My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 36: Thunder in the Narrow Alleys and the Mist of Death
The air within the derelict church courtyard was no longer just air; it had become a soup of volatile energies. The purple-gold radiance exploding from the junction of Dayat’s and Dola’s bodies was far from a mere light show. To any mage in Bakasa, it looked like a heresy—a violent, screaming intrusion of Earth’s physical laws being forced, unlubricated, into the magical reality of Aethera.
Dayat felt as if his very marrow was being replaced by molten lead. His nervous system screamed, sending signals of agony that no human was designed to process. Every cell in his body felt like it was being interrogated by a thousand white-hot needles.
Gravion, the elite gravity mage of the Brassvale Kingdom, narrowed his singular good eye. As a master of the fundamental forces, he felt the shift before he saw it. The atmospheric pressure around the two fugitives didn’t just rise; it twisted. The air didn’t feel like Mana anymore. It felt cold, heavy, and mathematically precise—as if the very space surrounding them was being rewritten by an invisible hand.
"Attack! Do not let them finish their incantation!" Valmir’s voice broke the heavy silence, a shrill, desperate shriek. He stood safely behind a double row of elite shielded guards, his broken fingers still throbbed with a rhythmic, vengeful fire. To Valmir, this was no longer about a bounty or a count’s orders. This was about erasing the man who had humiliated him.
But Dayat wasn’t chanting. He didn’t have a grimoire, and he didn’t need a catalyst. He was performing industrial assembly on a sub-atomic scale, using his own life force as the forge.
"Dola! Integrate the magnetic rails, now!" Dayat’s voice was a guttural roar, torn from a throat parched by the heat of his own energy.
"Synchronization at 82%... rising," Dola’s voice remained a haunting island of calm in the sea of Dayat’s agony. Even as her biological skin began to smoke and her internal cooling fans whirred at a deafening pitch, she didn’t flinch.
In front of Dayat’s chest, the three bars of pure Mithril they had liberated from the vault began to glow with a blinding white light. They didn’t just melt; they elongated, their atoms rearranging into two perfectly parallel tracks. These were the rails—the heart of the weapon that would change the face of Aetheran warfare.
"Master, the capacitor circuits are beginning to hit critical temperatures," Dola warned, her HUD projecting a crimson warning directly into Dayat’s mind. "If we fire a full charge in this enclosed courtyard, the resulting vacuum and heat will sear the oxygen from our lungs. We need a diversion. Now."
Dayat gritted his teeth so hard he feared they might shatter. A diversion. Something chaotic. Something that doesn’t follow their rules.
He clenched his left fist, the one not currently acting as a conduit for the Railgun’s birth. He didn’t imagine a sword or a shield. He reached into the memories of his world, into the tactical handbooks of special forces. He visualized the chemical composition—the blend of Terephthalic Acid and a pyrotechnic starter.
Vwoom!
The blue-gold aura flickered, and four small, dull gray metal canisters appeared on Dayat’s leather belt. They looked mundane, almost toy-like compared to the glowing staves of the mages.
M18 Smoke Grenades.
"Bara! Lina! Cover your noses! Now!" Dayat screamed.
Before the guards could react, Dayat grabbed two of the canisters. In a motion fueled by adrenaline and movie-inspired recklessness, he yanked the pins with his teeth. The metallic ting of the pins hitting the stone floor was the only warning.
He hurled them into the center of the charging elite squad.
PFFSSSTTTTTTT!
Within seconds, the courtyard was gone.
This wasn’t the translucent, swirling mist created by a low-level illusionist. This was a thick, suffocating wall of opaque white smoke. The particulate matter was so dense it didn’t just block vision; it felt like a physical weight against the skin.
"Cough! Damn it! What is this sorcery?!" Valmir’s voice rose in panic. "I can’t see! My Mana-sight is being reflected back at me!"
"Wind mages! Clear the air!" Gravion’s command was like a thunderclap, cutting through the confusion.
Three military mages stepped forward, their staves glowing with an emerald light. They began to draw the Mana from the air, intending to create a Gust spell that would sweep the smoke aside. It was a standard counter-measure, practiced a thousand times on the training grounds of Brassvale.
But Dola was faster.
[Hacking Protocol: Mana Resonator Jamming.]
Dola didn’t use a spell to counter their magic. She emitted a high-frequency interference signal from the nodes at her temples—a signal designed to resonate at the same frequency as the mages’ staves.
The emerald glow in the staves began to flicker uncontrollably. The air didn’t move. Instead, the Mana around the mages began to vibrate violently, creating a high-pitched whine that made the guards’ ears bleed.
"My staff! It’s vibrating! I can’t hold the—!"
BOOM!
The Mana resonators "jammed," causing the accumulated energy to backfire. The three mages were hurled backward by small, concussive pressure explosions of their own making. The smoke remained, as unyielding as a stone wall.
"Two o’clock, Master! Ten paces! Follow my lead!" Dola’s voice rang in Dayat’s ear.
Dayat hoisted the heavy bag containing the half-manifested Railgun. He couldn’t see anything but the white void of the smoke, but his retinas were suddenly overlaid with a digital ghost. Dola had synced her Thermal Vision directly into his visual cortex.
