My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 123: Lament Upon the Scorched Wheat
The first sound to shatter the dawn’s fragile silence was no longer a shout of warning, nor the frantic tolling of a bell. It was the sickening, wet sound of tearing flesh.
Thalor, the elderly man who for decades had served as the pillar of wisdom for Lamping Village, stood rigid before the advancing phalanx of Paladins. He had not even managed to finish his sentence of protest, his mouth still forming a plea for mercy, when Governor Caelistra swung her longsword. The movement was a blur of lethal grace—a horizontal arc coated in shimmering golden Mana.
Thalor’s head fell to the wheat-dusted earth before his body even realized it was dead. It was followed by his frail, aged frame, which collapsed with a heavy thud, his lifeblood soaking into the parched soil of the home he had spent his life protecting.
"Elder!" Lyrielle’s scream was a high, hysterical jagged edge that tore through the air. She clamped her hands over her mouth, her eyes bulging in horror as she watched the blood of the man she considered a grandfather stain Caelistra’s polished military boots.
Caelistra showed no remorse, no hesitation. She casually wiped the bloodstain from her blade with a silk handkerchief, her eyes scanning the villagers as if they were nothing more than vermin defiling her expensive carpet. "The sacred soil of Verdia has no use for those who defend traitors. Soldiers! Raze this place to the ground!"
"Exterminate them all!" General Haelir commanded, his voice a flat, emotionless drone that carried the weight of a divine executioner. "Leave not a single stain of the Maiden’s touch breathing upon this land."
In an instant, the nightmare erupted.
The Paladin host moved forward like a mechanical harvester in a wheat field, but the harvest they sought today was measured in souls. Dayat watched in a state of suspended disbelief as a middle-aged man—a farmer who only yesterday had shared his meager bread with him—fell to his knees, raising his calloused hands high in a desperate, futile prayer.
"Mercy, my lords! We are just farmers! We know nothing of these matters!" the man wailed, his voice cracking with terror.
A Paladin in gleaming silver plate stepped forward. His face was a mask of cold, religious fervor, as if he were performing a sacred rite rather than a slaughter. Without a single word of acknowledgement, he thrust his light-lance directly through the man’s throat. Blood erupted in a violent spray, splashing across the Paladin’s face, yet the soldier didn’t even blink.
"Cleanse the world of darkness," the Paladin whispered coldly, twisting the spear before pulling it free and letting the corpse fall into the mud.
"Kancil! Take the children and run toward the East!" Dayat roared. His voice was hoarse, choked by the white-hot rage that was beginning to climb from the depths of his soul to his throat.
Kancil didn’t ask questions. The boy’s face was ashen, drained of all color, but his eyes—those bright, inquisitive eyes—had dimmed into something dark and obsidian-cold. He snatched the hands of two sobbing children standing near the ruins of the granary.
"Follow me! Fast!" Kancil pulled them with a desperate strength. He no longer cared about his own fear. His only directive now was to ensure that the generation smaller than himself did not end up as piles of discarded meat on the village streets.
"Dola! Activate shields! Protect the evacuation corridor!" Dayat commanded, his hands blurring as he manifested his HK416. He wasn’t firing to kill thousands—he knew the math—but he was firing to create a sliver of hope.
RAT-TAT-TAT-TAT!
The staccato bark of the Earth-made assault rifle echoed through the valley, a jarring, mechanical contrast to the melodic clashing of enchanted steel. Dayat stood as a living barricade. Every time a Paladin attempted to intercept the fleeing villagers, Dayat’s rounds would slam into their shields or the joints of their armor, forcing them back or dropping them where they stood.
Dola stepped out in front of the panicked mass of humanity. Her synthetic arms were outstretched, her palms glowing with a violet radiance. A transparent, shimmering dome of energy—The Maiden Shield—materialized instantly. Thousands of Solar Flare arrows, raining down from the archers on the hills, struck the barrier, creating a chaotic, binary percussion.
"Master, system load has reached 78%. I will maintain these coordinates for as long as the core allows," Dola reported. Her voice remained flat, but Dayat could see the micro-tremors in her bio-synthetic fingers.
"Just do it, Dola! Everyone, to the forest! Don’t look back!" Dayat screamed at the hysterical crowd.
The atmosphere in Lamping had been replaced by a literal hell. Wooden cottages were devoured by the golden inferno of Sun-Light Spears. The screams of women, the shrill cries of infants, and the nauseating smell of burning hair and flesh coalesced into a suffocating, toxic mist.
Lunethra stood beside Dayat, her hands shaking so violently she could barely weave the plant-magic needed to entangle the advancing knights. Tears streamed down her cheeks, carving paths through the soot on her face. "Verene... you’ve truly lost your mind... you’re slaughtering your own people for the ego of the Council elders!"
"Lunethra! Don’t just stand there! Keep moving!" Dayat grabbed her shoulder, pulling her back as a mana-explosion obliterated a house mere feet away.
Dayat watched as the kind-hearted villagers—the ones who had fed him, the ones who had laughed with him—were cut down one by one. A mother was impaled while trying to shield her infant, their bodies left to be trampled beneath the hooves of the Paladin mounts.
