My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 109: Days of Rust and Roots

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Chapter 109: Chapter 109: Days of Rust and Roots

​Time was a dead concept within the lightless confines of The Deep Root Cellar. Here, seconds were not measured by the steady ticking of a clock, but by the rhythmic, agonizing drip of murky water from the ceiling and the increasingly labored breathing of lungs slowly filling with Mana-Leech spores. Dayat sat slumped against the damp, weeping wall of his cell, feeling every fiber of his musculature throb with a state of near-total exhaustion. Five days had passed since they were hurled into this abyss, and every single one of those days had felt like a century in a tailored hell.

​The air in this subterranean pocket was terrifyingly thin, saturated with the pungent stench of rotting earth, scorched metal, and the sharp, suffocating sting of ammonia. The only illumination came from the sickly, flickering glow of Mana-Leech fungi that sprouted between the fissures of the ancient roots—fungi that did not provide light for the living, but rather fed upon the life-force of anything that touched them. The majestic World Tree of Vaelith above remained a beacon of purity, yet the Elves had corrupted its deepest roots with black-magic seals to create this prison. They had forced a sacred, living entity to act as a jailer, its roots turned into bars that hungered for the energy of the prisoners.

​In the cell beside him, Dayat heard a faint, persistent scratching sound. He turned his head with an agonizing slowness, staring through the narrow gaps of the iron-roots that separated them.

​There, on the third day, Kancil had finally awakened from his coma-like slumber. But the boy who had opened his eyes was not the Kancil Dayat knew. The boy sat in the furthest, darkest corner of his cell, hugging his knees to his chest. His eyes were wide, glazed with a terrifying emptiness, staring at something that existed far beyond the stone walls. He no longer cried. He no longer called out for "Bang Dayat."

​Whenever Dayat whispered his name, Kancil would only turn his head with a slow, mechanical motion, his gaze hollow and alien. It was the look of a soul that had accepted the absolute cruelty of the world—the realization that hope was the most lethal poison of all. Occasionally, Dayat watched as Kancil picked up a shard of bone from his meager rations and sharpened it against the stone floor with an obsessive, rhythmic intensity. The sound—srek... srek... srek...—became a haunting lullaby. The trauma had effectively incinerated Kancil’s childhood, leaving behind only the primal, cold instincts of a predator growing in the dark.

​"Forgive me..."

​The voice belonged to Lunethra. The ancient Elven princess huddled in a corner of her own cell, separated by a wall of fossilized roots. Her once regal face was smeared with dust and black moss. Her robes were torn into rags, revealing pale, shivering skin that was bruised by the biting cold of the cellar.

​"I am the one who brought you here... I am the one who convinced you that Verdia was a sanctuary," Lunethra sobbed, her voice raspy from dehydration. "I should have let you go North... I should have known that my sister and my people had long ago traded their light for the safety of shadows."

​Lunethra stared at her hands, which were bound by the Platinum Shackles. The crystals in the bindings flared with a brilliant, cruel light every time she attempted to weave a spell, siphoning her Mana until she vomited a bitter, clear fluid.

​"I hate them, Dayat," she whispered, and this time, her voice held a frigid edge that matched the prison’s temperature. "I hate the very blood that flows through my veins. We Elves... we pretend to be the holiest of all, yet we are more putrid than the trash-heaps of Bakasa the moment our comfort is threatened. If we are to die here... I hope the World Tree rescinds its blessing from every last one of them."

​Dayat could only listen with his eyes closed. He lacked the strength to offer comfort to a princess who had lost her kingdom. His own body was a wreck. The Iron-Root Constrictor Nets that bound him had begun to feel like a second skin, tightening around his ribcage every time he tried to take a deep breath.

​Beside him, Dola remained in a state of catastrophic malfunction. Her bio-synthetic body had cooled drastically; her internal temperature regulation system had been shattered by the Mana-pressure of the cellar. Dola no longer provided tactical data or logistical advice. She simply leaned against Dayat’s shoulder, her sapphire eyes dim and flickering, while clear, saline tears—frighteningly human—trailed down her cheeks.

​"Master... Dayat..." Dola whispered, her voice a jagged wreck of static. "Forgive... me. As... an assistant unit... I failed to... predict... the depth... of this... systemic... xenophobia. I am... a burden... to you."

​Dola looked into Dayat’s face with an expression of profound sorrow—a mixture of regret and unspoken grief that bypassed her coding. Despite her robotic nature, the slight tremor in her lips proved she was experiencing an emotional suffering that was not supposed to exist in her circuitry.

