My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 43: Scorched Remnants and the Whispers of Doom
The silence that followed the final gunshot was absolute. It wasn’t the peaceful silence of a sleeping forest; it was a heavy, suffocating vacuum that felt more deafening than the explosion of the weapon itself.
Dayat stood frozen in the pitch-black heart of The Wailing Woods, his boots sunk deep into the sulfurous mire. The matte-black SMG in his hands—a masterpiece of terrestrial logic—didn’t fall to the ground. Instead, it began to fray at the edges, its solid form dissolving into a swarm of golden-purple particles. They danced in the air like digital fireflies before being whisked away by the cold wind, leaving behind only a lingering, razor-sharp scent of ozone, burnt insulation, and acrid gunpowder.
Before him, the forest floor was a map of violence. Marsha lay slumped against a stump, a precise, dark hole centered perfectly in her forehead. Her eyes were still wide, reflecting a shock that would now last for eternity. A few meters away, Voron’s body was a jagged ruin, shredded by the kinetic dominance of anti-mana rounds that had treated his elite armor like wet parchment.
Dayat looked at his hands. They weren’t shaking.
There was no nausea, no sudden urge to repent. The influence of The Maiden—that ancient, terrifying protocol that had briefly rewritten his neural pathways—still left a cold, crystalline residue in his veins. The absolute logic that had possessed him, a state of mind where life and death were merely variables to be balanced, was only slowly receding. It was replaced by the creeping return of his human consciousness, like warmth returning to a frostbitten limb. He had just erased two lives as if they were nothing more than lines of faulty code in a crashing program.
"Master... Dayat?"
The voice was a fragile thread that shattered Dayat’s trance.
He spun around, his movements still retaining a ghost of that supernatural fluidity, and sprinted back into the cramped safety of the cave. Dola was there, sitting upright on the bed of dry, rotting leaves. Her eyes had returned to their familiar, steady blue—the comforting glow of his assistant, no longer the abyssal purple of the executioner.
"Dol! Don’t move! Don’t you dare move!" Dayat fell to his knees before her, his breath coming in ragged hitches. His hands, finally starting to tremble, reached for her mangled right leg. He expected to see the horror from before—the snapped bone, the torn synthetic meat, the leaking silver conduits.
But as the pale moonlight crawled across the cave floor, Dayat froze.
Dola’s right leg was whole.
It wasn’t just healed; it was... upgraded. The leg that had been crushed into a ninety-degree angle by Joldric’s fist was now perfectly straight, its structure seemingly reinforced. The synthetic skin, previously shredded and gray, now possessed a flawless, pearlescent luster that shimmered with a faint, iridescent glow. There were no scars, no jagged edges, no trace of the dark synthetic blood that had pooled in the mud outside. It was as if the laws of entropy had been reversed.
"Emergency regeneration system... activated when the Maiden protocol was forced open," Dola explained. Her voice was still slightly fractured, a faint digital rasp underlying her words. She wiggled her toes, the movement smooth and silent. "The unit has been updated at a molecular level. My internal foundries utilized the ambient Mana to forge a high-density alloy lattice within the biological tissue. However... the energy consumption has been catastrophic. My Core is in a state of critical depletion. Remaining power: 0.8%."
Dayat let out a long, shuddering breath. He leaned forward, letting his forehead rest against Dola’s shoulder. The heat was gone; she felt cool, stable, and real. "Thank God... you’re back, Dol. I thought... I thought I’d lost you too. I thought I’d be alone in this place."
"The others...?" Dola went silent. Her memory banks began to pull the data logs from the East Gate and the alleyway. "Bara. Lina. Their bio-signatures are no longer detectable. Their data streams have ceased to flow. Biologically... they have been erased from the system."
Dayat squeezed his eyes shut, his grip on Dola’s hands tightening. The rage that had fueled his "Mode: Logic" and allowed him to kill Marsha and Voron had evaporated, leaving behind a cold, suffocating grief. They had died so he could live. They had burned so he could run.
