The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss
Chapter 211 - 212: His seat.
CHAPTER 211: CHAPTER 212: HIS SEAT.
A gust of wind rolled across the valley floor, tugging at the half-raised banners and half-buried corpses in the distance. The war was not far behind them—it lingered in the scent of ash, blood, and ozone. But here, just beyond the charred plains, something else had begun.
A tent, not yet alive but breathing—its canvas flapping against the wind as arcane sigils stitched themselves across the cloth—was being rendered into shape by ten mages, their arms outstretched, weaving elements into form. The earth groaned beneath them, forced to become foundation. The tent poles sprouted from stone, thin and black, runed in old war-tongue. Heat shimmered at the edges where fire and light stitched the seams.
Inside, at the center, a table was growing.
It began as a simple mound of earth.
Then the High Mage stepped forward. His hands glowed with twin spells—earth and sunfire. With movements slow but sure, he carved the stone, not with blade or chisel, but with will. Each gesture shaped the rock, smoothing its edges, coaxing its heart into clarity. Molten light trickled down the sides like golden sap. The heat smelled like burnt metal and jasmine. Then came the flame—not to burn, but to refine.
The stone sang as it was seared.
Minutes passed.
And then the table emerged—circular, glasslike, shimmering with internal light. It was imperfect. Still rough at its edges. Not ceremonial, not yet regal. But real.
Nine chairs surrounded it.
One for each kingdom’s crown.
But one chair stood slightly apart.
An extra seat.
For the uncrowned prince. For the man who had crushed a Prime with one hand, who had unraveled a whole empire by sheer presence. A king in all but title.
Atlas stared at that chair longer than any of the others.
And not for the reason Henry believed.
That chair meant the future. And Atlas didn’t yet know if he wanted to sit in it.
His gaze lifted toward the great beast across the field. The massive, feathered creature from Zenetia—their national animal, now serving as living transport for their diplomats. Its wings were folded like cathedrals of bone and plume. Its feathers, glistening with dew and blood, shimmered in the rising sun.
"You had been busy, father..." Atlas murmured.
Henry stood beside him, arms folded stiffly, back straight despite the decades. His armor bore no scratches—not from lack of battle, but because ’others had bled for him’.
They stood in the corner of the forming war-tent, half-shrouded in shadow.
Around them, the new court gathered.
Lara, Claire, Denish, and Devid stood behind Atlas. Weapons sheathed, but alert. Watching everyone. Not just the enemies—but the allies. Especially the allies.
Across the makeshift hall, clusters of kings and their entourages claimed territory. Each nation gathered in its own corner, like lions forced to eat at one table. Their faces wore masks of diplomacy, but the air was thick with mistrust and freshly buried rage.
And near the back, slowly regaining her balance—Eli
...or Elizabeth.
She had dressed hastily. Her long white coat clung to her like a flag in defeat. Her silver hair was still tangled from the battle, her voice hoarse from the invisible chokehold she had endured.
At her side stood the Number Three Prime and Merlin.
And behind them... the scraps of her knights. Ghosts in cracked armor.
Atlas didn’t speak to her.
He didn’t need to.
His silence was louder than any judgment.
He turned to Henry.
"...You were watching," Atlas said. "And waiting.....Weren’t you."
Henry chuckled softly, as though the weight of betrayal were merely a card he’d held too long.
"You caught me," he said. "I’m just a man. When my army became plagued, when the war looked unwinnable... I gave up on my arrogance."
His eyes flicked briefly to Aurora—who stood still and wordless near the tent’s entrance, lost within herself.
"...She reminded me of a gentler time," Henry went on. "Of your mother. Of everything we forgot."
Atlas didn’t respond. But his hands tensed, his fingers twitching slightly. He could still remember how often Henry had spoken of peace—but only after he’d broken things beyond repair.
"I thought I would try peace again....So I reached out."
"To who?" Atlas asked, more curious than accusatory.
"To everyone," Henry replied. "Enemies. Neutrals. Forgotten nations. Allies we’d betrayed, and those who betrayed us.....Thirty-eight in total."
Atlas raised a brow, incredulous. "Some of them were at war with us. Others... feared us."
"I was desperate," Henry said with a shrug. "But then..."
Atlas tilted his head. "...But?"
Henry’s voice lowered.
"I heard that a piece of the Empire’s western division—led by one of the Top Five Primes—was annihilated. Not by a battalion. Not by trickery. By you Alone."
The weight of that truth hung in the air.
Atlas’s jaw clenched slightly. Not in pride. But in acknowledgment.
Henry smiled.
"So I changed my plans. No longer alliances and treaties... but alliances ....and conquest."
Atlas blinked. "Just say You gambled."
"I wagered," Henry corrected, stepping forward so the rising sun caught the gold in his beard. "And I won. We won."
A pause.
Atlas laughed, sharp and bitter. "The gall. You’re as mad as I am."
"Madness runs in the bloodline," Henry said with a smirk. "You didn’t invent this brand of ruthlessness, boy."
Atlas looked around the tent. The kings. Their generals. Their eyes.
"...These are the few who agreed?"
"Yes. Of the thirty-eight, only seven answered."
Atlas shook his head slowly. "Even that many is shocking. The Empire ruled through fear. To even consider standing against them..."
"They didn’t answer because of me," Henry said softly. "They answered because of what your grandfather once was. Because of what you just became."
Atlas glanced again at the ninth chair.
"...They must be desperate," he murmured.
Henry laughed, shaking his head. "You have no idea. I made promises that even I might regret."
A long silence.
Atlas finally asked, "...What did you promise them, old man?"
Henry patted his shoulder.
"You’ll hear it at the meeting. But I will say this: I used YOU as the foundation."
Atlas’s instincts prickled. Something inside twisted.
"What did you tell them?" he repeated, voice quiet but firm.
Henry only smiled.
"You’ll know soon enough."
He stepped forward, joining the circle of kings, nodding politely to those who nodded back—and coldly to those who did not.
Across the tent, the high mage raised both hands.
"...It’s ready!" he declared.
The tent shimmered into full form. The table gleamed. The nine chairs pulsed with heat, each shaped with the sigils of its respective kingdom.
All but one.
The ninth chair bore no sigil.
Only fire.
Atlas stepped toward it slowly.
His shadow fell across the glassy surface. Reflected within it, for the first time since the war began, he saw his face—not bloodied, not burning, but bare.
He looked like..... his father.
And not at all.
He touched the chair’s back.
It was warm.
Too warm.
Like something that had just been born.
He didn’t sit.
Not yet.
Behind him, the murmuring of the other kings rose. The council was forming. Voices debated already. Some eyed Eli. Others avoided her.
Atlas stood still, watching, waiting, More patient. More....Hungry.