My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 45: Manifestation of Wrath

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Chapter 45: Chapter 45: Manifestation of Wrath

The aftermath of the annihilation was a landscape of hellish geometry. Black smoke, thick and oily, billowed from the jagged craters that now scarred the edge of The Wailing Woods. The torrential rain, which continued to pour with a vengeful intensity, failed to extinguish the flickering purple flames—the remnants of Dayat’s anomalous energy—that were slowly consuming the silver-armored remains of the Inquisition.

Dayat stood in the center of the devastation. His breathing was a series of heavy, metallic rasps. Steam rose from his drenched clothes as if his very blood were boiling, a physical manifestation of the energy surge that had just defied every known law of human sanity in Aethera. His hands were stained with a mixture of mud, soot, and a darkness that wasn’t physical.

Before him, the world seemed to have ground to a halt. The acrid, biting scent of gunpowder from the Cluster Munitions hung heavy in the damp air, competing with the overwhelming, copper-heavy tang of blood pooling beneath his feet. Yet, Dayat felt nothing for the carnage. His eyes, still shimmering with a receding purple light, were fixed on a single, heartbreaking point: Dola.

She was still pinned to the massive, blackened tree, her body a fragile anchor in the storm. The spear of holy light was finally fading, losing its physical form as the Bishop’s life force expired, but the wound it had carved through her was agonizingly real. Red blood—the same vibrant, hot crimson as Dayat’s own—continued to seep out in rhythmic pulses, soaking her tattered gown and staining her porcelain skin. She was turning ashen, her vitality draining into the hungry soil of the forest.

"Dol... hang on. Please, look at me. Don’t you dare close your eyes," Dayat whispered.

His voice was a shattered thing, trembling with a fragility that stood in terrifying contrast to the icy, god-like coldness he had shown his enemies moments ago. He approached her, his boots squelching in the bloody mud. His hands shook as they hovered near the hilt of the fading light spear. He was an Innovator, a man of logic, and logic told him that if he simply yanked the weapon out, the internal hemorrhaging would accelerate into a fatal flood. But if he left it, the residual holy energy would continue to incinerate her biological organs from the inside out.

"System... status... critical..." Dola’s voice was barely a ghost of a sound, a hoarse, mechanical whisper that lacked all its usual melodic cadence. "Damage log: 99% biological failure. Neural... links... snapping. Master... Dayat... please... run..."

"There’s no more running, Dol! Do you hear me?! I’m done running!" Dayat roared, his tears finally breaking through, mixing with the cold rain on his cheeks.

Suddenly, a gentle, firm pat landed on Dayat’s shoulder.

The reaction was instantaneous. Driven by a hair-trigger survival instinct etched into his brain by The Maiden, Dayat manifested a jagged tactical dagger in his right hand. He spun around with a speed that blurred the rain, the razor-sharp tip of the blade stopping exactly one millimeter from the throat of the intruder.

Lunethra didn’t flinch. The Elf woman’s emerald eyes gazed at Dayat with a terrifying calm, though a flicker of genuine surprise crossed her ageless face at the sheer, kinetic speed of his reaction. 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖

"You have spent your wrath, Child of Man," Lunethra said, her voice like the rustle of leaves in a quiet glen. "Now, fulfill your duty as her husband. If you continue to stand here weeping while the forest drinks her life, she will truly become nothing more than a forgotten history."

Dayat’s eyes cleared, the purple haze receding. He lowered the knife, and it dissolved into golden dust. "Lunethra... help me. Please. She’s bleeding. She’s... she’s not just a machine anymore. I don’t know what to do with a heart that bleeds."

"She is both. A beautiful, yet terrifying anomaly that bridges the gap between the forged and the born," Lunethra murmured. She waved her slender hand, and the ancient roots of the blackened tree stirred as if waking from a long slumber. They moved with a mother’s tenderness, gently extracting the fading spear of light from Dola’s abdomen while simultaneously sealing the exit wound with a thick, glowing green sap. "Pick her up. My dwelling is protected by the Ancient Breath. The Church’s reach is long, but their light cannot penetrate the shadows of my home."

