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Now reading: Chapter 459 456: Falling Stars from The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss, a Fantasy novel by JaggerJohns101.

The staging hall of Lower Heaven stretched like a cathedral built for war.

Its floor was a single, unbroken slab of pale stone veined with slow-moving currents of mana, each pulse synchronized to the heartbeat of the realm itself. The light rose and fell beneath the surface like breath beneath skin. Vast pillars climbed into a ceiling too high to see clearly, their faces etched with nas—deploynts, victories, failures, annihilations. So inscriptions were sharp and recent. Others had been worn thin by centuries of passage, as if Heaven itself had tried to forget them.

It never did.

Atlas arrived without announcent.

He did not need one.

Conversation didn't stop all at once. It faded outward in ripples—voices trailing off mid-sentence, laughter thinning into silence—as he crossed the threshold. The hall seed to lean inward, attention drawing tight around him.

Strike teams stood clustered throughout the space, demigods bound for different realms and different ends. So laughed too loudly, the sound brittle, overperford. Others stood silent, faces set, hands busy with weapons already perfect—checked and rechecked in rituals that had nothing to do with readiness and everything to do with fear.

So glanced at Atlas and quickly looked away.

Others stared.

He felt it imdiately.

Recognition.

Not official. Not sanctioned. But real.

They knew him.

Not as Atlas, Son of Ra, mission leader.

But as sothing else.

As a story that hadn't stayed buried.

As a rumor that had survived contact with reality—and grown teeth.

Veil lingered half-rged with his shadow, indistinct but alert, its presence a pressure rather than a shape. Bela walked at his side, expression calm, posture loose in the way only soone genuinely dangerous could afford. Every step she took was asured, casual, as if nothing in this hall could surprise her.

Sekht was not with them.

Yet.

Atlas stopped near the central plinth where mission leaders gathered their assigned units. The air subtly thickened, mana currents slowing, as five presences approached.

Iris ca first.

She moved with the precise confidence of soone trained from childhood to be observed—and to survive it. Her armor was light, white and bronze, inscribed with fine runes of cognition and battlefield awareness that shifted faintly as her eyes moved. A spear rested easily in her grip, its haft humming with Athena's distant blessing. Her dark hair was bound into a tight braid, her gaze sharp, dissecting rather than judging.

She inclined her head. Respectful. Controlled.

"Mission leader," she said.

Atlas returned the nod. No more. No less.

Pegasus followed like a storm barely leashed.

Broad-shouldered and tall even among demigods, he moved with restless energy, wings folded tight against his back—white feathers marked by faint scars of gold lightning. His armor was heavier, reinforced at the chest and shoulders, Zeus's sigil etched openly across the breastplate as if daring anyone to comnt.

He grinned when he saw Atlas.

Not cautiously.

Openly.

"Still breathing," Pegasus said, voice carrying farther than it needed to. "Good."

Several heads turned.

Atlas's gaze sharpened—not at Pegasus, but at the room.

Too many ears.

Pegasus caught the shift a half-second later and laughed, unapologetic. "Relax. Everyone already knows."

Knows what?

Atlas didn't ask. The answer wouldn't help.

Aron arrived without fanfare, sunlight dimd to embers around him as if deliberately restrained. Son of Apollo—slender where Pegasus was massive, composed where others radiated tension. A longbow of living light rested across his back, its glow muted but present. His eyes shone faint gold, not with arrogance, but with a healer's constant awareness of how easily things broke.

He t Atlas's gaze and smiled—soft, genuine.

"Missed you," Aron said. "Hard to find soone who kills gods and then vanishes without a word."

Pegasus snorted. "You make it sound romantic."

"It was," Aron replied mildly.

Kael and Nephra completed the formation.

Kael, Son of Tyr, was all angles and restraint. One arm bore heavier armor than the other, runes of oath and sacrifice etched so deeply they looked carved by pain rather than tool. His expression was steady, unflinching, the look of soone who had already accepted the cost—and would pay it without complaint.

Nephra moved like smoke given intent.

Daughter of Anubis, wrapped in dark linen and obsidian armor that absorbed light instead of reflecting it. Her jackal-headed helm hung at her side, revealing eyes like polished onyx—ancient, calm, already half-turned toward the dead.

Five demigods.

All watching him.

All waiting.

Pegasus stepped forward and clapped Atlas on the shoulder—hard enough to draw a ripple of surprise from nearby onlookers.

"Good to see you again," Pegasus said. "Slayer of Aron."

The hall went very quiet.

Aron winced. "You keep saying that like I didn't agree to the duel."

"You died," Pegasus replied cheerfully. "Details are negotiable."

Atlas felt it then.

Not hostility.

Alignnt.

He looked at them properly now—not as nas on a roster, not as assets to be deployed.

As co-conspirators.

"You're being careless," Atlas said flatly.

Pegasus grinned wider. "So are you. Guess that's the the."

Iris glanced toward the distant gates. "We should move. The portals open in minutes."

