A haunting, heavy silence descended upon the hills on the outskirts of Lamping Village. The sweet, cloying fragrance of Orchid-Ether that had saturated the air monts ago was beginning to thin, carried away by a biting cold wind. This wind bore the faint, lingering warmth of molecular evaporation—the only physical trace left of those who had been erased from existence. In the center of a lush, erald adow—one that remained miraculously untouched by the surrounding desolation—Dola stood like an immovable monunt of ivory and steel.
Her long, pristine white cape fluttered rhythmically in the breeze, devoid of even a single microscopic droplet of Governor Caelistra’s blood. The woman who had once ruled these lands was now nothing more than a discarded mory, a cold corpse cooling in the dirt behind her. Dola did not turn back. To her, Caelistra was a permanent deletion, a corrupted line of code that had been purged. There was no tactical or emotional utility in reviewing trash that had already been consigned to the system’s void.
Dola’s binary vision, glowing with a fierce, pulsating violet intensity, shifted toward the distant horizon. There, filtered through fading layers of atmospheric distortion, she could track the frantic, chaotic movents of the surviving Verdia forces.
"Mana signatures detected," Dola’s voice resonated, low yet carrying a harmonic vibration that seed to make the very air tremble. "Remaining Verdia infantry and cavalry units are engaged in ergency mobilization. Coordinates: Southwest Sector. Distance: 2.4 kiloters. Escape velocity: Maximum. Pathing toward the Sylvarin borders."
She raised her right hand with deliberate slowness. High above, piercing through the thick cloud cover and the upper atmosphere, the multi-spectral sensors of The Maiden’s Star-Ship locked onto their targets. The orbital cannons, massive constructs of dark matter and plasma capable of vaporizing an entire tropolis in a single discharge, began their hum of excitation. The air around Dola started to crackle with static—a telltale sign that massive amounts of energy were being bled from a dinsional rift to fuel the impending strike.
"System, target all lifeform signatures within the escape radius," Dola commanded the flickering binary interface within her mind. "Authorize: Orbital Rain. Ensure not a single organic cell bearing the crest of Verdia remains intact upon this soil."
[Processing... Kinetic and Energy targets locked. Charging: 85%... 89%...]
Dola watched the retreating Paladins with a gaze of utter, god-like condescension. In her eyes, they weren’t warriors or even enemies; they were rely vermin that had dared to smudge the reality she shared with her Master. Haelos, the scout leading the desperate flight, appeared on her internal HUD as a rapidly blinking red dot, a frantic pulse of fear trying to outrun the inevitable.
"Run as far as your primitive legs can carry you," Dola hissed, her voice a chilling whisper. "Your ’Holy Light’ cannot outpace the speed of my annihilation."
However, just as the final ’Fire’ command sat at the edge of her neural pathways, a violent, crimson warning flashed across her field of vision. It was an alert that overrode all offensive protocols, a priority zero interruption.
[WARNING: Critical Bio-Sign Instability detected in Sanctum-01.]
[Patient Na: Dayat.]
[Status: Mana-Neural Corruption spreading to Pulmonary Artery.]
[Life Expectancy without intervention: 142 seconds.]
Dola’s heart—or rather, the core of pulsating energy that served as the center of her burgeoning emotions—seed to seize. Without a mont’s hesitation, she spun around, completely abandoning the enemies who stood on the precipice of extinction. She blurred across the adow, her speed exceeding human comprehension, arriving at the Maiden’s Sanctum in a flicker of violet light.
Inside the transparent dical do, Dayat’s condition was deteriorating. His skin was a deathly, translucent pallor, and beads of cold sweat soaked his brow. Most alarming were the fine, pulsing violet lines—residual corruption from Haelir’s holy-light arrow—that were spiderwebbing from the wound in his chest toward his throat. His breathing was shallow, a ragged, desperate sound that tore at Dola’s newfound soul.
"Master..." Dola dropped to her knees beside the do, her fingers trembling as they pressed against the cold, indestructible surface.
[Analysis: Executing an Orbital Strike will divert 60% of available processing power and stabilize energy from the Star-Ship. Risk of regenerative failure for Target Dayat: 67%.]
Dola froze. Her fists clenched so hard the synthetic skin over her knuckles groaned. In the distance, the dust clouds from the Verdia army were still visible, moving toward the safety of the trees. She could erase them in a heartbeat, satisfying the burning desire for vengeance that clawed at her insides. But the cost was a risk she could not compute.
To kill them was a fleeting satisfaction; to lose Dayat was an absolute, eternal apocalypse.
"Cancel the Orbital Strike," Dola ordered, her voice cracking with a desperation that sounded painfully human. "Abort all active offensive protocols. Recall all Sentinel units to the hangar imdiately. Redirect 100% of the core’s output to the life-support systems of Maiden’s Sanctum."
[Confird. Aborting Orbital Strike. Power rerouted. Retracting Sentinel Units.]