Dayat didn’t hesitate. He gathered Dola into his arms, cradling her against his chest. Her body felt impossibly light yet terrifyingly feverish—like a fusion between an overheating high-performance engine and a human child racked by a lethal flu.

Lunethra’s Abode: The Intersection of Two Worlds

The Elf’s home was a marvel of organic architecture, hidden within the hollowed-out heart of a tree so large it felt like a mountain. High-level illusion barriers hummed in the air, vibrating at a frequency that made Dayat’s ears pop. Inside, the atmosphere was a complete reversal of the forest’s rot; it was tranquil, warm, and scented with a heavy forest aromatherapy that tasted like pine and hope.

Dayat laid Dola onto a long, polished wooden table draped in pristine white silk. He looked around, his mind already racing, pulling data from the library The Maiden had scorched into his consciousness.

"You need to leave, Lunethra. I need space. I need to focus," Dayat said. His tone had shifted; the grieving husband was being pushed aside by the cold, clinical focus of the Innovator.

Lunethra arched an elegant eyebrow, a tray of herbs in her hand. "I am the finest healer in this forest, Dayat. I have mended wounds that would kill a dragon. You are but a human who—"

"I’m not just a human. I am the Innovator," Dayat interrupted, his gaze locking onto hers with a ferocity that made even the ancient Elf pause. He took a breath, a bitter, exhausted smile playing on his lips. "And honestly? Your ’prayers’ and nature spells won’t interface with the Source Code architecture inside her. Her organs are biological, but her nervous system is a fiber-optic nightmare. I need precision, Lunethra. I need Earth’s logic, not Aethera’s miracles."

Lunethra stood silent, studying him for a long heartbeat, then she slowly nodded. "Very well. I will prepare a soul-strengthening decoction in the outer chamber. Do not let her light go out, Child of Man, or this forest will mourn a loss it doesn’t yet understand."

Once the door of roots closed, Dayat plunged into his mind. He summoned the medical archives transmitted by The Maiden. Thousands of years of Earth’s surgical knowledge—from the first sutures of ancient Egypt to the nanobotic surgery of the 21st century—flooded his brain.

"Alright, Dol... let’s rewrite your ending," Dayat muttered.

[PHASE 1: MEDICAL MANIFESTATION.]

Dayat raised his hands over the table. This was different from manifesting a gun. It required a different kind of focus—one of preservation, not destruction. He forced his energy to forge objects that had never existed in the history of Aethera.

First, a set of high-carbon, stainless steel scalpels. Then, hemostats, surgical sutures made of high-tensile polymer, and clear IV bags filled with sterile NaCl solution. He didn’t stop there. He manifested broad-spectrum injectable antibiotics and a high-intensity LED surgical lamp powered by a localized lithium-ion battery.

The equipment appeared one by one, shimmering under the room’s dim, amber light. Dayat worked with a speed that bordered on the supernatural. The hands that had just vaporized a Bishop’s head now moved with a delicacy that was almost poetic. He debrided the scorched tissue, sutured the ruptured blood vessels, and purged the lingering, crystalline holy energy that was still trying to "purify" Dola’s muscle tissue.

Hours bled into what felt like seconds. He had closed the physical wounds. He had stabilized the biological "vessel." But a massive, terrifying problem remained.

Dola’s biological wounds were sealed, but the blue indicator at her temple—her system’s status light—remained a hollow, dead black. Her Core, the bridge between her data and her flesh, refused to ignite.

"Energy... she’s drained. Her sasis is empty," Dayat whispered, his voice cracking with frustration. He stared at his own hands. "Sains Bumi isn’t enough. She needs a jumpstart. She needs Mana."

Dayat remembered the scans Dola had performed on him. His Mana was "unmeasurable" not because he was powerful in the traditional sense, but because his frequency was "Anomalous." It wasn’t Mana; it was Raw Data—the pure, unfiltered energy of the Source Code.

"If I can ’write’ my energy into her... if I can use my soul as a power supply..."

Dayat placed both of his palms directly over Dola’s chest, feeling the faint, stuttering thud of her artificial heart. He didn’t use a spell. He didn’t pray to a god he didn’t believe in. He used Programming Logic.

This was the ultimate synergy of wrath and innovation. Dayat envisioned his energy as a high-voltage DC current that needed to be inverted and stepped down into a binary code that Dola’s system could accept.

