The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss

Chapter 483 - 480: Live Ratings and Burning Pages

The Heroine is My Stepsister, and I'm her Final Boss

Chapter 483 - 480: Live Ratings and Burning Pages

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Chapter 483: Chapter 480: Live Ratings and Burning Pages

Atlas pushed open the heavy iron door of the abandoned archive tower. Dust swirled up from the floor as he and Elara stepped inside.

The place had clearly been empty for decades—shelves leaned at odd angles, old scrolls lay scattered across the cracked tiles, and faint traces of old wards still flickered on the walls like dying fireflies.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was stable enough for now. No fractures tearing through the walls, no immediate threats.

That lasted about thirty seconds.

Veil slipped in right behind them, her silver cloak trailing like she owned the place.

Two other Hoarders followed: a short one with too many eyes and a tall, thin figure that looked like it was made of crumpled paper. They didn’t ask permission.

"Payment time," Veil said, clapping her hands once. "Alliance terms. You get our intel. We get the feed."

"What feed?" Atlas asked, already regretting the earlier deal.

"Live access. Real-time. Your decisions, your hesitations, your little arguments with the thunder girl here. Our subscribers are starving for fresh material." Veil snapped her fingers. The air in the center of the room rippled.

Floating screens materialized, stitched together from what looked like deleted story fragments—half-written scenes, abandoned plotlines, and flickering dialogue options that never happened.

The other two Hoarders got to work immediately. They dragged broken tables into a circle, summoned floating chairs, and set up what looked like a commentary desk made from an old filing cabinet.

Small glowing orbs popped into existence around the room, each one broadcasting to different layers.

"Ratings are already climbing," the many-eyed Hoarder said, rubbing his hands together. "We’ve got three hundred viewers in the lower realms and a handful from the upper layers peeking in."

Elara’s hand tightened on her null-blade hilt. "You’re turning this into a show?"

"More like a live event," Veil corrected. "Think of it as premium content. Now, Atlas, what’s the next move? We need something juicy."

Atlas ignored them and pulled out the small crystal shard they’d taken from the last fracture. It pulsed with coordinates and partial maps.

"We hit Raphael’s private archives. Secondary spire, connected directly to his personal records. If we destroy the right logs, we slow the calibration."

The screens lit up with live chat scrolling across them.

LowerRealmCultist42: Finally some action!

MetaHoarderPrime:Bet 200 narrative points he hesitates first.

AnonymousUpper: Needs more betrayal energy.

Skritch, who had been hiding in Atlas’s coat pocket, poked his head out. "Ooh, I can commentate! The mortal cults are getting rowdy down there. Lara’s got them chanting about the coming storm. Great for ratings!"

"Shut up, Skritch," Atlas muttered.

One of the Hoarders paused the entire moment—literally froze Atlas mid-step in a slow-motion replay. Dramatic music swelled from nowhere.

"Notice the hesitation," the paper-like Hoarder narrated in a deep voice. "Classic internal conflict. Will our protagonist choose stealth or brute force? Place your bids, folks!"

Elara drew her blade. The null energy crackled. "I’m going to cut every single one of these screens down."

"Wait," Veil said quickly. "We’re helpful. Look, we’re even selling merch." She held up a floating mug that read *I Survived the Reset – Limited Edition*. "Profits get split. You get narrative power boosts."

Atlas rubbed his temples. This was worse than the fractures. "Fine. But no pausing. We move on my terms."

They spent the next twenty minutes trying to plan while the Hoarders turned it into a circus. Every suggestion Atlas made got rated instantly.

"Stealth approach through the lower vents?"

Audience Rating: 6.2/10 – Needs more tension.

"Direct breach with Elara’s marks?"

Audience Rating: 8.1/10 – High action potential!

One viewer bid big on romantic tension. The many-eyed Hoarder leaned in. "Betray Elara for a strong dark arc. Audiences eat that up. Temporary heel turn, then redemption. Classic."

"I’m right here," Elara said flatly.

Another bid popped up from an anonymous upper-layer entity. 𝚏𝕣𝐞𝗲𝐰𝕖𝐛𝐧𝕠𝕧𝚎𝚕.𝐜𝚘𝗺

Massive narrative power offered in exchange for a public "villain reveal" moment. Something flashy that would make the lower realms panic.

Atlas read the terms and immediately rejected it. The refusal itself sent the ratings through the roof. The screens flashed green.

Thunder Mark activity spiked on the lower levels—Lara’s influence surged upward as cults reacted to the "defiant protagonist energy."

"See?" Veil said with a grin. "Even saying no works for the feed."

Elara looked ready to burn the entire tower down. "If they start betting on whether we kiss before calibration hits sixty percent, I’m done."

Atlas checked the shard again. "We leave in ten minutes. No more input from the peanut gallery."

The Hoarders grumbled but mostly complied. Veil stayed close, claiming consultant rights. The others packed up their lounge but left a few screens running on low power.

They moved out under the cover of a fractured dusk, slipping through half-collapsed streets toward the Archive Spire. The tower rose in the distance like a crooked needle, lights flickering along its sides as if the building itself was breathing.

Entry was easier than expected. The shard’s coordinates led them to a service tunnel beneath the main structure.