"We’ll make them pay, Dol," Dayat whispered into her neck, his voice thick with a promise of future violence. "Brassvale, Alaric, the Church... we’ll hold them all accountable. But not now. Right now, we’re just two ghosts in a forest. We have to disappear."
"Logical recommendation accepted," Dola replied, her hand coming up to stroke the back of Dayat’s head. Suddenly, her head tilted at a sharp angle. Her eyes flickered red for a millisecond. "Master, an anomaly has been detected. Directly behind you. Thermal signature: High. Mana resonance: Ancient."
Dayat bolted upright, the instinct for survival overriding his exhaustion. He reached for his belt, trying to manifest a simple folding knife, but his mind felt like a dry well. Syntax Error. He stood his ground anyway, shielding Dola with his body as he stared into the swirling sulfurous fog at the cave entrance.
He expected more Inquisitors. He expected Alaric’s hounds.
He did not expect the woman who stepped out from the shadows of the blackened Ironwood trees.
She moved with a silence that made the forest seem loud. She wore a deep emerald-green cloak that seemed to breathe, its fabric shifting and changing color to match the surrounding foliage. Her silvery-white hair was a waterfall of moonlight that cascaded down to her waist, tied loosely with a vine of glowing moss. Her ears were long and tapered, marking her as a race Dayat had only seen in the background of Bakasa’s slave markets—but this woman was no slave. Her face possessed a timeless, haunting beauty, yet her emerald eyes held a weight of exhaustion that only comes from watching centuries of history turn into dust.
"Disabling the Aegis of a High Mage with small, propelled metal objects... that is a logic very foreign to these woods," the Elf said. Her voice didn’t just carry through the air; it resonated in the mind, sounding like the calm, rhythmic strumming of an ancient harp.
Dayat didn’t lower his guard. "Who are you? Another one of Alaric’s hunters? Or does the Church employ your kind now?"
The woman offered a thin, enigmatic smile—a look that held both a trace of mockery and a deep, soul-weary pity. "Count Alaric? That power-hungry blink of an eye has no authority here. I have walked The Wailing Woods since before your ruler’s great-grandfather drew his first breath. I have seen over seven hundred and eighty winters pass through these branches. I am merely an observer who found the silence of the night interrupted by the scream of your ’physics’."
Dola struggled to stand, leaning heavily on the cave wall. "Bio-metric analysis: Species - High Elf. Estimated age: 780-820 years. No hostile intent detected in muscle tension or Mana flow. She is... neutral."
"A fascinating metal girl," the Elf remarked, stepping closer. The fog seemed to part for her as if out of respect. She looked at Dola with a terrifyingly deep curiosity. "You are no ancient golem from the Era of Ruins. You are not a relic of the past. You are... a herald of something new. There is a heartbeat within your gears, child, but that pulse does not belong to Aethera."
The Elf then turned her piercing gaze toward Dayat. "And you, Child of Man. The knowledge you carry in your mind... it is a beautiful poison. In a world ruled by the whims of Mana and the stagnation of the Gods, your ’Logic’ is a heresy that will set the world on fire. You must leave this place. The hunters you killed were but a scouting party. A legion will be here by fajar."
"We want to leave, but the gates of Bakasa are sealed behind us," Dayat said, his voice hard.
"Do not look back at Bakasa. That city is a graveyard waiting for its occupants," the Elf suggested. "Go West. Head toward the Kingdom of Verdia. It is the land of the alchemists, the tinkers, and the free-thinkers. There, the ’Logic’ you bring might be studied as a marvel rather than purged as a sin. There is also a source of pure Aetheric energy in their capital that could recharge your companion."
Dayat looked at Dola, then back at the mysterious stranger. "Why help us? What’s your stake in this?"
"Because I am bored, Hidayat," the Elf replied simply. She reached into the folds of her cloak and produced a small, crystalline vial filled with a translucent green liquid. "Drink this. It is a decoction of the forest’s essence. It will mend your physical fatigue and knit your muscles back together, though it will do nothing for your unique, alien energy. And you..."
