The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss-Chapter 99: Damned
Chapter 99: Chapter 99: Damned
The battlefield hung in eerie silence.
Hundreds of dragons, frozen mid-flight. Their wings still beat the air, caught in the rhythm of defiance that no longer mattered. Their eyes wide with confusion, rage, and fear—expressions that now belonged to statues carved from time itself.
Atlas stood atop one such beast, its scales still warm beneath his boots, its body straining against invisible laws it could no longer resist. His breath came ragged. His heart pounded like war drums trying to remember peace.
He turned slowly to Aurora, who hovered just above the chaos. Her golden hair, unaffected by gravity or reason, rose like a halo against the burning sky. Her expression wasn’t smug. It wasn’t even proud.
It was calm.
It was beyond.
"You just... stopped them all," Atlas whispered, voice raw from exertion.
Aurora tilted her head slightly, a small, tired smile forming at the corner of her lips.
"I did more than stop them," she said. "I rewrote the sky."
Then she raised her hand.
Reality shimmered.
The very fabric of existence rippled like water. Atlas felt it deep in his bones—a change, not just in the wind, not just in the battlefield, but in the pulse of the world. As if some ancient song had changed tempo, and now everything danced to Aurora’s rhythm.
This wasn’t magic. This wasn’t strands of spells.
This was Law.
And Aurora had become its architect.
’This is real,’ Atlas thought, gripping his sword until his knuckles whitened. ’She’s not just powerful anymore—she’s something else entirely.’
He remembered the last time he saw her like this. Not on the battlefield. Not cloaked in divine terror. But by a fire, reciting theories from forgotten tomes. She’d taught him how to shape mana, how to speak without words, how to trust the stillness between spells.
But now she was the stillness. And the storm. And the law that bound both.
"How long have you had this?" he asked.
Her smile faltered slightly, replaced by something more fragile. "Since I started reading ....’The Book of the Damned’."
Atlas flinched.
"You think Henry was the only one who found forbidden knowledge? That he was the only one who learned how to reshape the world?"
He didn’t answer. Couldn’t.
Aurora looked toward the horizon, where the sun was barely beginning to rise, painting the blood-stained clouds in gold.
"Unlike your father," she said, "I didn’t just read it. I understood it. I let it consume me. Let it rewrite me."
Atlas looked at her differently now. Not as a mentor. Not even as family.
As something terrifying.
"What does that make you?" he asked, his voice barely audible.
Aurora’s smile returned, softer this time.
"A goddess? A demon? Or maybe just a woman who refused to let the world define her anymore."
Then, quieter: "But don’t worry, Atlas. You’re still the star of this story. I’m just here to make sure you don’t fall."
She reached out and placed her hand on his shoulder. The contact felt warm—but there was something beneath it, like touching lightning sealed in silk.
Then she stepped back, arms rising.
"And now, I give you the stage."
With a flick of her wrist, the air groaned.
The spell shifted.
The dragons remained frozen.
But now—they could see. Could feel. Could suffer’.
Aurora’s voice rang across the field, clear as a chime that silenced even thought:
"They’re yours now."
Atlas realized, the voice had also stopped, like hum of someone or something controlling the dragons, the one who was behind the attack. The one who knew too much. Speaking his name in the language forbidden in this world.
Atlas didn’t move immediately. He breathed. Once. Twice.
The wind brushed against him, cold and metallic, like it too had been reshaped by her will. The scent of sulfur still hung in the air, tinged now with ozone and blood. His heartbeat slowed, each beat heavier than the last.
He looked down at the dragon beneath him.
Its eye twitched.
Not in fear.
In awareness.
It knew.
And that changed everything.
"Come on, what are you waiting for?," Aurora said behind him. "You have suffered in Lara’s shadow enough..."
Atlas clenched his fists, then slowly raised his sword.
Not toward the dragons.
But toward her.
.
.
(Flash back)
Flashes. Blinding. Burning.
A battlefield not on this earth but somewhere deeper, deeper—where the sky was glass and the rivers screamed.
He saw The Guide standing atop a mountain of dead gods, black robes bleeding runes, pages of the Book of the Damned swirling around him like wings made of scripture.
Dracula—larger than the sun, eyes like void moons—descended from the heavens on a throne of ruin.
And the Guide met him—not with a sword.
But with a word.
A single syllable spoken in a language the world wasn’t meant to hear.
Reality cracked like thin ice beneath a titan’s foot.
The demons that flanked Dracula erupted, their forms mutating, bending into fractals. Atlas remembered the sound—not a roar, but a prayer in reverse.
The Book hadn’t just rewritten rules.
It unwrote them.
And now, in the present—he understood.
The dragons.
The grief he felt from the voice earlier, who separated the sky. Blaming him for her misfortune.
The bindings of reality unwinding thread by thread.
"It has begun....The world isn’t obeying natural law anymore... it’s obeying the one who won the war.....The GUIDE "
Aurora looked out at the wounded skyline, her voice colder than it had ever been. "...The Guide.....Yes, I knew you also read the damned book, no wonder you are surging with power...."
Atlas felt the shift in his chest—not pain, not fear.
Purpose?
But also... blame.
If the voice earlier was right, then the dragons came here not to destroy the source ...him.
But to answer the song the Book had started singing. The Guide told him, warned him of many things, one of them being, attracting attention from these...
’It will spread, soon it will spread everywhere, the epicenter being me.’ He thought, as the Guide told him.
He was the page now.
He was the vector.
He was the rewriter.
And that meant the world would follow him—or fall around him.
Without another word, he raised his hand.
"Veil," he called.
From the shadow beside him, a low growl pulsed. It wasn’t angry.
It was ready.
Veil emerged, not as a compact blade this time, but as a pillar of coiled shadow rising into the war-torn sky.
He twisted, spun, and then stretched—growing. Not merely in size, but in ’form’ Becoming a weapon not meant for mortals.
Runes carved themselves along his length, ancient and bleeding with red light, like open wounds in scripture. Each symbol screamed in a tongue Atlas did not yet understand—but somehow obeyed.
The blade kept growing.
Longer. Heavier. Hungrier.
Aurora took a step back, brow furrowed. "What are you—?"
But Atlas knew.
The change had begun.
He looked to the east.
The wind carried the first stench of ’sulfur’. Not smoke. Not dragonflame.
But hell.
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