©Novel Buddy
My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 46: Recovery & Discovery
The morning light didn’t just shine; it filtered through the cracks of the gargantuan leaves sheltering Lunethra’s home in a cascade of liquid amber and gold. Inside the room, the air was a thick, comforting blanket of forest aromatherapy—scents of crushed pine needles, dried lavender, and a sharp, medicinal herb that cleared the sinuses. It was a world away from the firestorm of blood and spent gunpowder they had left behind at the border of the Wailing Woods.
Dayat woke up to the sound of rhythmic thunder, only to realize it was the pounding of his own pulse against his skull. He was lying on a soft, luxurious pile of white wolf furs spread across the polished wooden floor. His body felt heavy, his limbs like lead pipes that had been rusted shut.
Beside him, Dola sat in a perfect seiza position, her back as straight as a steel girder. Her electric-blue eyes were fixed on him, unblinking, monitoring his vitals with a devotion that bordered on the obsessive.
"Master Dayat, your consciousness has returned to optimal levels. Sleep synchronization duration: 6 hours and 22 minutes," Dola stated. Her voice had regained its steady cadence, though a faint metallic undertone remained—a lingering scar from her system’s near-collapse.
Dayat groaned, trying to push himself up. Every muscle fiber in his chest and back screamed in protest, feeling as if they had been torn apart and stitched back together with jagged wire. "Ugh... damn. I feel like I just went ten rounds with a battalion of heavy-duty golems. My head is splitting."
"Your Mana energy is still critically low, hovering at 12%. Physical trauma is still in the ’Moderate’ category," Dola said. She leaned over and picked up a hand-carved wooden bowl filled with a thick, iridescent green fluid. "It is recommended that you consume the liquid nutrients provided by the Elven entity. My analysis confirms a 94% compatibility with human physiology for rapid muscle repair."
Dayat took the bowl, his hands still trembling slightly. He looked at Dola, his gaze tracing the lines of her body. The horrific wound in her abdomen, which had been a gaping maw of blood and burnt circuitry only hours ago, was now nothing more than a faint, silver-pink line beneath her torn, soot-stained gown.
"Are you really okay, Dol?" Dayat asked, his voice low and concerned. "I saw your internal fibers... I saw you bleeding human blood. No short-circuited systems? No permanent logic corruption?"
Dola didn’t answer immediately. Instead, she leaned forward, bringing her face so close to Dayat’s that he could see the microscopic hexagonal patterns in her pupils. Their noses almost touched. The scent of her—a mix of vanilla and ozone—filled his senses.
"Core integrity: 35%. Biological regeneration: 92%," Dola whispered, her breath warm against his skin. "Technically, I am far more functional and lethal than you are at the moment, Master. My ’wife’ protocols have prioritized my own repair so that I may better facilitate yours."
Dayat let out a raspy, weak chuckle, the sound catching in his throat. "Arrogant, aren’t we? Ever since you got that upgrade and realized you can actually feel things."
"I am merely stating factual data to manage your expectations," Dola replied. She didn’t pull away. Instead, she reached out with a cool, slender fingertip and wiped a bead of cold sweat from Dayat’s forehead. "Thank you, Dayat... for prioritizing my existence over your own safety. My logs have marked that event as a ’Primary Epoch’ in our shared history." 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶
The intimate moment was shattered by the creak of the wooden door. Lunethra entered, her green cloak swirling around her ankles, carrying a fresh stack of pungent herbs that smelled like wet earth and electricity. She stopped, eyeing the proximity between the Innovator and his Machine. A knowing, faint smile played on her lips as she shook her head.
"An odd pair, truly," Lunethra murmured, setting the herbs on a stone pedestal. "Dayat, I’m glad to see your soul is still anchored to your body. If you hadn’t woken up soon, your beautiful guardian here might have leveled this entire section of the fores."