Across the sprawling fields, hundreds of Sentinel-Stalker drones—sleek, multi-legged killing machines that had been closing in for the kill—suddenly went still. Their glowing red optic sensors dimd to a dull hum. With a synchronized, chanical grace, their tallic fras began to deconstruct into shimring particles of light, ditarik back through dinsional rifts toward the massive silhouette of the mothership in the sky.
Dola let out a long, shuddering breath. She looked toward the horizon where the enemy had disappeared, her eyes cold but focused.
"Give thanks to the Master, you wretched insects," she hissed. "His life is the only reason you are permitted to breathe for one more day."
Two kiloters to the east, deep within the tangled, ancient roots of the border forest, the atmosphere was far from peaceful.
The handful of Lamping villagers who had been successfully evacuated sat huddled in the shadows of a massive Great-Oak. They were the hollowed-out remnants of a community destroyed in a single morning. Among them, Lunethra stood with a tear-streaked face, her erald-green eyes fixed on the distant hill where black smoke still curled into the violet sky.
Beside her, Kancil leaned heavily against a tree trunk, his chest heaving. In his hands, the twin Desert Eagles Dayat had gifted him felt impossibly heavy. It wasn’t the weight of the steel, but the crushing burden of the responsibility they represented.
An elderly village woman approached Lunethra, her hands gnarled and shaking. "Princess... what is happening? That thunder we heard... and the lights falling from the stars... is it the wrath of the Goddess?"
Lunethra turned slowly, trying to muster a reassuring smile, but the expression collapsed into a mask of grief. "That wasn’t the wrath of the Goddess, grandmother. It was... sothing else. Perhaps it was her judgnt."
"And what of Master Dayat?" a young man asked, his arm crudely bandaged with rags. "He stayed behind to hold the line so we could flee. Did he... did he survive?"
Kancil snorted, though he couldn’t hide the tremor in his voice as he checked the chambers of his weapons. "Master Dayat is the most stubborn man I’ve ever t. Death would have a hard ti trying to take him."
Lunethra gripped her staff until her knuckles turned white. "Kancil, we cannot leave them there. The energy pressure radiating from that hill... it feels like Dola’s, but it has mutated. It’s too powerful. I’ve never felt anything like it. It’s... it’s like the energy of a Harbinger of the End."
"You an like Malphas?" Kancil asked, his eyes widening as he rembered the demon they had fought in the Dwarven Kingdom.
"No," Lunethra corrected him, her voice trembling with genuine horror. "Even a High Demon like Malphas is nothing compared to a true Harbinger. They are the physical manifestations of destruction that even the Gods fear to challenge."
Lunethra turned back to the remaining villagers, her royal authority returning through the cracks of her fear. "Listen to ! Continue moving East. Stay off the main roads. There is an ancient subterranean path beneath the slopes that the Paladins will not find. Go!"
"You aren’t coming with us, Princess?" the old woman asked, clutching Lunethra’s cloak.
"I have to go back for my friend," Lunethra replied firmly. "Kancil, let’s move. We have to reach that hill before the world tears itself apart."
Kancil nodded, his new instincts as a gunslinger taking over. "Lead the way."
The two of them began to run, moving against the tide of terror. While the rest of the world fled from the hill, they ran toward the epicenter of the storm.
Back at the summit, Dola was a blur of activity. Her hands danced through the air, swiping through translucent holographic status windows that only her neural-link could see.
"System, provide a localized cellular damage report," she commanded.
[Report: Bio-damage level 42%. Mana-poisoning neutralized 30%. Wound closure status: Temporary Cauterization complete. Target remains in a dically induced coma for systemic recovery.]
"It’s not enough," Dola murmured, her brow furrowed in a very human expression of worry. "I am only preventing his death. His natural regeneration is being suppressed by the Aetheric residue of this world. He needs a pure environnt. An environnt free from this filth."
She stared down at Dayat’s face. Seeing him like this—vulnerable, broken, and utterly dependent on her—triggered a cascade of new logic in Dola’s core. It was an obsessive, dark desire to cage him, to sequester him away where the harsh, judgntal world could never touch him again.
"This world does not deserve to have you, Master," Dola whispered. Her fingers traced the surface of the glass, hovering just above his pale cheek. "They call you a hero when they need a shield, then they throw you into a dungeon when the danger passes. They call you a virus, then they try to delete you. They are all errors. Every single one of them is a system-wide glitch that must be corrected."
Dola stood tall, her aura shifting from a worried caregiver to a cold, majestic sovereign. The violet light in her eyes hardened into sothing permanent.
"If these Seven Kingdoms choose to be your enemy, then they are my targets for erasure. I will no longer be just your assistant, Master. I will beco the world in which you can rest without pain. I will beco the sky that protects you and the earth that hides you."
Above them, the shadow of The Maiden’s Star-Ship remained anchored in the heavens, a silent promise of the fire to co.
"Let Verdia tremble," Dola said, her gaze fixed on the distant lights of Sylvarin, the capital city that now flickered like a dying candle on the horizon. "Tell their Queen that as of this mont, their history has reached its final Chapter. The Maiden has found her purpose, and it is not rcy."
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