The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss-Chapter 417 - 415: Heaven Talks
The High Heavens shook with arguments.
Cloud-thrones cracked. Starlight flickered. Even the sacred banners of the Pantheons trembled as the greatest war councils in existence gathered for the same reason:
One mortal had shaken the divine order.
And not just shaken it—
split it clean down the spine.
Gods argued across constellations. Storms born from outrage roared between temples. Golden bridges groaned beneath the weight of a thousand marching hosts preparing for a war no one wanted to name aloud.
War with Hell.
War with each other.
War with something older, awakening beneath the mortals’ soil.
And all of it because of him.
Atlas.
A mortal who should have lived and died unseen, whose name should have been washed away by time like any other grain of sand—
Yet now, the name Atlas carried the weight of prophecy in its syllables, fear in its breath, and revelation in its shadow.
He had become the hinge upon which cosmic destiny turned.
He had become the fracture.
.
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O D I N A N D H I S S O N S
The golden gates slammed open as Thor stormed into the hall of Valaskjálf, breathing lightning.
The hall—normally a cathedral of calm runes and quiet wisdom—shuddered beneath his fury. Columns shook. The woven tapestry of the Nine Realms rippled as though caught in a god’s exhale.
"Father!" Thor roared, his voice rattling constellations. "Why do we wait?! You saw the vision. This mortal—this Atlas—humiliated the slaves, the Thrones. Send me. Let me crush him."
His fury was a living thing. Sparks crackled across his beard. Static raised gooseflesh on the skin of every god who stood too close. He struck a column with Mjölnir; the pillar shattered, dust swirling like powdered stars.
But Baldr, radiant and calm, stepped forward. Even Thor’s storm hesitated.
Baldr’s glow softened the broken marble, his presence a balm to the air. Yet his eyes...the sadness there was ancient as winter.
"Brother," he said softly, "to rush at him is to throw yourself at a storm. He is not what the gods believe."
Thor growled, "Then what is he?"
Baldr’s eyes dimmed, heavy with forbidden knowledge. He glanced toward the far end of the hall—toward Odin’s silent figure—and for a moment his breath caught in his throat.
"He carries the spark of the empress, spark of the Genesis... The beings we swore never to speak of."
Even speaking the name felt like pulling rusted blades from old wounds.
"The beings who once made even us kneel, who made you....kneel."
Thor froze. His fingers tightened around Mjölnir. He remembered stories whispered by dying giants, tales Odin never confirmed but never denied—stories of beings who devoured galaxies and forged gods like weapons.
His heart hammered. For the first time in centuries...Thor felt something dangerously close to doubt.
Odin’s fist tightened around Gungnir.
The old spear hummed. Its runes brightened, flickering like the pulse of a frightened animal.
Loki, leaning lazily against a fractured throne, smiled thinly.
"And that’s not the worst of it."
Odin’s one good eye sharpened. "Speak."
Loki flicked dust from his sleeve, the gesture too casual for the gravity of his words.
"Your ravens returned from the mortal realm. They went deep—far into the Dark Continent..."
Odin’s voice was a growl. "What did they see?"
"A ripple," Loki whispered. "Something older than the Tree... older than the gods."
The hall chilled. Even the floating candles dimmed as if listening.
"It is waking, they are coming, from the deapths of hell...." Loki said. "all ...all because of my dear friend Atlas..."
Silence cracked open like a fault line.
A wind, cold and sharp as ancestral fear, swept through Valaskjálf. Odin felt it first—old memories rising, memories he had carved from his own bones for the sake of sanity.
He remembered kneeling.
Gods kneeling.
Entire pantheons trembling before a void-lit throne.
No.
Not again.
Not because of a mortal.
But the vision had been clear.
The waking presence unmistakable.
Atlas was the catalyst.
The crack.
The harbinger.
Odin exhaled slowly, the weight of prophecy turning his bones to chains.
".... Thor," he said. "...Go to the mortal realm, take your weak form and ask Atlas, ask that stupid mortal child, if he will deny me for the last time..."
Thor’s nostrils flared, eagerness and dread mixing like fire and ash.
Baldr bowed his head, whispering a prayer to a future already stained with blood.
And Loki?
Loki smiled as if watching the first drop of rain fall before a world-ending storm.
.
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Z E U S A N D H I S B R O T H E R S
Storms cracked overhead as Zeus and his brothers gathered in the Palace of Tempests.
Lightning crawled across the ceiling like chained serpents. Thunder rolled in circles, trapped in the marble like the pleas of old titans.
They argued before the lightning even settled.
Poseidon slammed his trident on the marble. "The seas are restless, brother! This mortal tilts the balance of the world..His legions of Fallens and demons reaching everywhere. The tides recoil when he breathes."
He wasn’t exaggerating.
