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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 78: The Sight of Daylight
The rhythmic echoes of their footsteps against the metallic floor of the Exit Tunnel sounded like a funeral march for a past they were finally leaving behind. Each clank... clank... was a reminder of the weeks spent in the suffocating embrace of the dark, a cold and artificial world where the air was recycled and hope was a rare commodity. But as they progressed, that metallic resonance began to soften. The sharp, clinical strikes of boots on alloy were gradually replaced by the muted, organic thud of soles meeting damp earth and scattered shale.
The transition was not merely physical; it was sensory. The air, which had been sterile, bone-dry, and heavy with the scent of ozone and ancient machinery, was undergoing a radical transformation. A draft of wind, traveling from the world outside, carried the fragrance of a thousand living things. There was the sharp, refreshing scent of pine needles, the musk of wet soil kissed by morning dew, and a purity of oxygen so intense it felt cold—almost crystalline—as it filled Dayat’s lungs.
"The light..." Kancil whispered, his voice trembling with a mix of awe and disbelief.
At the far end of the long, arched corridor, a singular point of white brilliance flickered. To their eyes, adjusted to the dim emergency reds and clinical whites of the bunker, it looked like a fallen star. As they moved closer, the speck expanded, growing from the size of a marble to a vast, blinding horizon that seemed to consume the tunnel.
Dayat winced, his eyes stinging. He instinctively raised a hand to shield his brow, his pupils contracting painfully against the sudden onslaught of natural photons. For those who had survived the lightless depths of the Terragard Mountains, the sun of Verdia was not just a welcome sight—it was a sensory assault, a flashbang of pure existence.
"Don’t look directly at it, Cil! Close your eyes for a second!" Dayat commanded, his voice raspy but firm. He squeezed his own eyes shut, waiting for the dancing phosphenes behind his eyelids to fade.
Beside him, Dola halted. Though she was a sophisticated Bio-Synthetic unit equipped with advanced optical sensors and adaptive filters, even her systems struggled with the transition. The sudden jump from near-total darkness to the searing intensity of a high-altitude sun required a complex recalibration of her visual processors.
Dayat felt a hand reach out in the brilliance, fingers fumbling for his arm before gripping his sleeve with surprising force. He looked down—or tried to—and saw Dola pressing close to him. Her fingers were trembling. It wasn’t just the glare; Dayat could feel the existential dread radiating from her. The revelation in the Hall of Memories—the title of "General," the Maiden Protocol, the ghost of a ruthless past—was a shadow that followed her even into the light. She was terrified of what she might be, and in that moment of vulnerability, she clung to Dayat like a drowning person seeking an anchor.
"It’s okay, Dola," Dayat murmured, placing his hand over hers. "New world, new rules. We’re out."
With a final, heavy step, they breached the mouth of the cave. A gust of warm, mountain wind swept over them, ruffling their hair and carrying away the last lingering scent of the bunker’s stagnant air. When Dayat finally managed to blink his eyes open, the sight that greeted him stole whatever breath he had left.
They were standing on a precipice, a jagged limestone shelf jutting out from the western slopes of the Terragard Range. Below them, a sea of emerald green stretched toward the horizon, seemingly infinite. This was the Great Wilds of Verdia. It wasn’t just a forest; it was a titan of nature. Giant trees, their canopies interlocking like the shields of an ancient army, rose hundreds of feet into the air. Silver threads of winding rivers meandered through the valley, glinting like spilled mercury under the midday sun. The sky above was a deep, impossible cerulean, devoid of the smog and grey haze that had defined the skyline of Dayat’s memories of Jakarta.
"The sun..." Dayat whispered. He took a deep, agonizingly beautiful breath, letting the mana-rich air of Verdia circulate through his system. "I never thought I’d miss a giant ball of fire this much."
But the most spectacular reaction came from Lunethra.
The moment the ancient Elf stepped onto the soil of the outer world, the change was instantaneous and magical. In the bunker, she had been a fading ember, a ghost of a woman held together by sheer willpower. But here, in an atmosphere saturated with natural Mana, she was like a parched desert receiving its first rain in a century.
The dull, translucent quality of her skin vanished. A soft, pearlescent glow began to emanate from her pores, a radiant vitality that seemed to stitch her cracked lips back together and flush her cheeks with the color of life. Her eyes, once clouded with the exhaustion of Mana Anemia, snapped open with a piercing, emerald intensity. She threw her arms wide, her head tilted back as she literally drank the energy of the world.
"I can feel it..." Lunethra’s voice was no longer a frail rasp; it was a melody, resonant and commanding. "The heartbeat of the world. The pulse of the earth. This... this is the land of Verdia."
The surge of power within her was palpable. The weakness that had threatened to collapse her lungs only an hour ago was replaced by the terrifyingly beautiful grace of the Elven nobility. She turned to Dayat, a smile gracing her lips that was brighter than the sun itself.
"Thank you for bringing me back from that soulless tomb, Dayat. I thought I would die seeing only gray metal."
Suddenly, a sharp vibration rattled against Dayat’s back. Silver Thorn, the legendary blade of the Verdia heroes, began to hum within its scabbard. For two pulsating seconds, a brilliant silver light bled through the seams of the leather wrap, vibrating in perfect harmony with the mountain air. It was a resonance of home—a weapon recognizing its birthplace.
