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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 102: The Mover of Winds
The morning sun in Vaelith never possessed the searing, oppressive heat that Dayat remembered from the concrete jungles of Jakarta. Instead, the rays that filtered through the colossal canopy of the World Tree were softened into a soothing hue of golden-green, casting long, ethereal shadows across the bark-paved streets. It was a light that didn’t just illuminate; it seemed to heal the skin.
Dayat walked with a relaxed stride along the mid-tier boughs, a region known as the Althar District. Here, the hustle and bustle of daily life felt more human—or rather, more "Elven." There was no thunderous roar of steam engines or the choking stench of coal that defined the industrial zones of Bakasa. The only sounds were the melodic babble of water flowing through organic wooden pipes and the crystalline songs of tiny birds perched on windowsills of houses that had grown, quite literally, from the trunk of the tree itself. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
Beside Dayat, Ilthir moved with a disciplined, rhythmic step. His Adamantite armor, while still imposing, no longer radiated the sharp, suspicious chill it once did. On Dayat’s other side, Lyna walked with her head slightly bowed, carrying a small satchel of light supplies with a grace that was near-silent. Ahead of them, Dola and Kancil looked like a pair of siblings—one clinical and silver, the other wiry and exuberant—exploring a gargantuan playground.
Dayat’s progress came to a halt as they passed a wide, open plaza—a hanging garden surrounded by clusters of pale purple flowers known as Nura’s Breath. There, a group of Elven children, appearing between seven and ten years old in human terms—though likely decades older in reality—sat in a circle on the silk-grass. Before them, a young Elven woman in a simple green gown named Elowen was moving her hands in slow, rhythmic arcs, attempting to demonstrate basic wind manipulation techniques.
"Remember, children, the wind is not a servant to be commanded by force," Elowen said, her voice as soft as velvet. "The wind is the breath of Vaelith. You must not push it; you must feel it at the very tips of your fingers."
Despite her gentle guidance, the children were clearly struggling. Several of them were furrowing their brows so hard their faces turned a bright crimson, desperately trying to make a single leaf spin in their palms. The leaves would tremble for a second, then fall limply to the grass. Disappointment and frustration clouded their young, innocent faces.
Dayat watched for a moment, his heart softening at the sight. He glanced at Dola. The Bio-Synthetic assistant caught his gaze and offered a microscopic nod—a signal that she was ready to support whatever "impulsive" plan her master had conceived for the day.
"Ilthir, can we pause for a moment?" Dayat asked.
"Of course, Lord Hero. This area serves as the primary academy for the fledgling Wind-Callers," Ilthir replied with a respectful inclination of his head.
Dayat stepped closer. His presence was immediately noticed by Elowen. The teacher gasped, her eyes widening as she recognized the man in the moss-green silk. She stood quickly, offering a deep, reverent bow. "Lord Hero... it is a profound honor to have you visit our humble garden."
"No need for the formalities, Elowen. I was just passing by and saw they were having a bit of a rough time," Dayat said, offering a warm, approachable smile. He crouched down in front of a young Elven boy who was currently pouting at a stubborn leaf. "What’s the matter, little one? The wind being a bit of a jerk today?"
The boy stared at Dayat with large, round amber eyes. "It is very difficult, Lord. The wind is invisible. I do not know if it is truly here or if it is just a ghost."
Dayat let out a soft laugh. "If you can’t see it, we’ll just have to make it visible. Do you want to see my version of ’magic’?"
At the mention of the word "magic," the children immediately swarmed around him, their frustration forgotten in a wave of curiosity. Elowen herself looked intrigued; she didn’t feel intruded upon, but rather invited into a new kind of lesson.
Dayat closed his eyes for a second, summoning a memory from his childhood—days spent in the open fields near his home in Jakarta, long before the world of gears and guns took over his life. He called upon his manifestation, focusing on textures rather than lethality. He summoned a stack of colorful, square-cut papers with a slightly rigid but lightweight texture—treated cellulose that felt like premium origami paper. Then, several thin, smooth wooden sticks and small metal pins appeared between his fingers.
"Dola, help me with the folds. Precision is key," Dayat commanded softly.
Dola knelt beside him. With her incredible, mechanical precision, her fingers blurred into motion, folding the papers into perfect four-pointed pinwheels. Dayat carefully pinned the centers to the wooden sticks, ensuring the balance was exact.
"Look at this," Dayat handed a bright red pinwheel to the pouting boy. "Don’t try to command it. Just... blow on it, very gently."
The boy took a deep breath and blew. The moment the air hit the paper blades, the pinwheel began to spin with a frantic, beautiful speed, creating a shimmering blur of color as it caught the ambient Mana in the air.
"Whoa! It’s spinning! Look, Teacher, it’s spinning!" the boy shrieked with delight.
Dayat began to teach them one by one. He didn’t bother explaining aerodynamics or Bernoulli’s principle; for him, these toys were a bridge, a way for these children to physically interact with the invisible force they were supposed to master. Kancil joined in, his voice the loudest in the garden.