Wake up, Dol... this is an official order from your Administrator. I am commanding you to return to the network! Dayat screamed internally, pouring every ounce of his remaining Mana into her chest.

A brilliant golden-purple light erupted from Dayat’s palms, seeping into Dola’s skin like liquid fire. The connection was agonizing. Dayat felt as if his own soul were being dragged through a needle’s eye, his vision turning white as he pushed his limits. He was merging Earth’s medicine with Aethera’s energy, a hybrid treatment that the world had never seen.

Suddenly, Dola’s body jolted, a violent arc of electricity jumping between her skin and the table.

BEEP.

The indicator at her temple flickered a deep, bruised purple, then settled into a steady, stable sapphire blue. Dola’s eyelids fluttered and slowly opened. She stared at the wooden ceiling, her pupils Dilating and contracting as her sensors came back online. She turned her head, looking at Dayat, who was now slumped on the floor beside the table, drenched in cold sweat, but wearing the widest, most triumphant grin of his life.

"Master... Dayat..." Dola’s voice was hers again. Stiff, soft, and beautifully monotone. "Internal analysis: Biological lacerations have been sutured with 85% accuracy. Core integrity: 15%... charging via anomalous tether. You... you have just performed a Class-A medical violation of Aethera’s security protocols."

Dayat let out a ragged, hysterical laugh—a sound of pure joy that hadn’t been heard since the deaths of Bara and Lina. "I don’t give a damn about the protocols of this world, Dol. I only care that you’re back. I only care that you’re here."

The door of roots creaked open, and Lunethra entered, her hands holding a tray of steaming potions. She stopped dead in her tracks, her jaw nearly dropping as she looked at the glowing LED lamp, the plastic IV bags, and the very much conscious Dola.

"Impossible... a piercing wound of that magnitude... it should have taken weeks of high-level Elven stasis to even begin the mending process," Lunethra whispered, her eyes wide with a newfound fear—or perhaps respect.

"Magic is slow and erratic, Lun. Logic is instantaneous and absolute," Dayat said, gritting his teeth as he forced himself to stand. He wobbled, his energy at zero, but Dola was faster.

She slid off the table, her newly regenerated legs hitting the floor with a solid, confident thud. She caught Dayat’s arm, pulling him upright with a strength that felt as solid as iron. She looked at Lunethra with a gaze that was flat and unyielding, her blue eyes flickering as they performed a rapid-fire scan.

"Master Dayat, your glucose levels are at 2%. You are bordering on a hypoglycemic coma," Dola stated firmly. She then shifted her gaze to the Elf, her eyes narrowing slightly. "And Lady Elf... while I thank you for providing this temporary repair facility, I must inform you that my sensors are detecting a 15% increase in your heart rate and a dilation of your pupils whenever you look at Master Dayat. I feel compelled to remind you that Hidayat’s status is officially ’Data-Linked’—to me. Permanently."

Dayat melongo, staring at his wife. "Dol, you literally just came back from the dead, and the first thing your system does is perform a jealousy scan on an ancient Elf?"

"Emotional security and territorial optimization are high-priority sub-routines, Master," Dola replied stiffly, though she leaned her body into his, clutching his arm with an incredibly possessive grip.

Lunethra stood there for a moment, then she shook her head, a thin, amused smile touching her lips. "You truly are an anomaly, Hidayat. A man who brings the tools of the future to fix a heart made of both steel and flesh. But listen to me carefully. The news of a dead Inquisitor Bishop will reach the Capital of Brassvale by dawn. They will no longer see you as a mere fugitive or a thief."

Dayat’s expression went cold, the warmth of the humor vanishing. He looked at his hands—hands that could now heal or destroy with equal precision.

"What will they call me, then?"

"A Calamity-Level Threat," Lunethra said solemnly. "They will send the Purge."

Dayat looked at Dola, then at the dark woods outside. In his mind, the blueprints for a more perfect, more lethal Railgun—the MK-II—began to coalesce.

"Let them send whoever they want," Dayat said, his voice dropping into a lethal whisper. "Brassvale, the Church, or the Gods themselves... if they want a war with logic, I’m going to give them a very calculated apocalypse."

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