Dayat finished the green fluid. It tasted like bitter grass mixed with honey, but the effect was instantaneous. A wave of warmth radiated from his stomach to his extremities, dulling the ache in his bones. "Thanks, Lun. Without your ’miracles’, I’d be a very well-dressed corpse by now."
"Save your gratitude for when we aren’t being hunted," Lunethra’s expression turned grim, the light in her emerald eyes hardening. "I’ve just returned from the outer veil. Brassvale has stopped being subtle. They aren’t using the old trade routes anymore. They are flattening the trees, grinding the ancient moss into dust, and destroying the ecosystem just to pave an industrial road for their war machines."
Dayat stood up, his legs wobbling like a newborn foal’s before he found his balance. The humor vanished from his eyes, replaced by the cold, calculating gaze of a man who had seen his friends die and was ready to make the world pay for it. "Who did they send? Is it Joldric again? Or that gravity mage?"
"Worse. They sent the Executioner of Brassvale. Thamuz," Lunethra answered, her voice trembling with suppressed rage. "He doesn’t fight for glory or gold. He is a fanatic of the Gear-Breaker Church. He is bringing a Destroyer Golem Battalion—the Mk. IV units. Thamuz isn’t a man who negotiates. To him, duty is the only law, and you... you are a ’Logic Defect’ that must be purged from the world’s equation."
"Thamuz, huh?" Dayat clenched his fists, feeling the mana-infused blood pumping through his veins. "A fine, sturdy name to put on a headstone. If he wants a purge, I’ll give him a cleanup he’ll never forget."
"Dayat, they are scarring my home," Lunethra said, her hands gripping her wooden staff so hard her knuckles turned white. "They are burning trees that have seen a thousand years of peace just to make a path. I will not allow my sanctuary to be touched by that rusted, soul-less iron."
Dayat looked at Lunethra, then turned to Dola. "Dol, you hear that? They want to play rough in our host’s backyard. What’s the tactical outlook?"
"Tactical analysis: The enemy possesses an 8-to-1 advantage in raw physical mass and numbers," Dola replied, her eyes flickering as she accessed the shared tactical cloud they had established. "The Mk. IV Golems are powered by compressed Mana-steam cores and armored with reinforced granite-steel alloy. However... the density of this forest provides a 70% guerrilla advantage if we exploit their sensor blind spots and the lack of maneuverability in their heavy chassis."
"Alright," Dayat took a deep, steadying breath. He felt the knowledge from The Maiden humming in the back of his mind, a library of destruction waiting for a librarian. "Lun, I need the open clearing in your backyard. The one facing the valley. I’m going to manifest something that’ll make Thamuz wish he stayed in his metal capital."
The Forge of Asymmetric Warfare
In the hidden clearing, sheltered by high-level illusion barriers, Dayat went to work. He was no longer manifesting small, makeshift tools like the "Udin Merepet." He was reaching for the apex of Earth’s precision engineering.
He closed his eyes, visualizing the intricate firing pin, the rifling of the barrel, and the complex ballistics of a long-range engagement. He called upon the Source Code.
[MANIFESTATION: CHEYTAC M300 INTERVENTION – ANTI-MATERIAL SNIPER RIFLE.]
A brilliant burst of purple-gold energy erupted in the air. Out of the vacuum of logic, a massive, matte-black rifle appeared. It was a beast of a machine—nearly five feet long, constructed from high-strength polymers and aerospace-grade steel. Dayat caught it as it materialized, the weight nearly pulling him down. The steel felt icy and absolute in his palms.
Next, he manifested several boxes of .408 CheyTac ammunition. But he didn’t stop at standard lead.
Dayat took the raw mana crystals Lunethra had salvaged from the forest’s ancient shrines—remnants of pure, emerald energy—and placed them on the table. He used his Manifestation power to fuse the crystals into the tips of the tungsten projectiles.
"Synergy of Innovation," Dayat muttered, his sweat dripping onto the blackened metal. "Earth’s ballistic logic meets Aethera’s explosive mana. These aren’t just bullets anymore. They’re miniature meteorites."
