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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 138: Throne of the Architect
The echoes of Dayat’s footsteps against the obsidian floor sounded like a steady, deliberate heartbeat within the oppressive silence of the castle. The dinner had long since concluded, leaving behind the lingering savory taste of rabbit meat and the bitter, metallic tang of rejection on Lunethra’s tongue. Dayat walked with a slow, measured gait, his palm still feeling the ghost of Dola’s warmth from when she had gripped his hand as they rose from the dining table.
Dayat came to a halt in front of a mechanical storage compartment integrated seamlessly into the corridor wall. With a single touch, the metal panel slid back without a sound, revealing a longsword wrapped in coarse, blood-stained linen.
Silver Thorn.
Dayat took the blade in his hands. Its weight was familiar, a comforting anchor in a world that felt increasingly alien. However, there was something different this time. The Adamantite material forming the blade seemed to vibrate faintly, humming in response to Dayat’s presence—as if it recognized that he now possessed the "Vaelith Authority."
"You still keep it in its primitive form as a sword?" Dola’s voice, soft and melodious, broke the silence.
Dayat turned his head. Dola stood several paces behind him. Under the dim, ethereal glow of the binary lights, she had discarded the icy, detached mask of the Maiden of Steel. Her electric blue eyes searched his with a tenderness she reserved solely for him. Her white cape shimmered softly, her bodysuit following the elegant curves of her body, but Dayat didn’t see the luxury or the divinity. He saw the assistant who had stood by him through thousands of lines of code in a cramped apartment in Jakarta.
"For now, yes," Dayat replied shortly. He slung the sword across his back, resting it against his black tactical jacket. The jacket was starting to look worn, frayed at the edges from the battles in Verdia, but it remained his identity—a physical reminder that he was a man from another world, a soul that did not belong to the stars of Aethera.
"This corridor leads to the nerve center, my Husband," Dola said, stepping forward and looping her arm through his once again. "To the place where you were always meant to be."
They walked together toward a pair of colossal double doors that groaned with a low-frequency hum as they opened automatically. The moment they stepped inside, the very atmosphere of the room shifted. This was no longer a luxury suite or a warm dining hall. This was The Heart of Logic.
The hall was circular, with a ceiling that looked like an open window into a binary galaxy, where stars composed of data-streams moved in eternal, calculated orbits. In the center of the hall, upon a raised dais of shimmering metal, stood the structure that would define the future of this world.
The throne was not forged from gaudy gold or encrusted with blinding jewels. It was made of a matte-black metallic alloy that seemed capable of swallowing the light around it. Its design was stark, ergonomic, with sharp, aggressive angles that somehow looked incredibly comfortable. Along its edges, lines of binary code emitted a piercing violet-indigo light, giving the impression that the throne was not an inanimate object, but a breathing, sentient entity.
Dayat climbed the steps of the dais. Every step he took caused the indigo light on the floor to flare brighter, as if the castle were welcoming its master home. He stopped directly in front of the throne and turned around.
"Lunethra, Kancil... you may enter," Dayat said, his voice echoing with a new, resonant authority.
At the threshold of the room, Lunethra and Kancil stood with a mix of awe and trepidation. Kancil’s mouth hung open as he stared at the celestial ceiling, while Lunethra looked at Dayat’s back with an unreadable expression. Though her heart was still raw from Dayat’s earlier admission, her admiration for him remained unshaken. To her, Dayat was still the man who had pulled her from the wreckage of her life, even if he now looked like a king from a realm she could never truly understand.
"Whoa... Brother Dayat, what is this place? Why is that chair so cool?" Kancil asked, stepping hesitantly onto the glowing floor.
"This is the command center, Kancil. And as of today, this is our home," Dayat answered, his voice steady.
Dayat then took his seat. He assumed a dominant posture—his right leg crossed over his left, his hand resting on the armrest that felt cold initially but quickly warmed to match his skin temperature. The moment he sat, the entire hall seemed to resonate in harmony. The violet-indigo light of the throne flared with intense power, illuminating Dayat’s face, which now looked harder, sharper, and perhaps a little more arrogant.
He reached back and drew Silver Thorn. He held the legendary blade horizontally across his chest. Suddenly, his hands began to glow with a violet hue, his fingers tracing the flat of the blade.
Zzzzt!