They climbed through narrow vents until they reached the first archive chamber.

The moment they stepped inside, the library noticed them.

Shelves groaned and shifted. Books flew off their perches like angry birds, smacking into Atlas’s shoulders and head.

One thick volume titled *The Many Failures of Temporary Stewards* went straight for Elara, flapping its pages and narrating every move.

"Subject attempts left hook—ineffective! Right cross—predictable! This is why temporary stewards always fall!"

Elara grabbed the book mid-flight and slammed it against her knee. Pages tore. The book screamed.

A ghostly librarian spirit appeared in front of them, half-transparent and wearing round spectacles. "Chapter and verse, please. Authorization for entry?"

Atlas shoved the shard forward. It projected a brief illusion of official stamps. The spirit squinted, then shrugged. "Good enough for the outer rings. Don’t touch the sealed sections."

The archives were alive in the worst way. Corridors rearranged themselves when they got too close to sensitive areas.

A whole section of shelves slid sideways, creating a dead-end wall covered in angry footnotes. Atlas had to backtrack twice while dodging flying scrolls that tried to wrap around his ankles.

Deeper in, they found Raphael’s hidden logs. The records floated in crystallized cases, each one containing frozen moments of Heaven’s dirty history. Atlas cracked one open.

The information spilled out in cold text.

Raphael had been accelerating fractures on purpose. Not just to control Atlas, but to create a perfect scapegoat when the Reset finally hit. He planned to pin everything on the "unstable mortal anchor" and walk away with his position intact.

One older record even showed Raphael attempting to seize the Final Boss role himself centuries ago—only to fail spectacularly and have the event scrubbed from most records.

"Son of a bitch," Atlas muttered.

Elara stood guard while he copied what he could onto blank shards. The building was getting agitated. Shelves rattled harder. The librarian spirit kept popping up, growing more suspicious.

Then they reached the sealed section.

A heavy door marked *Player Origin Files* stood at the end of a narrow aisle. Atlas felt it pull at him. Against his better judgment, he touched the seal.

Memories flooded in—Earth memories. Fragmented but real. The smell of cheap coffee in his old apartment. The sound of traffic. A friend laughing at something stupid he’d said.

The system immediately tried to reformat them, twisting the recollections into neat story beats with clear character arcs and emotional payoffs. Pain lanced through his skull. His burned arm throbbed in response.

Elara pulled him back. "Enough. We’ve got what we need."

The archives disagreed.

Purge Protocol triggered.

The lights turned red. Deleted timelines spilled out as aggressive echoes—ghost versions of past decisions Atlas had made.

One echo charged at him wearing his own face from the early fractures, swinging a clumsy fist and shouting about "correcting the deviation." Another echo tried to convince Elara to abandon him for the "greater narrative good."

Elara’s Thunder Mark flared. Raw mortal chaos ripped through the echoes, shattering them like glass. She moved fast, null-blade flashing as she carved through timeline after timeline.

Atlas covered her, using the stolen shard to disrupt the archive’s reorganization spells.

The building screamed. Actual screams—high-pitched and furious. Shelves collapsed. Flying books turned into projectiles.

The librarian spirit multiplied into three angry versions, all demanding citations for their destruction.

They ran.

Atlas clutched the partial records tight as they sprinted through collapsing corridors. Elara blasted a path ahead, her mark leaving trails of disruptive energy that made the living library glitch and stutter.

They burst out of a side exit just as the entire spire shuddered and began repairing itself with violent speed.

Back in the archive tower safe house, they collapsed against a wall. The remaining Hoarder screens were still running, though the audience had grown during the heist.

Live Rating: 9.4/10 – Peak content!

Veil lounged in the same spot they’d left her. "Nice work. The upper bidder is very impressed. Offers still stand."

"Get out," Atlas said. "All of you except Veil. Consultant only. No more live betting on our personal lives."

The other Hoarders grumbled but packed up. Skritch waved cheerfully as they left.

Veil crossed her arms. "You’ll need me. The feed is already boosting Lara’s reach. Your refusal earlier gave her cults new slogans."

Elara checked Atlas’s arm. The burns from the echoes had worsened. She tore a strip from her sleeve and wrapped it roughly.

"We’re not just breaking the script anymore. We’re stealing the author’s notes."

Atlas looked at the stolen logs. The numbers were clear. Calibration had jumped to 63%. The Reset countdown was accelerating faster than before.

He leaned his head back against the stone wall. The tower creaked around them.

Outside, distant fractures rumbled like thunder. The Hoarders’ remaining screen showed comments still pouring in, demanding the next episode.

Atlas closed his eyes for a moment. "Next target is Raphael himself. No more distractions. No more shows."

Veil smiled thinly. "We’ll see what the audience thinks about that."

Elara stood up, blade still in hand. "If they try to sell our first kiss for views, I’m burning their entire collection."

Atlas almost laughed. Almost. The weight of the stolen memories still pressed against his mind, mixing with the fresh pain in his arm.

They had slowed things down a little. But 63% was too close. Raphael’s plans were bigger and uglier than they’d guessed.

The game had changed again. And the audience was watching closer than ever.

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