Inside the shimring blue barrier, the data continued its relentless tide.
Dayat’s body was no longer writhing in agony. His muscles remained taut, but the violent convulsions had subsided. His eyes were clamped shut, his lips still pressed firmly against Dola’s. His breathing was shallow and erratic, but he was alive.
Yet, sothing fundantal had shifted.
The pain in his mind was no longer purely physical. Sothing else was weaving its way into his consciousness—it wasn’t just science, nor was it just weapon blueprints or war strategies.
It was mory.
Dayat saw a sky that never knew darkness.
The sky of Aethelgard—a brilliant, golden-blue expanse that looked like a masterpiece of a painting that refused to fade. He saw a city forged from light and liquid tal. Structures towered hundreds of ters into the air, constructed from materials unseen in Aethera—glistening, pulsing with rhythmic blue light. Gravitational bridges connected one spire to another without pillars or cables. Wheelless vehicles glided through the streets, leaving ethereal trails of luminescence in their wake.
It was a civilization beyond his wildest imagination. A world he could barely comprehend.
Dayat found himself unable to move or speak; he was a ghost in a machine, a re observer to a lost utopia. And in the heart of that radiant city stood a woman.
She wore a long, flowing robe of soft azure, the color of the sky just before a gentle rain. Her silver hair shimred like a river under the noon sun. Her eyes were blue—the sa blue as the woman holding him now, but softer. There was no hatred. No bitterness. No constant, weary vigilance.
There was only a profound, sincere kindness.
The woman walked among the people. They did not fear her. They did not flee or hide. A man in tattered clothes, his face sared with dust, approached and knelt before her. The woman reached out, her touch gentle as she helped him to his feet.
"There is no need to kneel," she said, her voice a soothing lody. "I am not here to be worshipped."
The man wept. "But you have brought us light. You gave us knowledge. We can read. We can write. We can finally understand the world we live in."
The woman smiled—a look of pure, selfless joy. "I only provided the key. It is you who chose to open the door."
Behind them, children ran freely. They were unafraid. They tugged at the hem of her robe, laughing and clamoring for her attention. The woman leaned down, stroking their hair one by one with a tender hand.
"Are you a Goddess?" a little girl asked, her eyes wide with wonder.
The woman answered only with a smile.
Dayat felt a strange warmth blossoming in his chest. It wasn’t the heat of battle or the sting of a wound. It was sothing that made him want to smile back, a sense of belonging he hadn’t felt in a long ti.
In the waking world, a single tear traced a path down Dayat’s cheek.
Dola was still kissing him. She knew. She knew that her mories were bleeding into the transfer. She knew that Dayat was witnessing her past—the part of her history that hurt the most to rember.
But she didn’t stop. She couldn’t.
Ti lost its aning. It could have been minutes; it could have been hours. Slowly, the blue luminescence radiating from Dola began to flicker. Like a candle burning down to its last thread of wick, the light died away.
The transfer was complete.
Their lips parted.
Dola slumped to the earth. Her white cape lay soiled in the dirt, her silver hair—once vibrant—now looked dull and brittle. She didn’t move. She didn’t speak. She simply sat there, staring blankly into the distance.
Suddenly, her body jerked.
It wasn’t an external force. It was the Seal.
The Seal of the Six Goddesses reacted to her overextension. Dola began to cough—a violent, racking sound that forced her to double over. She clapped her hand over her mouth, but the blood had already escaped.
Fresh, crimson blood.
It seeped through her fingers, staining her white cape and dripping onto the dark earth. The red was a jarring contrast against the white, and against the distant violet glow of the castle walls.
"Dola..." Dayat’s voice was a ghost of a whisper.
He was still sprawled on the ground, his eyes half-open and unfocused. His body refused to obey him—there was too much knowledge, too many foreign mories cluttering his mind. But he saw the blood on her lips. He saw the white cape turning red.
He wanted to scream. He wanted to leap up and shield her. But he was paralyzed by the sheer volu of the "Update."
The blue shield around them flickered. Once. Twice. Three tis.
Then, it shattered like glass.
Orchid stood exactly where he had been. His red blade remained ignited, humming with a low, predatory frequency. He watched the barrier collapse. He saw the fallen Maiden, bleeding and broken. He saw the man, helpless on the ground.
Orchid was in no hurry. He observed them for a mont, a cold, detached expression on his face.
"Finally," he said. His voice was devoid of emotion. It was simply a statent of fact.
He took a slow, deep breath. Then—he lunged.
He was faster than before. His black cloak snapped in the wind, and the ground beneath his feet cracked from the sheer force of his propulsion. His red blade was raised high, aid for the finishing blow.
His target was Dola.
Dayat saw it all. Through his half-lidded eyes, he saw the red streak of the sword. He saw Orchid’s relentless approach. He saw the gap closing in a heartbeat.
One ter.
Dayat wanted to roar, but his throat was dry.
Half a ter.
Then, his body moved on its own.
