gaze flicked to him for half a heartbeat—an unreadable glint, perhaps approval, perhaps warning—before settling on Hercules.
They spoke quietly at the center, heads close, words too low for even enhanced hearing to catch.
But not for Veil.
*She's telling him about you,* Veil whispered urgently from the shadows, voice tight with caution. *Not everything—nothing of Iris, nothing of the rebellion below—but enough. Your power. Your restraint. The potential threat… or asset.*
Atlas remained outwardly still, expression neutral.
Athena nodded once to Hercules, a crisp gesture of finality. Then she vanished—stepping sideways into nothingness, leaving only the faint scent of olive wood and ozone.
Whispers erupted imdiately—anxious, awed.
"The Goddess of Wisdom herself…"
"Why here? Why now?"
Hercules turned back to the field.
His eyes found Atlas across the distance, locking on with new intensity.
The next mont, Atlas felt the ground shift beneath him.
Not physically—no tremor, no crack.
Administratively.
A sigil flared to life under his boots—pale gold runes spiraling outward, ancient and binding. Before anyone could react, the world lurched, colors inverting, and Atlas was gone—yanked through space by divine decree.
He reappeared in a vast, tiered hall of white marble and living knowledge.
Rows of stone seats rose in perfect semicircles, already filled with dozens of demigods and divine scions—hand-selected, auras subdued in reverence. Floating orbs of soft light hovered overhead, illuminating scrolls and holographic projections that shifted with the lesson. At the front, upon a simple dais, stood a woman draped in flowing robes of deep indigo, embroidered with constellations that moved slowly across the fabric.
The Goddess of Knowledge—tis, so whispered, though nas mattered little here. Her presence was calm, imnse, a quiet ocean of intellect that drowned superficial thought.
She did not introduce herself.
"Sit," she said simply, voice resonating in the mind as much as the ears.
Atlas took the nearest empty seat, blending into the assembly.
The lesson began without preamble.
Human behavior. The delicate machinery of governance. The interplay of fear and faith. Control through kindness versus control through terror. Empires that endured across millennia—and those that crumbled beneath their own weight.
She lectured with precision, posing questions that cut to bone.
Most answers from the students were theoretical—recited from scrolls, polished by ambition.
When her gaze settled on Atlas, the hall quieted further. Her eyes sharpened like owl talons.
"How do you rule humans who do not wish to be ruled?" she asked directly.
Atlas t her stare without flinching. "You don't," he answered, voice steady. "You give them sothing worth choosing freely. Purpose. Protection. A future better than rebellion."
Murmurs rippled through the seats—surprise, disagreent, intrigue.
"And when they rebel anyway?" she pressed, leaning forward slightly.
"You listen," Atlas replied without hesitation. "Truly listen. Then you decide whether they're wrong—or whether you are. If it's you, change. If it's them… correct with minimal force. Rule by consent endures. Rule by fear invites knives in the dark."
The goddess studied him for a long, weighing silence. No approval showed on her face, but the questions moved on—yet the hall felt altered, as if his words had left a mark.
When the session ended, she dismissed them with a simple nod. Students filed out in hushed discussion.
Atlas stepped into the corridor outside.
Hercules was waiting, leaning against a pillar with arms crossed, that easy hero's smile back in place.
"Congratulations," he said warmly.
Atlas frowned slightly, wary. "For what?"
"You've been selected," Hercules replied, pushing off the pillar. His smile faded into sothing graver, more serious. "A mission. Direct from the upper circles. Into Hell itself."
The word hung heavy between them—Hell, the fractured realms below even Lower Heaven, domains of tornt, demons, and forgotten divinities.
Atlas's pulse remained steady, but deep within his chest, the demon god heart stirred—slow, anticipatory, undeniably hungry. A low thrum of eagerness echoed through his veins.
"What kind of mission?" he asked.
Hercules t his gaze squarely. "Retrieval. Containnt. The kind that decides whether you're truly worthy of remaining in Middle Heaven… or climbing higher."
He paused, studying Atlas's reaction.
"Or," he added quietly, "whether you're sothing else entirely."
Atlas nodded once, resolve settling like armor.
"Then let's begin."
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