​"Don’t apologize," Dayat muttered, his voice barely a breath. "I’m the one who brought you into this. I’m the idiot who believed in them."

​On the fourth day, the heavy iron gate at the end of the corridor boomed open. Lyna appeared, carrying a wooden tray with three small bowls of a viscous, black sludge that smelled of fermented earth and ammonia. Black Root Porridge.

​Lyna no longer greeted them with the graceful politeness of a palace attendant. She kicked the tray under the bars of the cells. "Eat. The Queen has commanded that you remain breathing until the Public Trial the day after tomorrow. Do not let this cell reek of your rotting carcasses."

​Dayat stared at the bowl. He crawled with agonizing slowness, dragging his weighted body across the stones to reach the tray. He forced a spoonful of the black sludge into his mouth. It tasted like ash mixed with animal urine—bitter, gritty, and revolting. Yet, he forced it down. He knew he needed the calories to maintain consciousness.

​Lyna watched him with a look of pure, unadulterated disgust. "Do you know, Dayat? Those children you taught to make paper wheels... their parents burned every single one of those toys in the city square last night. They claimed the wheels contained spy-magic. You corrupted their innocence with your filth."

​Dayat stopped chewing for a split second. He didn’t get angry. He didn’t even look up at Lyna. He simply continued to swallow the bitter sludge in silence.

​"Done?" Lyna asked with a sneer.

​Dayat finally looked up. His eyes, which had once been filled with a brilliant, inventive spark, now looked resigned. But beneath that resignation lay a terrifyingly calm darkness. It was a gaze that had accepted that death was the most likely outcome, and if he were to go, he wouldn’t be going alone.

​"Lyna," Dayat called out softly.

​"What?"

​"Tomorrow... when it all ends..." Dayat offered a small, thin smile that made the hair on Lyna’s neck stand up for reasons she couldn’t explain. "I hope you never forget the taste of this porridge. Because it might be the last thing you remember about me."

​Lyna snorted, trying to hide the slight tremble in her hands. She turned on her heel and hurried away, as if desperate to escape the proximity of his presence.

​Once she was gone, Dayat closed his eyes again. But inside the dark theater of his mind, he was no longer visualizing irrigation systems or medical tools. Because his physical body was suppressed to its limits, his brain had become hyper-active, performing high-level mental blueprinting.

​He visualized a weapon that could erase Vaelith from the map of the Aethera Continent in a single second. In the dark of his mind, he began to assemble the mechanisms of nuclear destruction—the cold, calculating processes of fission and fusion. He visualized the structural integrity of an ICBM (Intercontinental Ballistic Missile). He saw a squadron of F-22 Raptor stealth jets screaming low over the World Tree, releasing thousands of gallons of napalm that turned every emerald leaf into black ash.

​He visualized a technological apocalypse.

​He mapped out every bolt, every binary circuit, and every warhead with atomic detail. The purple light of manifestation occasionally flickered at his fingertips, though it died instantly under the Mana-pressure. Dayat didn’t care. He continued to engineer destruction within his skull. If this world wanted a monster, he would become the most efficient monster the universe had ever conceived.

​In the next cell, the scratching sound—srek... srek... srek...—of Kancil’s sharpened bone became more intense. The boy stared at the stone wall as if he could see right through it, staring at the jugular veins of the Elves walking above them.

​The fifth day arrived. The final day in the darkness.

​The thunderous sound of royal trumpets echoed from the surface, vibrating through the massive roots into the Deep Root Cellar. The sound was majestic to the citizens, but to Dayat, it was a funeral knell.

​"The time has come," Lunethra whispered, her body shaking uncontrollably.

​Dayat opened his eyes. He wasn’t afraid. He wasn’t shaking. He forced himself to stand, gritting his teeth as the pain lanced through his spine. He looked at Dola, who also struggled to her feet, her chassis vibrating with a stiff, mechanical effort. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

​Dayat stared at the dark ceiling of the cell. "Let’s go. Let’s show them... exactly what kind of monster they’ve awakened."

​In the adjacent cell, Kancil stood up. He didn’t say a word. He simply tucked the needle-sharp shard of bone into the tattered hem of his pants. His hollow eyes were now focused solely on the cell door that was beginning to grind open.

​The Public Trial awaited them on the surface. Before thousands of citizens who had once deified him, Dayat would be paraded as a traitor. But the Elves did not realize that beneath the resigned mask of the man they had chained lay the blueprints for an apocalypse they could never have imagined.