My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 41: The Weight on My Shoulders and the Irrational Heartbeat
The forest east of Bakasa was no storybook woodland filled with singing birds or shimmering pixies. This was The Wailing Woods—a vast, festering wound on the map of the Brassvale Kingdom.
The vegetation here didn’t grow; it suffered. Gargantuan, obsidian-barked trees twisted toward a sky they could never see, their roots bursting from the black soil like the swollen, necrotic veins of a dying giant. The air was a stagnant, heavy soup of sulfur and rotting moss, so thick it felt like a physical weight against the skin. Every breath was a gamble, a mixture of damp decay and the metallic tang of ancient, forgotten magics.
Amidst the oppressive gloom, illuminated only by the skeletal fingers of moonlight that managed to pierce the thick canopy, came the sound of a struggle. It was the sound of ragged, wet gasps and the uneven, rhythmic drag of boots through the mire.
"Hah... hah... hah..."
Dayat limped forward, his world reduced to the five feet of mud directly in front of him. Every inhalation felt like he was breathing in shards of powdered glass. His lungs were a furnace, his legs were trembling with a violence that threatened to collapse his entire frame, and his right shoulder—the one Dola had just snapped back into its socket—throbbed with a constant, white-hot agony that pulsed in time with his racing heart.
But the heaviest burden wasn’t the physical pain. It was the weight pressing against his spine.
Dola.
His wife, his AI, his ultimate weapon—now hung limp against his back like a broken doll. Her arms were draped over his shoulders, her fingers interlaced across his chest, while Dayat hooked his remaining strength under her thighs to keep her from sliding into the mud. He could feel the heat radiating from her skin—a terrifying, unnatural fever that spoke of internal systems failing and biological tissues screaming.
"Master..." Dola’s voice whispered directly into his right ear.
It was a haunting sound—weak, riddled with digital static, and yet deathly cold. It lacked the melodic precision she usually possessed. "Movement efficiency analysis: Decreased by 64%. Your heart rate has entered the Level 4 danger zone. Cardiac arrest probability: 18% within the next kilometer. Logical recommendation: Abandon the damaged unit. Your survival probability increases by 200% without this 60-kilogram mass."
"Shut up, Dol," Dayat growled, the words catching in his parched throat. He gritted his teeth until his jaw ached. Cold sweat poured from his temples, mixing with the explosion dust and dried blood that masked his face. "I told you... if you talk about me leaving you one more time, I’m going to get genuinely angry. And you don’t want to see me angry, right?"
"But this is inefficient, Master. Survival logic dictates that the vessel must be preserved at all costs. I am merely a—"
"To hell with your logic!" Dayat snapped, the outburst costing him a precious lungful of air. He stumbled, his boots sinking deep into a patch of soft peat. "Bara and Lina... they didn’t turn themselves into ash just so I could run away alone like a coward. We get out together, or we rot in this forest together. That is the only ’logic’ I’m following tonight."
The forest fell into a heavy, judging silence. Only the crunch of breaking twigs and the squelch of mud beneath Dayat’s boots broke the stillness. In the hollow of his chest, the guilt was a living thing, gnawing at his resolve.
They died because I was weak, he thought, his vision blurring with more than just exhaustion. Because I’m just a Rank F fraud who got lucky with a chatbot. I couldn’t protect them. I can’t even protect the woman I love.
Suddenly, Dayat’s boot caught on a thick, slick root that snaked across the path. His balance, already compromised by the lopsided weight on his back, gave way. He tried to compensate, his muscles screaming in protest, but it was too much.
They both tumbled forward, crashing into the damp, moss-covered earth.
"Argh!" Dayat groaned as his dislocated shoulder hit the ground first, a flash of white blinding him as the joint protested the impact.
But a far more agonizing sound came from beside him.
"Cough... cough!"
