Chapter 332: Chapter 331: A warning
Atlas had not wanted sleep, but sleep had taken him anyway.
It came not like a gift but like a hammer, slamming down on his bones, crushing the last embers of his vigilance. His body—scarred, taut, weary from the trials of Hell—collapsed onto the jagged stone. He lay there in the heat and silence, a giant subdued by the simplest tyranny: exhaustion.
Yet even as his eyes closed, he resisted. His thoughts raged like chained beasts. I cannot rest. Not here. Not now. Not while Aurora presses deeper, not while the chains of this realm coil around us. Not while Loki—
Loki. The name seared like an ember in his chest.
It was that thought, that wound disguised as loyalty, that pulled him under.
Not the soft hush of mortal night, but the cavernous void of Hell’s dreaming—a silence so thick it had weight. Here the air was dry as dust and yet heavy as oceans. He felt himself float, then sink, then be wrenched.
A force seized him, claws invisible, tugging his soul free from the fragile shell of his body.
Atlas snarled. His teeth bared, his fists clenched. His will flared like iron dragged into a forge. Another trick? Another fucking demigod prying at my sleep?
The last time they had entered his dreams, he had torn their illusions apart like rotten cloth. He would do so again.
The void trembled. Something moved.
At first, only light—searing, sudden, impossible. Not Hell’s crimson glow nor the pale fires of demon-wraiths. This was purer, fiercer, a conflagration that carried the taste of dawn.
Then, through the blaze, a figure stepped.
Hair like wildfire spilling down his shoulders. Eyes golden, bright enough to blind. Skin alight with an inner flame.
Atlas’s breath caught. His rage collapsed into stillness.
"...Loki."
For a moment, disbelief anchored him. Loki had been broken the last he saw—bloodied, gasping, his laughter drowned in pain beneath the strike of Ouserous, that thunder-whelp, son of Thor. Atlas had carried that vision ever since: Loki’s body limp, his fire dimmed.
And now here he stood, blazing like the sun’s own child.
Atlas’s throat tightened. Words tumbled up, jagged, unsteady. "Are you—are you whole? The wound—"
"No time." Loki’s voice was flame, quick and cracking. His expression was not sly, not mischievous as it had once always been. No teasing smile. No glint of mischief. Only urgency. "Listen. Every second burns."
Atlas stiffened. A part of him wanted to fight the command, to bark back that no one ordered him. But the light in Loki’s eyes—sunfire laced with desperation—cut through his pride. He stayed silent.
Loki drew closer, his form bending the dreamscape. Heat shimmered in the air, sweat beading along Atlas’s skin even though this was not flesh but spirit.
"The gods of Heaven are moving," Loki said, his voice low and fierce. "Not one. Not two. All. They are planning, Atlas. They are planning something deep, for Hell."
Atlas blinked, slow. His heart pounded, refusing the meaning. "...Here? For Hell?"
"Yes." Loki’s tone was iron. "They mean to claim it. They mean to bind it. To leash what was never theirs. They have seen the cracks, they smell blood. Heaven will wear Hell’s crown as a trophy."
The words struck like stone on stone. Atlas’s jaw set. "Why would they—"
"Because ambition is hunger without end. Atlas." Loki’s voice cracked, like a fire breaking wood. "They want dominion. They want every throne. And in their grand design, Atlas..."
The dream pressed closer, the firelight blazing like a furnace. Loki’s eyes locked on his, so bright they seemed to scorch the truth into his skull.
"...you are the center."
Atlas staggered. He almost laughed, bitter, jagged. "Me? Don’t spin riddles, Loki. I am no god. I’m no king. I’m a man who clawed too far. Why in every abyss would I be the center?"
Loki’s voice cracked again, desperate. "Because you are tied. Because you carry oaths older than you realize. Odin’s blood stains your path. His bargains bind you. Heaven sees not Atlas the man, but Atlas the key. The bridge. The weapon. The threat."
Atlas’s fists clenched until his nails carved into dream-flesh. His chest heaved. He wanted to spit, to scream. "I made no pledge to them! I swore nothing but what I chose. Odin and I have a deal. That’s it. That’s all."
Loki’s gaze softened. He looked at Atlas the way a brother might, one who bore both love and pity. "You think gods care for the lines of your contracts? Their belief reshapes reality. If they name you pawn, the board bends until you are. And belief, Atlas, in divine hands..."
His voice dropped, almost a whisper. "...belief burns worlds."
Silence yawned wide. Atlas’s rage collapsed into confusion, into something rawer. Fear? Perhaps.
He opened his mouth, the question clawing its way free—"Then what must I—"
But the dream shattered.
The fire winked out. Loki’s light fell into ash.
Atlas’s eyes flew open.
Hell’s morning. If such a thing could be called morning.
The sky above him was black iron stretched thin, veined with faint embers. The rivers of molten stone hissed, their glow painting the air with dull fire. The stink of sulfur clung thick in his lungs.
He sat upright, his body trembling, sweat dripping into his beard. His heart still thundered, as if trying to punch its way free of his chest.
"...Loki." He breathed the name as curse, as prayer, as wound.
He dragged himself to his feet. His body moved like a storm-caged beast, pacing, restless. His mind spun with Loki’s words.
The gods. All of them. Coming here. To claim Hell. And me—the center of their plan? Why? Why me?
He remembered Loki broken under Ouserous’s strike. Remembered his own helpless fury. He remembered the first oath he had sworn—vengeance, protection, loyalty tangled together like chains. And now Loki, flame-eyed, had planted a truth that cut deeper than any sword.
Atlas’s hands twitched. His eyes fell.
There.
The Key.
Lying against the black stone, faintly glowing. Silver, traced with veins of blue fire. The Heavenly Key.
Aurora had pulled it from the dungeon of Orcus at Titus, and Atlas had carried it ever since. A relic of Heaven, capable of carving a temporary door between realms. A thing of grace forged into a blade of intrusion.
He picked it up now. Its weight was unnatural, too light and yet impossibly dense, like holding a fragment of sky. The cold bit into his palm, deeper than Hell’s heat could warm.
He stared at it, jaw tight. This. This could take me there. To their seat. To the truth. To see for myself the plotting hands that dare call me their weapon.
But another thought whispered, sharp as doubt always was. Or it drags you into their snare. Or it delivers you straight into their chains. You’ve danced on one god’s leash already. How many more can you stomach?
Atlas laughed, harsh, bitter. The sound echoed against the molten cliffs. "Fuck it. If I am their pawn, I’ll flip the board. I’ll choke them with it."
Still, his steps slowed. He could not rush blind. Not this.
He needed answers. More than a key. More than a warning.
A name left his lips.
"Uriel."
The word rang through the molten air, carried on his breath like a strike of iron on anvil.
Uriel. The angel. The defeated. The one whose blade had once clashed with Heaven’s, whose voice had carried its hymns, whose silence now weighed heavier than most armies.
Atlas needed her knowledge. Needed her fire. Needed her truth about Heaven’s moves, Heaven’s throne, Heaven’s ambition.
He called again, voice raw, urgent, a war drum pounding into the stillness.