It wasn’t a conscious thought. It wasn’t a plan. It was sothing deeper—an instinct forged from the data of a thousand battles and the soul of a Maiden.
His hand shot up.
Fwusssshhh!
A blade of violet energy ignited in his grip.
It was long—longer than Orchid’s blade. It was single-edged, resembling a futuristic katana but crafted from materials that did not exist in this world. The blade wasn’t solid; it was made of pure, roiling energy that pulsed with a mixture of violet and erald green, swirling like a vortex in a deep river.
The sound was different. It wasn’t a low hum; it was a high-pitched shriek, like a jet turbine reaching its peak velocity.
CLANG!
Dayat’s blade t Orchid’s strike.
Sparks of violet, green, and red erupted in a violent spray. So hit the ground, searing black holes into the earth. Others drifted into the air before vanishing. The ground beneath them spider-webbed with deep fissures, and the mist was instantly vaporized by the shockwave.
Orchid’s eyes widened. For a fraction of a second, his composure broke. It was enough.
Dayat pushed. Orchid was forced back a step. Then two.
Dayat stood up.
He didn’t struggle. He didn’t lean on his weapon for support. He stood tall, stable, as if he had never been injured at all. His face was a mask of cold iron. His eyes were focused, devoid of pain or doubt. There was only an absolute, terrifying resolve.
He stared at Orchid through the glow of his blade.
"You..." Orchid began, but the sentence died in his throat.
Dayat pushed the blade forward again, forcing the "Hero" back another two paces.
"I will not let you touch her," Dayat said. His voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of a mountain.
Behind him, Dola offered a faint, tragic smile. Her dimming eyes sparkled with relief. She knew her gambit had worked.
But Dayat wasn’t finished.
He looked at the blade in his hand—violet and green, pulsing with life. He had never manifested a sword before. It had always been firearms—pistols, rifles, explosives. But this was different. This wasn’t a tool for killing from a distance. This was a weapon for a protector.
He closed his eyes for a split second.
The torrent of knowledge—Maiden technology, physics, biology, strategy—coalesced in his mind. He didn’t need to study it. He didn’t even need to understand the ’how.’ He only needed to intend.
And the world responded.
Dayat opened his eyes. A surge of violet and erald light erupted from his body, flowing like a newly awakened river. The light enveloped him, starting from his chest.
High-tech combat material began to weave itself over his tactical jacket. The base color was a shimring cerulean silver, looking like polished tal but possessing none of the weight. Lines of violet and green pulsed along the surface, following the contours of his muscles.
The armor spread to his shoulders. His arms. His waist. His thighs. His calves.
It was sleek—nothing like the bulky plate armor of Aethera or the stiff mail of the Dwarves. This armor clung to him like a second skin, enhancing his movents rather than restricting them. Within seconds, Dayat was encased in a suit of cerulean-silver plating.
Only his eyes remained visible through a thin, transparent visor. Behind it, two dark pupils glowed with a faint, artificial light—no longer just human eyes, but living lenses perceiving the world through a cold, calculated tranquility.
Dayat looked at his hands. The gauntlets were flexible, the finger joints moving with perfect precision. He clenched his fist.
CRACK.
The air around his hand distorted. Not from magic, but from raw, kinetic pressure. He felt no weight. No heat. No pain.
He looked at Orchid. The violet-green sword humd in his right hand. The armor pulsed with a soft, rhythmic glow.
"Now," Dayat said, his voice modulated by the helt, sounding calm and resonant. "It is my turn."
Orchid smiled. It was the sa piercing smile, but his eyes had changed. The arrogance was gone. The predatory satisfaction of seeing a weak Maiden was replaced by sothing else.
Curiosity.
"Interesting," Orchid murmured. "Deeply interesting."
He raised his red blade, the energy humming louder, more aggressive. Dayat raised his own. They stared at each other as the mist began to roll back in, swirling between them. The wind carried the scent of blood and scorched earth.
Neither spoke. They simply stood, blades glowing, gazes locked.
But the world seed to hold its breath. They both knew that in the next heartbeat, the true battle would begin.
Inside the castle, Kancil stood by the window, his hand pressed against the glass. He stared toward the gate, his eyes tracking the flashes of light.
"What is that?" he whispered.
Lunethra remained at the door, her expression unreadable. "Do not go out," she repeated.
"But Mister Dayat—"
"Trust them."
Kancil bit his lip, his eyes reflecting the distant glow of violet, green, and red. He wanted to help, but he knew his own weakness. He could only watch and wait.
In the control room, Dalgor stared at his sensors. The data for Orchid was stable, but the reading for Dayat... it was off the charts. The energy spike hadn’t been gradual. It had been an instantaneous surge, a vertical line on the graph.
"What is happening out there?" he whispered to the empty room.
Outside, the two titans didn’t wait any longer.
Dayat took a deep breath.
"Co," he said.
Orchid’s smile widened. "With pleasure."
Two blades ignited. Two bodies blurred into motion. The mist between them was torn asunder.
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