Dola hacked violently, and a thick, dark crimson fluid escaped her lips, splashing onto the pale green moss. Her face, usually a mask of calm, was contorted in a grimace of pure suffering. Her eyes were squeezed shut, her fingers clawing into the damp earth so hard that her synthetic nails snapped, drawing more of that strange, red-purple blood.
Dayat scrambled up, ignoring the stars dancing in his eyes. He crawled on all fours toward her, his heart hammering against his ribs.
"Dol? Dol! Talk to me!" Dayat reached for her, his hands shaking.
The moonlight caught Dola’s right leg as her gown shifted. The sight made Dayat’s stomach turn a violent somersault.
The leg was still attached, but "attached" was a word used by the desperate. From the knee down, the structure was bent at a gruesome, ninety-degree angle that defied any skeletal logic. The synthetic skin—engineered to be as soft as a human’s—was torn wide open. It revealed a nightmare of mangled red flesh and a jagged shard of white bone protruding through the muscle.
But it was what lay within the wound that made Dayat’s skin crawl. Amidst the wet, red biological tissue, fine silver fibers pulsed softly. They looked like strands of metallic silk, woven intricately into the meat and wrapping around the broken bone. He saw tiny, electric blue sparks flickering from the frayed ends of the fibers—short circuits in her neural dampeners. Deep red blood—smelling of rusted iron and a cloyingly sweet glucose—pooled in the black mud beneath her.
Dayat touched the skin near the wound. It was searing.
"Chassis core temperature... 42.5 degrees Celsius... and rising," Dola murmured, her eyes flickering open, though they were glazed and unfocused. "Cooling manifold: Ruptured. Internal reservoir: 12% capacity. Master... I am detecting a Critical Error in the neural receptors. My processor is... overwhelmed by the signal noise."
"That signal noise is called pain, Dol," Dayat whispered, his voice cracking.
He pulled a knife from his belt and tore a long strip from his own shirt sleeve. His hands were covered in mud and blood, but he tried to be as surgical as possible. He needed to bind the wound, to stop the leak of her life force.
As his fingers brushed against Dola’s inner thigh, searching for a pulse point to gauge her internal pressure, Dola’s entire body jolted as if struck by lightning.
"Wait... Master... stop..." Dola caught Dayat’s wrist with a grip that was surprisingly strong, despite her condition.
Dayat froze. Her pale face, usually the color of fine ivory, was suddenly flushed with a deep, vivid pink—not the blush of a modest girl, but the sign of a massive chemical surge. 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮
"What? Did I hit a nerve? Does it hurt that much?"
"No. It is not... pain," Dola stared blankly into the dark canopy above, her eyes darting as if reading invisible lines of code scrolling across the sky. "There is a... massive data anomaly. When you touched the femoral sector, my internal matrix recorded an unauthorized surge in Sector 4: The Bio-Synthesis Matrix."
"Speak human, Dol! I don’t care about Sectors right now!" Dayat’s panic was peaking, his mind conjuring images of her exploding from within.
"Mock hormones..." Dola’s brow furrowed, an expression so human it was heartbreaking. "The levels of Synthetic Estrogen and Oxytocin in my internal chemical tanks have surged by 400%. The ’Cellular Replication’ indicator on the artificial womb module is flashing active. This... this is a catastrophic glitch, Dayat. That module was designed as a passive anatomical mimic. It was never meant to... to engage."
Dola shook her head, her silver hair matting with mud. "Forgive me, Master. Ignore the data. The physical trauma must have caused a cross-contamination between the cooling fluid and the endocrine reservoirs. My system mistakenly believes this body is in... biological preparation mode. Utterly illogical."
Dayat sat back on his heels, stunned. Artificial womb? Biological preparation? He stared at her flat stomach, hidden beneath the tattered remains of her tactical suit. He realized then that he truly didn’t know the full extent of what he had created—or what Dola was becoming.
"We’ll figure out the glitches later," Dayat said, his voice hardening with resolve. "Right now, I have to get you to cover. The wolves are going to smell that blood soon."
