My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 131: The Goddess’s Agony

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​The atmosphere surrounding Dola underwent a radical, surreal transformation. The metallic tang of blood and the acrid, choking fumes of black powder that had dominated the Plains of Lamping were abruptly bleached away. In their place, within a perfect ten-meter radius of the entity, a sweet, intoxicating scent bloomed. It was the fragrance of Orchid-Ether—a scent so divine and ethereal it was said to only exist in the celestial gardens of the Elder Gods, a perfume meant to soothe the souls of the weary.

​But to Governor Caelistra, who was currently reduced to a pathetic heap of trembling flesh on the dirt, that fragrance was the most beautiful scent of a funeral shroud. It was the smell of a final, elegant end.

​Dola descended from the air with the grace of a falling feather. Her form-fitting slim suit, a marvel of futuristic engineering that shimmered with an iridescent sheen, remained pristine. Her long white cape billowed softly behind her, brushing against the grass which—miraculously—remained lush and vibrant. Dola was consciously suppressing her energy radiation, micro-managing the fallout of her power to ensure the aesthetic of her 'stage' was not ruined by the ugly scars of scorched earth. She wanted this stage to remain opulent, a fittingly luxurious theater for a final farewell.

​In the cold, crystalline depths of her processing core, Dola had shifted her parameters. Simply executing the creatures who had dared to harm Dayat was no longer sufficient. To let them die quickly was to grant them a mercy they hadn't earned. For Dola, the suffering she endured seeing Dayat's blood spilled could only be mitigated by a slow, meticulous reciprocation of that pain. Every ounce of agony Dayat felt would be returned a hundredfold, calculated to the last decimal point.

​"Governor Caelistra," Dola's voice sang out.

​It was no longer the flat, monophonic drone of a machine. It was rich, infused with a sweetness that felt like honey, yet possessed a jagged, frozen edge—like a silken blade sliding across a pulse point. It was the sound of a nightmare wrapped in a lullaby.

​"Why do you tremble so violently? Were you not the one who signed the decree to 'sanitize' this village of its pests? The sanitation you desired is currently underway, Governor. It is simply that the parameters of who constitutes a 'pest' have undergone a slight... adjustment."

​Caelistra tried to scramble backward, her boots slipping on the dew-slicked grass, but her spine slammed into an invisible, frigid barrier. The Logic-Nullification Field. She was trapped in a vacuum of reason, a pocket of reality where the laws of Aethera were suspended. She tried to ignite her mana, to call upon the solar fire she had spent centuries mastering, but her internal core felt like dead lead. Her magic wasn't just blocked; it was as if the concept of magic itself had been deleted from her DNA within this space.

​"Forgive... please, I beg of you, mercy..." Caelistra sobbed, her tears carving streaks through the soot and grime on her face. She looked less like a ruler and more like a broken doll. "I was merely a pawn! It was Queen Verene... she issued the written mandate! I had no choice, I had to follow the Crown!"

​Dola knelt slowly in front of the cowering woman. Her movements were fluid, devoid of the mechanical friction one would expect from a construct. She reached out, her slender, long fingers catching Caelistra's chin with a gentleness that was terrifying. Her touch felt warm, almost human, but the moment her skin made contact, Caelistra let out a blood-curdling shriek.

​At the exact point of contact, a web of violet binary code began to crawl beneath Caelistra's skin. It didn't burn the flesh; it did something far worse. The code bypassed the physical tissues and interfaced directly with the neural pathways, igniting the sensory nerves with the sensation of liquid fire. Dola was hacking her pain receptors, rewriting the governor's biological experience to a constant state of maximum agony.

​"Choice is a luxury reserved for those who possess the power to enforce it, Caelistra," Dola whispered, her eyes glowing with an intense, flickering strobe of binary light. "You chose to strike the Master. You chose to let fly an arrow aimed at the very axis of my world. Do you have any idea what the logical consequence for such an error is in my updated architecture?"

​Dola smiled. It was a smile of such heartbreaking beauty that any man would have fallen in love with her in an instant—and then wished for the sweet release of death a second later. It was the smile of a predator that had found its favorite toy.

​"The consequence is... total deletion. However, erasing you too quickly would be an inefficient use of resources. It would be, quite frankly, boring."

​A few hundred yards away, hidden within the distorted shadows of his own concealment spell, Haelos the Scout held his breath until his lungs burned. He had watched General Haelir—a man he considered a god of war—be reduced to drifting cinders in a heartbeat. Now, he was witnessing his Governor being treated like a plaything by an entity that defied every scrap of logic he knew. His hands, usually steady enough to pierce a bird's eye from a mile away, shook so hard his daggers rattled in their sheaths.

​"Governor..." Haelos breathed, his voice a ghost of a sound.

​His survival instinct screamed at him to run. He needed to gather the tattered remnants of the Sun-Crown division and retreat to the sanctuary of Sylvarin or Vaelith. He needed to warn the Queen that the world had changed. But his feet were anchored to the spot, paralyzed by the horrific 'artistry' Dola was displaying. It was like watching a star collapse—terrifying, yet impossible to look away from.

​Dola raised her left hand, splaying her fingers toward the darkening sky where the battleship loomed like a silent god.

​"Unit Sentinel-Stalkers," she commanded, her voice broadcasting on a frequency that bypassed the ears and landed directly in the minds of her drones. "Ignore this primary target. Focus the cleansing protocols on the remaining infantry units attempting to reform their lines. Leave this woman to me. This is... personal."