Through the mist, the world was now a landscape of cool blues and sharp, burning oranges. He could see the skeletal outlines of the guards—their bodies glowing with heat, their panic visible in the rapid thumping of their hearts.
"There’s Valmir," Dayat hissed.
He pulled a second weapon from his pocket. It was short, wide-barreled, and painted a bright, safety orange—an object that looked entirely out of place in a world of enchanted steel.
A Flare Gun.
Dayat didn’t point it at the guards. He aimed it straight up.
THUMP.
The flare streaked into the night sky, a brilliant red comet that illuminated the entire district. A second later, it exploded into thousands of blinding, magnesium-fueled sparks.
To the guards who had just consumed Night-Vision Elixirs to see through the gloom, the effect was catastrophic. The sudden, intense lumens were amplified a hundred times by their enhanced retinas.
"MY EYES! I’M BLIND!"
"THE LIGHT! IT BURNS!"
Capitalizing on the sensory overload, Dayat, Dola, and their two companions slipped through a gap between the waste-processing buildings. They moved like ghosts through a world of blinded giants.
"Lidi... you’re officially insane," Bara whispered, his breath coming in ragged gasps as they reached the relative safety of a hidden alleyway. He stared back at the lingering clouds of smoke with genuine horror. "I’ve fought goblins, I’ve fought trolls... but that? That magic that the wind can’t touch? That’s not natural."
"It’s not magic, Bara," Dayat replied, his voice leaning on a stack of cold steam pipes for support. "It’s chemistry. And unlike magic, chemistry doesn’t care if you have a high Mana capacity. It just works."
Dola slid down the brick wall, her knees hitting the ground with a heavy, metallic thud. Wisps of steam vented from the seams in her arms and neck. The orange-red glow of her internal core flickered through the gaps in her torn gown.
"Railgun status?" Dayat asked, his voice trembling with a mix of exhaustion and fear for her.
Dola lifted the weapon. It had finally taken its physical form.
It was a terrifying piece of engineering. The Handheld Railgun MK-I. A meter-long skeletal frame of black carbon-fiber plating, with twin Mithril barrels that seemed to pull the very light from the alleyway into their depths. Silver wire coils were wound tightly around the barrels, shimmering with a dormant, purple energy. At the rear, a specialized interface waited for Dayat’s hand—a bridge between his anomalous energy and the weapon’s destructive potential.
"Mithril barrels fused. Structural integrity at 88%," Dola reported, though her voice had a slight, digital rasp to it. "However, the thermal output from the Manifestation has damaged 12% of the bio-synthetic epidermal tissue on my hands. Nano-regeneration is commencing, but it will take 300 seconds to reach combat readiness."
Dayat looked at Dola’s hands. His heart twisted. Her elegant leather gloves were shredded, revealing the raw, red muscle tissue and gleaming silver fibers beneath. She was burning herself out to keep him alive.
"I’m sorry, Dol," Dayat whispered, gently stroking her hair. He felt the intense heat radiating from her skin. "I pushed you too hard."
"There is no room for apologies in survival protocols, Master," Dola replied, her blue irises slowly fading back from their combat-red hue. She looked up at him with a gaze that contained something that wasn’t in her original code. "Valmir will not stop. He is a man driven by wounded pride, and Gravion... Gravion is a man driven by cold duty. They know the East Gate is our only exit for a carriage. They will be waiting."
"And Gravion is a Rank S threat," Lina added, her voice trembling. "He can crush us with a thought. He won’t let us get close enough to use that... that thing."
Dayat stared at the Railgun. It was heavy—fifteen kilograms of cold, lethal logic. He felt his purple-gold energy vibrating inside the Mithril barrels, a caged sun waiting for the signal to expand.
"If he wants to crush us, we’ll put a hole through his fortress walls first," Dayat growled. His fear was being replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He looked at Dola. "How long until we can fire a single annihilation shot?"
"600 seconds to charge the capacitors to 100%, assuming you channel 80% of your remaining Mana. Warning: The recoil and energy drain will likely cause immediate syncope. You will be unconscious the moment the projectile leaves the barrel."
"I only need one shot," Dayat said. He stood up, slinging the massive weapon over his shoulder.
In his black leather zirah, with the futuristic cannon silhouetted against the moonlight, Dayat no longer looked like a scavenger or a weak F-rank adventurer. He looked like a Reaper from a future that Aethera wasn’t prepared for.
"We’re going with Plan C," Dayat said, looking toward the towering walls of Bakasa. "The Brute Breakthrough. Let’s show this Kingdom what happens when they try to cage the laws of physics."
Beside him, Dola stood up, her wounded hands already weaving back together. She didn’t look like a machine anymore. She looked like a partner.
"Master... if my systems fail at the gate, do not stop running," she whispered.
Dayat didn’t answer. He simply reached out and gripped her hand—the warmth of her biological skin and the hum of her metal bones merging into one. Together, they walked out of the shadows and toward the center of the storm.