Atlas nodded. "Walk with ."

They fell into formation without discussion, spacing instinctive as they crossed the hall. Around them, other strike teams began to mobilize—demigods of fire and frost, shadow and steel. Gods' children wearing expectation like ill-fitting armor.

So looked excited.

So terrified.

So already broken.

Atlas spoke without turning his head.

"This mission is simple," he said. "We investigate a breach in the Second Layer of Hell. We confirm the status of containnt wards. We retrieve Michael's Essence if possible."

"And if not?" Kael asked.

"We leave," Atlas replied. "Or we end it cleanly."

Nephra's gaze sharpened. "Cleanly how?"

Atlas t her eyes. "No suffering."

She inclined her head. Approval, quiet and final.

Pegasus leaned closer, voice lowered. "You know they're watching, right?"

Atlas didn't answer.

Because Pegasus wasn't wrong.

Because everyone here already knew.

"You've been busy," Pegasus continued. "Word travels. Especially when Ares stays dead."

A flicker of tension moved through the group like a held breath.

Aron exhaled slowly. "Careful."

Pegasus waved him off. "No point pretending anymore."

Atlas stopped.

The others halted with him.

He turned, gaze sweeping across their faces.

"I won't protect you from what you say," he said calmly. "If you're here to posture, leave now."

Pegasus t his eyes without flinching. "I'm here because I'm tired of pretending the gods aren't afraid."

Silence settled—not awkward, but heavy.

Then Iris spoke, quietly. "So are we."

Atlas searched their expressions.

No hesitation.

No fear.

Only resolve.

He nodded once. "Then listen carefully. From this point forward, don't talk to unless necessary. Treat this as an easy mission. We observe. We extract. We leave."

Pegasus frowned. "Easy?"

Atlas's lips curved faintly. "For us."

The gates lood ahead.

Massive circular constructs of layered sigils and rotating rings, each keyed to a different realm. The Hell-gates burned cold—black iron rimd with pale blue frost, mana bleeding outward like vapor from a wound.

Strike teams lined up before their assigned portals.

The air buzzed with anticipation.

With dread.

With longing.

Atlas stepped onto the platform before the Hell-gate.

Runes flared.

"Destination locked," intoned a disembodied voice. "First Layer of Hell."

Pegasus rolled his shoulders. "Haven't fallen in a while."

Aron smirked. "Try not to scream."

Kael closed his eyes briefly. "For Tyr."

Nephra fitted her helm into place. "For the dead."

Iris t Atlas's gaze. "Ready."

Atlas stepped forward.

The gate opened.

And Heaven dropped them.

They fell like stars.

Not through air—but through absence.

Light stretched into threads. Sound vanished. Ti folded inward. The sensation clawed at the soul rather than the body.

Atlas did not scream.

He rembered this feeling.

The tearing weightlessness.

The pull.

The war.

They hit Hell like teors.

The First Layer shattered beneath them—obsidian plains exploding outward in concentric rings as molten fissures tore open the ground. Heat roared upward in waves, carrying the stench of sulfur and old blood.

Pegasus slamd down with thunderous force, wings flaring instinctively.

Aron rolled, ca up kneeling, bow already in hand.

Kael landed solidly, boots sinking inches into scorched stone.

Nephra simply appeared, death magic bleeding into the ground around her like ink in water.

Iris landed last—controlled, precise.

Atlas remained standing.

Hell recognized him.

The sky churned above—red and black clouds folding into themselves, lightning crawling sideways through smoke. Distant screams echoed like mories rather than sound.

And Atlas rembered.

The war with the Demon Lords.

Cities of bone and brass.

Rivers of screaming souls turned into weapons.

The Demon Kings rising, one by one.

Battles that tore entire layers apart.

He rembered pushing past the Fourth Layer.

The Three Empresses.

The sky-skin that bled when struck.

The land that scread beneath his feet.

Kije Berves.

The thing that wore a horizon like armor.

His jaw tightened.

Pegasus stepped closer, voice low. "You're back here."

Atlas didn't respond.

Pegasus leaned in further. "An she knows."

The na struck like a blade.

Atlas turned slowly. "What did you say?"

Pegasus swallowed. "She knows you're not a demigod."

The sky pulsed.

More stars fell—other strike teams arriving, impacts flaring across the horizon.

Pegasus continued, urgent now. "She asked how you did it. How you killed Asmodeus when the gods couldn't. How a human—"

"Stop," Atlas said quietly.

Pegasus froze.

Atlas stepped closer until they were nearly chest to chest, his voice low and flat.

"Say it again," Atlas said, "and I'll forget you're useful."

Pegasus t his gaze, sweat beading at his temple. "Then tell ."

Atlas leaned in.

"Shut up."

The sky scread.

A beam of falling light tore through the clouds.

Another strike team landed nearby.

Six figures.

And one familiar presence.

Sekht stood at their center as the dust cleared, arms crossed, grin sharp and unapologetic.

"Well," she called brightly. "This is nostalgic."

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