"Step right up, step right up! Whoever gets their pinwheel spinning the fastest gets a special blessing from Big Bro Dayat!" Kancil shouted, his eyes gleaming with his usual mischief. He leaned in and whispered to one of the kids, "You know, back in my world, these things cost a whole gold coin, but because you’ve got cool ears, today it’s free!"
Dayat reached out and playfully flicked Kancil’s ear. "Stop running a scam in a school, Cil!"
"Hehe, just kidding, Bang! Just making it more exciting!" Kancil laughed, continuing to help a young girl fold her paper with surprisingly gentle hands.
Dola appeared remarkably "human" in that moment. She sat on the grass, surrounded by three Elven girls who were fascinated by her silver hair and the cool, smooth texture of her skin. Dola patiently allowed them to touch her hands while she continued to produce pinwheels with increasingly complex patterns—some shaped like flowers, others like multi-pointed stars. There was no tactical alertness in her gaze, only a soft, sapphire glow that indicated her creative processors were at work.
Lyna, who usually stood like a silent shadow behind Dayat, was now holding a sea-blue pinwheel that Dayat had handed to her. She watched the small object spin in the gentle Vaelith breeze. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the corners of Lyna’s mouth curled upward. A thin, genuine smile touched her lips—a sight so rare it felt like seeing a flower bloom in the snow. There was a sudden, emotional glint in her eyes, as if the simple paper toy had just unlocked a memory or a sense of joy that had long been suppressed by the crushing weight of palace etiquette.
Elowen watched the scene with tears shimmering in her eyes. "Lord Dayat... you haven’t just given them toys. You’ve given them a way to love their element. All this time, we have taught them to master the wind, to control it like a tool. We forgot to teach them how to play with it. Thank you."
"Don’t mention it. This world is too beautiful to only be studied through dry textbooks," Dayat replied, standing up and dusting off his silk jubah.
After spending nearly an hour with the children, Ilthir politely reminded them that the day’s schedule had to continue. The Elven children waved their hands high, holding their colorful pinwheels like trophies, turning the garden of The Whispering Leaf into a kaleidoscope of spinning colors.
Their journey continued to the highest point in Vaelith accessible to the public: The Solar Prism of Zenith.
To reach it, they boarded a gargantuan Organic Elevator, a platform capable of transporting dozens of people at once through a hollowed-out channel within the primary trunk. As the root-doors slid open at the peak, Dayat instinctively caught his breath.
The Zenith was a massive crystal dome that functioned as the crown of the World Tree. These crystals were not static; they floated in a state of magical levitation, slowly rotating to capture every single drop of sunlight. The light that entered the dome was refracted into thousands of spectral colors, creating a permanent, shimmering aurora that arched across the ceiling.
"It’s... incredible," Dayat whispered, walking toward the wooden railing at the edge of the dome.
From this vantage point, Dayat could see the entirety of the Aethera Continent. The view was so vast, so staggeringly majestic, that he felt a sudden, profound sense of humility. There were no skyscrapers, no smog-filled horizons, no gridlocked streets. There was only the sprawl of a primal world, powered by an energy he was only just beginning to comprehend. The rainbows from the Solar Prism reflected off Dayat’s face, making him look as if he were truly a part of the world’s fabric.
"This place was built to remind us that light is the greatest gift of Goddess Nura," Ilthir said, standing beside Dayat. "Every rainbow you see here channels purification energy down to the lowest boughs of Vaelith. It is the filter through which the world breathes."
Dayat nodded, feeling a peace he hadn’t known in his entire life. Kancil stood beside him, his jaw dropped so low it looked like it might hit the floor, staring at the distant ground below. Dola stood silently, her sensors recording every angle of the vista into her memory banks, as if ensuring that this moment of tranquility would never be erased.
However, deep within the shadows of the palace, in a room draped in twilight and far beyond the reach of the Zenith’s rainbows, the atmosphere was far less serene.
Several members of the Elder Council, including the stoic Thalmirion, stood before a pool of Mana that served as a scrying mirror. They watched the image of Dayat laughing with the Elven children in the garden.
"Look at him," one of the elders murmured, his voice a dry, rasping hiss. "He poisons the pure minds of our youth with objects from the outside world. Paper wheels? What are they if not the seeds of the very technology that once brought us to the brink of ruin?"
Thalmirion stared at the image with narrowed eyes, his jaw set in a hard line. "The Queen is too lenient. Hero or not, his presence here is a dangerous anomaly. We must be prepared, brothers. Before this sacred root is turned into something entirely foreign, we must decide if the cure is worse than the disease."
The dialogue was brief, but the air in the room was thick with a toxic suspicion. High above, Dayat continued to smile at the rainbows, entirely unaware that beneath the breathtaking beauty of Vaelith, the seeds of a cold, calculated betrayal were already beginning to sprout in the darkest corners of the kingdom.
The wind he had taught the children to play with was beginning to shift, and a storm was gathering on the horizon of the Emerald Palace.