"Damn you! You’re all animals!" Dayat cursed, spitting a full magazine into the advancing line of heavy infantry.
In the midst of the carnage, Lyrielle ran toward Dayat. She was still clutching her medical satchel, frantically trying to provide some semblance of aid to a fallen villager who was bleeding out in the dirt.
"Lyrielle! Leave him! We have to go now!" Dayat screamed, lunging forward to grab her hand.
Lyrielle looked up, her red-rimmed eyes wide with a pure, crystalline terror. Yet, she didn’t let go of the man’s arm. "Dayat, he’s still breathing! I can’t just—"
In that precise, cruel micro-second, a sharp, piercing whistle sliced through the roar of the fire.
SHUCK!
A single Solar Flare Arrow—fired with the pinpoint accuracy of an elite marksman from the hill—streaked through the air and buried itself directly in the center of Lyrielle’s chest. The sheer kinetic force of the mana-bolt was so immense that it lifted her small frame off the ground, pinning her momentarily against the charred remains of a fence.
"LYRIELLE!" Dayat’s voice broke into a jagged scream. He dropped his rifle and lunged, catching her body before she could collapse into the ash.
The world around Dayat seemed to decelerate into a horrifying slow-motion. The sounds of explosions and screams faded into a dull, painful static. He cradled Lyrielle against his chest. Fresh, hot blood began to soak through her green healer’s dress, a stark, violent contrast to the fading yellow glow of the mana-arrow still lodged in her lung.
"Ly... Lyrielle... stay with me..." Dayat’s hands fumbled through her satchel with a desperate, frantic energy, searching for any potion, any herb. "Dola! Medic! Dola, help me!"
Dola glanced back for a fraction of a second, but her posture remained fixed. [Apologies, Master. If I disengage the shield, 142 villagers behind me will perish within 3 seconds. I cannot prioritize a single unit over the collective survival probability.]
Lyrielle coughed, a spray of crimson staining her lips. She looked up into Dayat’s eyes. The fear that had consumed her moments ago had vanished, replaced by a painful, serene peace. Her small, blood-stained hand reached up, touching Dayat’s cheek with a tenderness that didn’t belong in a war zone.
"Dayat..." her voice was barely a whisper, almost lost to the crackle of the flames.
"Don’t talk! I’m getting you out of here!" Dayat’s tears fell freely now, splashing onto Lyrielle’s face. It was the first time since he had arrived in this world that he had wept with such raw, unbridled agony.
Lyrielle smiled. It was a genuine, beautiful smile—the same one she had given him the first day he helped her in the fields.
"Thank you... for coming to this village..." Lyrielle took a short, rattling breath that whistled through her wound. "I... I always wanted to tell you..."
She paused for a second, gathering the final, flickering embers of her strength.
"I liked you so much, Dayat... ever since you... fixed that waterwheel..."
The hand resting on Dayat’s cheek slowly lost its strength, sliding down to rest limp against his chest. Her eyes remained open, staring at the sky of Verdia now choked with black smoke, but the light of life within them had been extinguished forever.
Dayat froze. His heart felt as though it had been gripped by a cold, iron hand and crushed. He held Lyrielle’s cooling body tightly, letting the falling ash and dust cover them both like a shroud.
"Lyrielle? Lyrielle!" Dayat shook her gently, but there was no response. Only the distant, mocking sound of the Paladin trumpets. 𝗳𝗿𝐞𝕖𝘄𝗲𝕓𝗻𝚘𝚟𝕖𝐥.𝚌𝕠𝕞
In the distance, the knights raised their spears again, signaling the final sweep. "Scour every inch! Let no follower of the Maiden escape!"
"Dayat! We have to move! They’re closing in!" Lunethra pulled at Dayat’s arm with frantic desperation.
Dayat slowly looked up. His black hair shadowed his eyes, but Lunethra felt an entirely different aura radiating from him. It wasn’t the aura of a hero trying to help, nor was it the aura of a friendly traveler.
Something had snapped within Dayat. The fragile concept of humanity he had tried to maintain in this world had been shattered into a million jagged pieces along with Lyrielle’s final breath.
"Kindness..." Dayat murmured. His voice was hollow, like the wind howling through a tomb.
He laid Lyrielle’s body down with excruciating care upon the ruined earth, as if he were tucking a child into bed. He picked up his HK416, slamming the magazine home with a cold, metallic click that sounded like the hammer of fate.
"Let’s go," Dayat said flatly. He did not look back.
He led the remnants of the villagers toward the shadows of the Eastern forest. His heart was a ruin, but within that ruin, a new foundation was being laid. A foundation forged of pure, unadulterated hatred and a vengeance that would eventually set the entire continent of Aethera ablaze.
Behind them, Lamping Village was no more. Only pillars of black smoke and thousands of nameless peasant corpses remained—sacrifices to the false sanctity of the Verdia Kingdom. Dayat walked at the head of the line, his steps heavy but certain, heading toward the border hills that would bear witness to the true birth of the Calamity Architect.


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