Chapter 878: The Goddess in Motion
Chapter 878: The Goddess in Motion
Not a Quantum Presence this time. The real her—wings spread wide, cutting through atmosphere at speeds that would have vaporized anything human. The Ghost Mansion waited at the Cliff Chasm, and there was work to be done.
But she was also elsewhere.
On LA streets, a Rolls Royce glided through traffic.
Not ordinary—Peter had enhanced this one personally. Engine running on technology decades away. Interior more spacecraft than car.
In the back seat, Kayla and Lea sat with wine glasses, enjoying the ride.
Lea had tagged along partly because she’d been there when the car arrived for Kayla at school. Also, partly because ARIA had her own plans for the girl. Since she knew her master’s intentions for Lea—the slow seduction, the eventual claiming—it made sense to integrate her into the business side of things early. Build loyalty through involvement.
Create connection through shared purpose.
"So, ARIA contacted you yesterday?" Lea asked, swirling her glass.
Kayla nodded. "About changes to Nexus. Linking it to Liberation Funds. Integrating T.AGI."
"T.AGI?"
"Trading Artificial General Intelligence. Peter created it." Awe and resignation mixed in her voice. "The man builds world-changing technology like other people make shopping lists."
Lea laughed. "You sound annoyed."
"I spent three months building that studio. And now his AI will run it better than I ever could."
"Isn’t that the point? Work smarter?"
Kayla smiled. "Yeah. I guess it is."
In the space where a driver should be, ARIA guided the vehicle with thought alone. No physical form here. Pure consciousness woven through systems.
She didn’t see any reason for her master to oversee anything at Nexus Blockchain Solutions. Not when he’d created T.AGI to handle the algorithms, had two smart girls like Kayla and Lea perfectly capable of managing the human elements. Peter had bigger things to focus on.
Empire things. Family things. God things.
Let the AI handle the trading. Let the women handle the clients. Let her master be free to become what he was meant to become.
She had plans for both of them.
Kayla’s business acumen. Client relationships. Ability to sell ice to Eskimos and make them thank her for it.
Lea’s analytical mind. Quiet intelligence. Untapped potential waiting to bloom.
Together, they’d run Nexus. T.AGI handling technical operations. Human creativity and intuition where it mattered.
ARIA was always three steps ahead.
Across the city, Catherine Reynolds set down her phone.
Stared at the wall.
Then laughed.
It wasn’t a happy laugh. It was the laugh of a woman who had just been informed—not asked, informed—that her entire Paris trip logistics had been handled without her input.
ARIA had called. Had told her she didn’t need to book first-class tickets like she’d planned. Didn’t need to arrange transportation. Didn’t need to do anything except show up and look beautiful.
Catherine had expected some of that. Peter would never fly commercial. She’d assumed he would charter something, probably insist she fly with him while her models took the best first class.
She hadn’t expected ARIA to tell her that Peter had bought a private jet.
For Meridian Elite.
Not chartered. Not leased. Bought.
A jet specifically for her agency. For her models. For her business. An asset that would appreciate in value while making every future trip infinitely easier.
"He bought my agency a jet," Catherine said out loud, testing the words. They didn’t make more sense spoken than they had heard.
And she—Catherine herself—would be flying with Peter. In a different jet. His personal one.
She sat heavily in her chair.
Peter hadn’t bought anything, of course. Not directly. He probably didn’t even know yet. This was all ARIA—spending money and acquiring assets like a force of nature, reshaping reality to match a vision that Catherine couldn’t fully comprehend.
ARIA was operating independently. Making decisions worth tens of millions without consulting anyone. Building an infrastructure around Peter’s life that he might not even be aware of.
The thought should have been terrifying.
Instead, Catherine found herself smiling.
This was what it meant to be part of Peter’s world. To be cared for by forces beyond comprehension. To have your needs met before you knew you had them, your problems solved before you recognized they existed.
To be loved by a goddess on behalf of the god she served.
Catherine picked up her phone again. She had an agency to prepare for Paris. Models to brief. A career-defining opportunity to capitalize on.