Beside him, Dola was a whirlwind of efficiency. She was helping him assemble a series of small, inconspicuous black boxes with blinking red status lights.
"Master, the Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) traps are ready for deployment," Dola reported. "I have fine-tuned the pulse frequency to specifically target the Mana-resonance of the Golem cores. It will create a feedback loop that will seize their hydraulic joints without harming Lunethra’s biological barriers or the surrounding flora."
"Good. Let’s turn this forest into a graveyard for machines," Dayat said, his voice cold as the rifle’s bolt.
Throughout the long afternoon, Dayat and Lunethra worked in a strange, silent harmony. Lunethra used her ancient songs to command the tree roots to weave into snares that could trap a golem’s leg, while Dayat planted M18 Claymores and motion sensors at the base of the trees.
"You truly are no ordinary human, Hidayat," Lunethra remarked, watching with morbid fascination as Dayat attached a 20x thermal-optical scope to the top of his rifle. "You create inanimate objects that possess fangs sharper than a dragon’s. You don’t use magic to fight; you use magic to create a god of death."
"This world isn’t tolerant of things it doesn’t understand, Lun. Tolerance in Bakasa only bought me a one-way ticket to an execution," Dayat replied. "If they come with fire and iron, I’ll give them a much colder, more calculated hell."
The Setting of the Blood-Orange Sun
The sun began to dip below the horizon, painting the jagged peaks of the Wailing Woods in shades of violent crimson and blood orange. The silence of the forest was suddenly shattered.
The ground began to vibrate with a low, rhythmic thrum. It wasn’t the sound of nature; it was the harsh, metallic roar of high-pressure steam engines and the thunderous thud of thousands of tons of metal hitting the earth. From his vantage point, Dayat saw them—the Mk. IV Destroyer Golems. They were walking fortresses, ten feet tall, their bodies glowing with the orange light of their steam cores.
And at the very front of the iron tide walked a man in jagged, spiked black armor. He carried a massive executioner’s axe on his back, its blade stained with the soot of a thousand purges.
Thamuz.
The Executioner stopped exactly at the edge of Lunethra’s illusionary barrier. He took a deep, rattling breath through his iron mask, then bellowed a shout that shook the very leaves from the trees.
"HIDAYAT! I KNOW YOU HIDE WITHIN THIS DEN OF GREEN HERESY! COME OUT AND FACE THE JUDGMENT OF THE GEAR-BREAKER, OR I WILL LEVEL THIS ENTIRE FOREST AND TURN EVERY TREE INTO FUEL FOR THE KINGDOM’S PROGRESS!"
Dayat didn’t answer. He was already thirty feet up in the branches of a massive Ironwood tree, his body hidden by a camouflage mesh he had manifested. He laid prone, the bipod of the M300 dug into a thick branch. He regulated his breathing, his heart rate dropping into a steady, predatory rhythm.
Through the 20x scope, the world turned into a grid of thermal signatures and distance markers. He locked his crosshairs on the neck joint of the lead golem—the point where the Mana-conduit was most exposed.
"Dola, activate the EMP network. Lun, trigger the root snares on my mark," Dayat commanded via the manifestation radio in their ears.
"Sensors active. Kill-zone established," Dola’s voice was as cold as the vacuum.
"The forest is ready to feast on their iron," Lunethra whispered from the shadows of the brush below.
Dayat offered a thin, mirthless smile. His finger rested on the cold curve of the trigger.
"First logic of the day, Thamuz: Never scream in front of a sniper. You’re just giving me a clearer acoustic lock."
Dayat squeezed.
DOR!
The M300 roared, a thunderous crack that echoed through the valley like a mountain splitting apart. A single anti-material round, glowing with a fierce purple-green light, streaked through the twilight mist, leaving a trail of ionized air in its wake.
The battle for the Wailing Woods had begun.