"You won’t have the strength," Dola protested feebly. "Your muscle fibers have sustained micro-trauma in 60% of the tissue. If you attempt to lift me again, you will lose consciousness within 500 meters."
"Then I’ll collapse at meter 501," Dayat replied. It wasn’t a joke. It was a promise.
He turned around, positioning his back in front of her. "Get on. That’s an Administrator’s order. No arguments."
Dola hesitated for a heartbeat. Her primary protocols forbade her from endangering her Administrator, but the hierarchy of an ’Order’ was absolute. With slow, agonizingly cautious movements, she wrapped her arms around his neck once more.
As their bodies pressed together, Dayat felt it—a rhythmic, frantic thudding against his shoulder blades. It wasn’t the hum of a reactor or the whir of a pump. It was a heartbeat. Thump-thump-thump-thump. Fast, terrified, and undeniably alive.
Dayat stood, his vision swimming with black spots. He forced his spine straight, his knees popping under the weight, and began to walk.
An hour passed in a blur of agony and silence. The fog seemed to grow teeth, the cold wind whispering the names of the dead. Dayat began to hallucinate; the silhouettes of the twisted trees looked like Bara’s broad shoulders, the rustle of the leaves sounded like Lina’s soft laughter. The guilt was a physical weight, heavier than Dola’s body.
I’m sorry, guys, he whispered into the fog. I’ll make it count. I swear.
"Master..." Dola’s voice was a warm puff of air against his neck. Her head was resting on his shoulder now, her breathing shallow. "Passive sonar... has detected a structural anomaly. One hundred meters... two o’clock. A stone cavity. No thermal signatures detected. It is... safe from the wind."
"Got it... hang on..."
Dayat dragged his feet, each step a victory of will over biology. He found the spot—a natural cleft beneath the massive, mossy roots of a fallen Ironwood tree. It was a small, dry cave, hidden from the path.
He stepped inside and, with agonizing slowness, lowered Dola onto a thick bed of dry, discarded leaves. Dola let out a long, shuddering hiss of air as her mangled leg touched the ground. Her face was now as translucent as paper.
Dayat collapsed beside her, his back against the cold stone wall. He had no fire. He had no food. He had only a small folding knife, a few blood-soaked bandages, and a dying cyborg wife.
"Dol," Dayat called out softly into the darkness of the cave.
"Yes, Master?"
"Do you really just feel a ’logic error’? Don’t you feel... anything else? Like... the fear of not waking up?"
There was a long, heavy silence. Only the sound of the wind howling outside and the slow, rhythmic drip of water from the ceiling filled the space.
"My system..." Dola began, her voice gaining a strange, reflective quality. "Master Dayat... when Joldric swung that blade at the gate... my tactical processor showed a 100% probability of your death if I did not intervene. There was no time for a secondary strategy."
"And?"
"When that data appeared... my Logic Core didn’t process a counter-move. What appeared instead was... a void. A blank image. A world where you did not exist." Dola turned her head toward him, her blue eyes dimming as her energy reserves hit the bottom. "And that empty data... was far more terrifying than the thought of my own chassis being destroyed. If that is what humans define as ’fear,’ then yes... I am very afraid, Master."
Dayat shifted closer, pulling her into an embrace to share what little body heat he had left. He didn’t care about the smell of sulfur or the blood staining his chest.
"We’re going to survive this, Dol. I’m going to fix your leg. I’ll build you a new one, better than before. I’ll make it so you can feel those ’glitches’ properly, without the errors."
Dola didn’t answer. Her system had entered a forced Sleep Mode to preserve the final 2% of her core energy. But her biological hand—the one that wasn’t metallic—gripped Dayat’s fingers with a strength that was purely human.
Outside, the Wailing Woods continued to howl, but inside the cave, two outcasts slept in a cocoon of flickering hope and a love that defied the laws of two worlds.





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