The Elf stepped closer to Dayat. She was tall, nearly as tall as he was. She reached out and, with a deliberate, slow movement, adjusted the torn collar of Dayat’s jacket. Her face was only inches from his, her scent like rain on fresh pine. "This human child has the potential to either break this world’s chains or crush it under a different kind of wheel. Guard him well, Metal Girl. He is a rare specimen."
In that moment, a jagged spark of red light flared in Dola’s eyes.
[WARNING: UNIDENTIFIED EMOTIONAL SPIKE DETECTED.]
[STATUS: IRRITATION / PROTECTIVE OVERRIDE / POSSESSIVE TENDENCY.]
Dola suddenly lunged forward, her movement startlingly fast for someone with 0.8% power. She grabbed Dayat’s arm and yanked him back, physically positioning herself as a barrier between the Innovator and the ancient Elf. Her face remained a mask of clinical detachment, but her grip on Dayat’s hand was tight enough to bruise.
"Administrator Dayat is under my permanent, exclusive protection," Dola said, her voice dropping into a tone that was noticeably sharper and colder than usual. "Physical interaction or ’collar adjustments’ from third-party biological entities are deemed unnecessary for his data recovery or emotional stability."
The Elf woman blinked, then let out a melodic, genuine laugh that echoed through the dark trees. "Oh? So the machine has teeth. And a heart that knows jealousy? How intriguing. Your evolution into humanity is progressing much faster than your blueprints intended, I suspect."
Dayat could only gape, his face turning a shade of red that rivaled Dola’s warning lights. "Dol? What... what was that? Are you glitching again?"
"I am merely performing a security optimization task, Dayat," Dola replied stiffly. She didn’t let go of his hand. If anything, she pulled it closer to her chest. "My internal sensors recorded a 20% spike in your adrenaline during her proximity. I am... mitigating the interference."
Dayat looked back at the beautiful Elf, who was now fading back into the swirling mist of the woods. "Wait! How do we get out? The forest is a maze!"
"Follow the path marked by the Caelum moss—the ones that glow blue when your ’Logic’ passes by. It will lead you to the Terragard border in three days," the Elf’s voice drifted back, sounding like it was coming from everywhere at once. "Remember, Hidayat. The world is ending. You and your Metal Wife are the only ones holding the eraser. Do not die at the hands of a mere Count."
Dayat stood in the silence of the cave, processing the tidal wave of information. Inside his mind, he could still feel the echoes of the The Maiden’s transmission. It was a library of violence: blueprints for Flashbangs, Claymore mines, internal combustion engines, and even the chemical formulas for nerve gas. The knowledge didn’t feel heavy anymore; it felt like it had always been there, waiting for him to wake up.
"Master," Dola called out, her voice returning to its soft, familiar cadence. "The Elf’s liquid... my chemical analysis confirms a 98.4% efficacy for your biological recovery. Please consume it."
Dayat took the vial and downed it. It tasted like ice-cold mountain water mixed with the sting of mint. Instantly, a surge of warmth exploded in his chest, radiating down to his tired legs and his aching shoulder. The pain vanished, replaced by a clean, sharp energy.
"Alright, Dol. We’re going to Verdia," Dayat said, staring out at the Western horizon where the first hint of dawn was beginning to bleed into the sky. "I’m going to build a home for us there. A place where nobody can touch you. And I’m going to find out exactly who The Maiden is and why she’s hiding inside my wife."
Dola looked down at her hands—hands that felt warm, soft, and alive. "The Maiden... she is a protocol of the deep future, Dayat. She is what I was meant to become. But as long as I am with you... I prefer being Dola."
Dayat squeezed her hand. "Whatever you are, you’re mine. Let’s go."
Dola went quiet, the neon indicator at her temple turning a soft, glowing pink for several seconds before settling back to blue. "Data received. Status: Moving toward a shared future. Let us proceed, my Husband."
They stepped out of the cave, leaving the ruins of their enemies and the ghosts of their friends behind. As they walked through the glowing blue moss, the Innovator and the Machine didn’t look like fugitives anymore. They looked like the beginning of a revolution.