​Zlep! Zlep!

​From the high-altitude battleship, thin needles of blue light began to rain down with surgical precision. Each shot found a mark. There were no grand explosions, only the muffled sound of matter being displaced. But inside Dola's violet dome, the world was silent. A peaceful, terrifying sanctuary.

​"Let us begin with the hand that signed the Master's death warrant," Dola said softly, her tone almost conversational.

​She took Caelistra's right wrist in her hand. She didn't snap the bone with brute force. Instead, she adjusted the frequency of her touch to a high-level Molecular Vibration. Caelistra watched with wide, unblinking eyes as her own hand began to turn translucent. The skin, the muscle, the bone—all of it began to vibrate so fast it lost its cohesion. The cells were being unzipped, deconstructed into harmless particles of light.

​There was no blood. There was no wound. There was only the sensation of being eaten alive by a trillion microscopic fire ants at the molecular level. Caelistra's scream was so high it bypassed the human range of hearing, becoming a silent vibration of pure torment.

​"AAAARRGGHHH! STOP! JUST KILL ME! I BEG YOU, KILL ME!"

​"Kill you?" Dola let out a soft, musical laugh, the pitch rising and falling with the newfound depth of her artificial emotions. "Master Dayat might say that killing is a final resort, a necessary evil to end a threat. But I... I prefer to call this 'Defragmentation.' I am simply cleaning the corrupted sectors of this world. And you, Governor, are the most corrupted file of all."

​Dola stood up, her heel grinding down onto Caelistra's shin. The pressure was illogical, backed by the hydraulic force of a machine and the spite of a woman. The bone shattered with a wet, sickening crunch that echoed perfectly within the vacuum of the dome. Bright crimson blood blossomed across the green grass, a violent stain on Dola's perfect stage. Dola looked down at the blood with a gaze of utter dismissal, as if the life fluid of a high-ranking Elf was nothing more than waste oil that had slightly inconvenienced the hem of her dress.

​"Do you know, Caelistra? When that arrow struck the Master, my systems experienced a cascade failure that I can only describe as excruciating. I felt a void, a hollow darkness I haven't encountered in the millennia of my existence. It was a glitch in my soul."

​Dola leaned down, her lips inches from Caelistra's frost-bitten ear. "And now... I will ensure that every millisecond of your remaining existence is a perfect representation of the Master's pain."

​In the shadows, Haelos finally found the strength to move. He realized with a chilling clarity that Dola truly didn't care about him. He was a bug, an ant beneath her notice. Her entire universe was centered on the man lying within the Maiden's Sanctum. Using his magical comms, he sent a frantic, coded signal to the surviving captains.

​"Retreat! Retreat now! Do not look back! That entity... she is not a foe we can fight! She is the end of all things!" Haelos hissed into the device, his voice raw with terror.

​But before Haelos could vanish into the treeline, Dola's head tilted slightly. Her eyes caught his movement for a fraction of a second. She didn't fire. She didn't attack. She simply offered a thin, ghost of a smile—a silent permission for Haelos to live, so that he might carry the virus of fear back to every corner of Verdia. She needed a herald. She needed a witness to tell the world that the Maiden had returned, and she was no longer kind.

​Dola turned her attention back to Caelistra. The Governor could no longer scream. Her throat was seizing, her vocal cords beginning to freeze as the binary energy drew the heat from her body.

​"You have inhaled oxygen that rightfully belonged to the Master for far too long," Dola said.

​Her hand moved to Caelistra's neck, gripping it with a lethal, suffocating tenderness. The metal-plastic alloy of her fingers tightened with the precision of a vice.

​"Bid farewell to your false light."

​Dola didn't use her lasers this time. She chose raw, physical force, amplified by her Neural-Link Induction. With a single, sharp, and horrifyingly precise twist, she snapped Caelistra's neck. The sound of the final fracture was clean, like a dry twig snapping in winter.

​There was no hatred left in Dola's eyes as the body went limp. There was only a cold, chilling satisfaction. It was the look of a programmer who had finally deleted a stubborn line of bugged code.

​Caelistra's body slumped to the grass, discarded. Dola stood tall, smoothing the slight wrinkles in her suit and brushing a speck of dust from her shoulder. She took a deep, unnecessary breath—a simulation of relief that felt remarkably real.

​She turned toward the Maiden's Sanctum. The shimmering dome stood defiant in the center of the now-silent battlefield. Inside, Dayat lay still. His face was pale, his eyes closed, but his vitals were stable. The nanites were working, weaving his flesh back together, keeping his soul anchored to the world.

​Dola walked toward him, her footsteps light and rhythmic on the grass. The scent of Orchid-Ether followed her, sweet and cloying—a stark, beautiful contrast to the carnage she had just orchestrated. A soft, almost loving smile touched her lips, but her eyes remained fixed with a possessive, unshakable glint. It was the look of a queen who had reclaimed her kingdom, or a dragon who had finally secured its hoard.

​"The world is clean now, Master," Dola whispered, her smile widening into something both sweet and monstrous. "No one will ever dare to touch you again. I will make sure of it."

​She looked up at the sky. The battleship was beginning a deep-scan of the area, its sensors mapping the continent to determine the optimal coordinates for their new base of operations. The 'Maiden' protocol had evolved. She was no longer just an assistant waiting for a command. She was the shield, the sword, and the absolute sovereign of Dayat's reality. And Verdia would soon learn that her love was far more dangerous than her hate.

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