The Adamantite blade began to deconstruct. The metal didn’t crumble; instead, it dissolved into swirling particles of light that orbited Dayat’s hands like a miniature solar system. The particles reconfigured their atomic structure in real-time. The silhouette of the sword vanished, replaced by the familiar, lethal shape of a modern firearm.
Seconds later, the light faded. In Dayat’s hands sat a customized HK416 assault rifle. But this was no ordinary Earth weapon. The barrel was etched with silver-gold metallic veins that pulsed with purple energy, and every time Dayat’s finger brushed the trigger, a hiss of compressed mana escaped the chamber.
"Hybrid Fusion complete," Dayat whispered. He looked at the weapon, then stared straight ahead, toward the open doors of the hall that revealed the endless, swirling mists of the Forest of Lamentation.
Dola stood beside the throne, her hand resting on the backrest, looking down at Dayat with a gaze of absolute, terrifying possession.
"Lunethra," Dayat called out.
Lunethra stepped forward and bowed deeply—a reflex of her noble upbringing that she now dedicated entirely to Dayat. "Yes, Dayat?"
"I know you are still unsure. I know you feel the world has gone mad. But here, within this bastion, the laws of Verdia do not exist. The laws of the gods do not apply. There is only one law here: survive, and grow strong enough to crush those who try to stop us," Dayat’s voice boomed through the hall.
"I understand," Lunethra replied softly. "I will be your hands to manage the logistics of this place. I will ensure we never want for anything, regardless of the risk."
"Good. And Kancil," Dayat turned his gaze toward the boy. "Your training becomes ten times harder starting tomorrow. I don’t want to see you crying when we have to face the monsters the kingdoms will send for us."
Kancil clenched his fists, his eyes burning with resolve. "I won’t cry anymore, Brother! I’ll be the best hunter in the Wailing Horde!"
Dayat offered a thin, sharp smile. He leaned back into the black throne, feeling the flow of data and mana streaming from the castle into his consciousness through Dola’s link.
"Let them search for us," Dayat muttered. "Let them send their armies into this forest. We will not strike... not yet. We will build our strength behind this veil of mist until they realize they are no longer dealing with a hero they can betray, but with something far worse."
In the Infinite Dimension: The Hall of Guardians
Far above the clouds of Aethera, in a space where time was a meaningless concept, six entities of pure light stood around a churning pool of mana. The water within the pool, usually crystal clear, was now distorted by a deep, oily purple-indigo stain.
"Incredible bravery... or perhaps absolute madness?" A heavy, booming voice echoed. It was The Arda of Earth. The foundations of the world trembled whenever he spoke. "That man sits upon a throne that should have been buried in the graveyard of history."
"He is not merely a man, Arda," replied a soft voice that sounded like falling rain. The Maira of Water stared at the pool with deep concern. "He is an anomaly who has brought back the Logic-Breaker. Look at how he fuses our holy materials with the annihilation tools of his world."
"I feel the winds in the Forest of Lamentation beginning to shift," interrupted The Riha of Wind. "The air there is no longer pure. It smells of metal and suffocating steam. This is no longer our territory."
"We must purify it before it spreads!" The Narisa of Flame shouted, her fires flaring high. "Something grown in hatred will only bear the fruit of destruction."
"Calm yourself, Narisa," said the most regal and calm voice among them. The Nura of Light, the center of their radiance, stepped forward. "Our seal on the Maiden has not been entirely shattered. Dola—or whatever name that man has given her—is still bound by energy constraints. However..."
Nura trailed off, her brilliant white eyes fixed on the image of Dayat sitting upon the throne.
"That man... Dayat... he possesses something our kings never had. He does not worship us. He does not fear us. He only cares for one thing: protecting what is his. And that is what makes him far more dangerous than the Maiden herself."
The Samara of Aether, the keeper of dimensional harmony, finally spoke. "The binary destiny has begun. We cannot intervene directly without shattering the balance. Let us see... if this Architect will build a new paradise, or if he will become the final key for the Seven Harbingers of the Apocalypse to swallow this world."
The image in the mana pool slowly faded, leaving only the ghost of Dayat’s cold laugh echoing in the ears of the gods.
Inside Castle Zero, upon his matte-black throne, Dayat closed his eyes.
"Welcome to the new era," he whispered into the dark.