Even now, miles of ocean twisted in unnatural spirals, from obscene monsters from the dark continent, as if trying to flee from the mere echo of Atlas’s presence.
Hades’ cloak of shadows wrinkled with agitation. "The Underworld screams. Souls cry his name. Some refuse to kneel to me...saying their messiah has arrived. Do you understand the severity of that?"
He stepped forward, the cold of the grave preceding him. When he spoke, the torches dimmed, shadows lengthening like frightened children clutching at their master’s feet.
Zeus stared at both of them, jaw clenched so hard the air hummed.
"He is a mistake," Zeus said. "A cosmic aberration born from a dying age. And mistakes are erased."
But his voice trembled—not with anger, but with something far more dangerous for a king of gods.
Fear.
Poseidon snarled. "Then let us erase the mortal continents before he unites them. Release the Leviathans. Sink their cities. Drown their armies."
Lightning cracked down the length of Poseidon’s trident, reacting to his rising fury. Ocean spray materialized from thin air, soaking the marble floor.
Hades stepped closer, shadows gathering at his feet. "I care nothing for mortal armies," he hissed. "But Atlas disturbs the passage of souls. That cannot be tolerated."
Zeus turned away, the storm outside echoing the storm twisting inside his chest.
He remembered another mortal once—born of prophecy, raised in defiance, who brought Olympus to its knees.
Hercules had almost ended the era of gods.
But this Atlas...
This Atlas made Heracles look like a child lighting sparks beside a wildfire.
Poseidon noticed the tremor in Zeus’ fist.
The king of Olympus... was afraid.
"No," Zeus whispered, almost too softly for his brothers to hear. "Not again. Not another mortal that the Fates have chosen instead of us."
He raised his lightning bolt, and the hall blazed with raw power.
"Prepare the Titans’ chains," Zeus commanded. "If Heaven falters, Olympus will strike the first blow. I will not let history repeat."
The shadows around Hades pulsed.
Poseidon’s ocean eyes darkened.
Thunder answered like a drumbeat for war.
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R A A N D T H E H E L I O P O L I S P A N T H E O N
The throne room of Heliopolis glowed with blinding heat as Ra meditated in the center of a golden circle.
The air wavered, shimmering with solar fire. Sand particles floated weightlessly, caught in miniature orbits as if the god’s presence distorted the laws of physics themselves.
Then—
Crack.
The sun disk above his head split.
A sound no god had heard in all history.
Horus rushed forward. "Father—!"
But Ra’s eyes were unfocused, burning with prophecy. Light poured from them, radiant and terrifying, illuminating visions only he could see.
"I saw him," Ra whispered. "Atlas... crowned in light and silence... wearing the mantle of origin and the wound of oblivion...he said it, he said he will wage war on all of us...."
The words tasted like scorched truth.
The gods around him felt them like a heat that melted certainty.
Isis gasped. "The wound... father... that belongs only to the First Dawn." 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
Anubis stiffened, jackal ears flattening as though he heard the future’s heartbeat falter.
Horus’ wings twitched open, feathers rippling with dread. "Father, what does it mean? Why would a mortal bear such symbols? Symbols of Genesis..."
But it was Set who stepped into the circle.
Set, whose smile was a sharpened crescent.
Set, whose footsteps made the sand recoil.
He grinned like a serpent tasting blood.
"Then the answer is obvious," Set said. "We...ally with Hell...ally with one of the Empresses."
The entire pantheon recoiled.
Even the flames paused, as though uncertain they wished to burn in his presence.
Set’s smirk deepened. "This mortal is no enemy of Heaven, no pet of the gods. He is something new. Something that can kill us all if we stand divided...."
He spread his arms wide, every scale in his armor reflecting Ra’s trembling light.
"So I say we speak to one of the Empresses of Hell before Zeus or Odin does."
Even Ra staggered at the audacity.
Memories flickered through his mind—blood-red thrones, laughter like cracking bones, the Empresses’ crowns forged from the skulls of forgotten kings.
To bargain with Hell...
To shake hands with them...
The shame almost burned him.
But the vision he had seen burned hotter.
Atlas, standing upon a field of ash.
Atlas, wearing stars like armor.
Atlas, walking toward a temple of broken gods.
Ra closed his eyes, and in the darkness behind them he saw a truth far more painful than Set’s suggestion.
Heaven could not face this alone.
Not Odin’s wisdom.
Not Zeus’ storms.
Not Ra’s sun.
Atlas was not a threat.
Atlas was an ending.
Ra’s voice cracked like old stone. "Send emissaries. Prepare the chariots. If Hell will parley... we must listen."
Set’s grin sharpened.
Horus stared in disbelief, heart pounding like war drums.
Isis whispered, "May the gods forgive what we are about to do."
But Ra knew the truth:
The gods would not be forgiven.
Not for this.
Not by what was coming.


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