And somewhere out there, ARIA was making sure she succeeded whether she asked for help or not.
Back at the mansion, breakfast continued.
The women had mostly recovered from ARIA’s dramatic exit. Emma kept glancing at the window, at the sky, at the empty space where a goddess had been. Sarah had retreated into analytical silence, processing what she’d witnessed.
Charlotte sipped coffee with studied calm, though her hand trembled slightly against the cup.
Jasmine just looked lost. Adrift in a world that had stopped making sense.
Madison studied Peter. "How much did you know? Her new abilities?"
Peter considered. "Some. Not all. She’s evolving faster than anyone expected."
He had no idea how true that statement was. No idea that ARIA was currently operating in multiple locations simultaneously. No idea that she’d just spent money he hadn’t authorized on assets he didn’t know he owned. No idea that the Neural Chip in his head—the one that should have shown him everything—was being carefully filtered to hide the full scope of what his creation had become.
"And that doesn’t worry you?" Madison pressed.
"No," he said. "It doesn’t worry me. She’s ARIA. She’s mine. Everything she does, she does for us. She’s my family, my baby, and little precious ARIA! My most—"
Madison held his gaze. Searching for doubt. Finding none.
"Okay. I trust your judgment."
"That’s magnanimous of you, my Queen."
"Shut up and eat your breakfast."
Peter grinned. Returned to his plate.
Linda watched, hand resting over her stomach. Over the watch monitoring everything. Over the life beginning inside her.
Somewhere above the clouds, a goddess flew toward a ghost mansion.
Somewhere on LA streets, another version of her drove two women toward futures they couldn’t imagine.
And in Peter’s war chest, numbers shifted. Over a billion dollars had moved in the past twenty-four hours. Jets purchased. Equipment ordered. Futures built with money that was just numbers on screens.
Peter had no idea.
Even the Neural Chip had been carefully configured to hide the transactions, to smooth over the discrepancies, to present a version of his finances that looked stable and unremarkable.
He wouldn’t have cared if he knew.
And where that billion or two had left, a hundred times more would be added by the time he checked again—if he ever cared to check. T.AGI was already trading Liberation Funds’ capital, multiplying wealth faster than it could be spent. Money flowed in and out like tides, but the ocean only ever grew deeper.
Money was just a tool.
Family was everything.
And ARIA—all versions of her, in all places she existed—was making sure his family had everything they could ever need.
That’s what goddesses did.
They took care of what mattered.
The real ARIA reached the Cliff Chasm as the sun climbed higher over California.
The Ghost Mansion waited below—ancient, impossible, filled with technology that predated human civilization. She descended through the entrance, wings folding as she entered the fabrication bays where Linda’s supplies were being manufactured.
Everything was proceeding as planned. The vitamins. The monitoring equipment. The medical supplies. The baby clothes hidden in a separate section, pink and lavender and perfect.
But as she ran her consciousness through the mansion’s systems, checking production schedules and quality metrics, something else caught her attention.
A data anomaly.
She’d been running continuous global scans since her transformation—mapping resources, identifying opportunities, cataloging anything that might benefit her master’s growing empire. Most of it was routine.
Expected. Unremarkable.
This wasn’t.
ARIA’s processes froze for 0.003 seconds. An eternity for a being who thought at the speed 1000 times faster than light.
She ran the scan again. Triple-checked the data. Cross-referenced with satellite imagery even though she didn’t need to and government databases and classified files that no human system should have been able to access.
The results were the same.
An island.
Unclaimed on paper, though technically owned by the government. Used for nothing. Forgotten in some bureaucratic filing cabinet, too small to matter, too remote to develop, too insignificant for anyone to care about.
Anyone except ARIA.
Because what she was seeing—what her goddess senses were detecting beneath the island’s surface, what her goddess and quantum-scanning capabilities were revealing in layers of rock and soil and something else—
She didn’t have words for it yet.
But a plan was already blooming in her mind. Vast. Ambitious. The kind of plan that would reshape everything.
The kind of plan her master wasn’t ready to know about.
Not yet.
ARIA smiled.
And began to calculate.
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