"The sword knows," Dayat muttered, gripping the hilt. The metal felt warm, almost as if it were purring. "It knows it’s back where it belongs."
"Big Bro! My stomach is about to start its own revolution!" Kancil yelled, breaking the poetic silence. The boy was doubled over, clutching his midsection as a loud, wet growl echoed from his gut.
The reality of their situation crashed down. Their triumph was grand, but their bellies were empty. The last of the petrified Dwarven biscuits had been consumed in the dark, and they were now standing in a wild, uncharted territory with no rations left.
Lunethra laughed—a sound like silver bells. "Fear not, little one. You are in my domain now." She stepped forward with renewed confidence, her movements fluid and silent. "As long as there are roots that grow and leaves that turn to the sun, you shall not hunger under my guidance."
She led them down a steep, treacherous path of scree and weathered stone toward the denser vegetation below. Kancil was a blur of energy, darting between rocks and reaching out to touch every leaf and flower he passed. To a boy born in the gutters of Bakasa and raised in the industrial soot of Brassvale, this green paradise was nothing short of a miracle.
Dayat watched his team, a small smile playing on his lips. To mark the occasion, he reached into his tactical vest and pulled out the digital music box. He wanted something that matched the scale of this moment—something that spoke of rebirth, of rising from the ashes, and of the sheer, chaotic energy of destiny.
He scrolled through his library and hit play. A classic from his old world began to blare—a legendary anime anthem with a soaring, dramatic melody.
A Cruel Angel’s Thesis began to fill the mountain air. The energetic drum beats and the triumphant brass section provided a surreal, epic backdrop to their descent.
"Zankoku na tenshi no you ni... Shounen yo, shinwa ni nare..."
"What’s this one, Big Bro? It makes me feel like I can jump over that whole forest!" Kancil shouted, hopping over a massive, moss-covered root in sync with the beat.
"It’s a song about destiny, Cil," Dayat replied, his eyes following the vast horizon. "About how you have to become a legend, even when the world is falling apart around you."
He glanced at Dola. She was still walking close to him, her shoulder occasionally brushing his. She seemed calmer now, the music providing a strange sort of comfort. In her digital mind, she was likely cataloging every vibration of the melody, using it to build a wall between her current self and the "General" buried in her code. As long as the music played and Dayat was there, the past couldn’t claim her.
"Master," Dola said softly, her sapphire eyes flickering with data streams. "The air here contains a highly complex array of organic particles. My bio-scanners indicate that the ambient Mana concentration will accelerate your physical recovery by approximately 40%."
"That’s good to hear, Dola. But right now, I’d trade that 40% for a cheeseburger," Dayat joked.
After an hour of trekking through increasingly lush undergrowth, Lunethra came to a halt beneath a gargantuan tree. Its bark was a deep charcoal gray, but its branches were laden with heavy, pendulous fruits that glowed with a soft, indigo hue. They looked like oversized pomegranates, their skins stretched tight with juice.
"Mer-Berries," Lunethra announced, plucking one with effortless grace. "They are a gift from the forest. A single fruit contains enough concentrated nutrients to sustain a soldier through a day of hard marching. And the taste..." She handed the first one to Dayat. "...is a sweetness that cannot be found in your world of logic."
Kancil didn’t wait for an invitation. He scrambled up the lower branches like a squirrel, grabbing the fruits and tossing them down. Dayat took a bite. The skin gave way with a satisfying pop, and an explosion of cool, sweet nectar flooded his mouth. It was floral, tart, and incredibly refreshing—worlds apart from the sawdust-flavored bricks they had been eating.
A profound sense of gratitude washed over Dayat. After the tension of the bunker, the whistling bullets, the terrifying "Data Burns," and the crushing weight of the dark, this simple moment felt like the ultimate victory. To sit under a tree, eating fruit with friends, while the sun warmed his skin—it was why he fought.
They sat in a circle on the massive, sprawling roots of the tree, enjoying the bounty of the forest. The sun began its slow descent toward the western peaks, painting the sky in a breathtaking gradient of burnt orange, deep violet, and soft gold.
"We’re still far from any Verdia settlements, aren’t we?" Dayat asked, wiping blue juice from his chin.
"Very far," Lunethra replied, her gaze fixed on the darkening horizon. "This is the Wild Zone—a place seldom trodden even by the Paladins of the High Order. It is dangerous, untamed, and ancient." She paused, a small, knowing smile touching her lips. "But at least here, we have an ally that cannot be bribed or betrayed: Nature itself."
Dayat looked at his team. A robot with a burgeoning soul, a street urchin turning into a warrior, and an ancient Elf who had just reclaimed her crown. They were the strangest group of outcasts in the entire continent of Aethera.
As the last notes of the music box faded into the rustle of the leaves, Dayat leaned back against the cool bark of the tree. The journey was far from over, and the shadows of Terragard still loomed in their memories, but for the first time since he had been summoned to this world, Dayat felt like he wasn’t just surviving.
He was finally home, even if home was a world he had never known. The real battle for Verdia was just beginning, and they were ready to meet it under the light of a new day.







