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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 91: The Shadow in the Garden
Night in Elarwyn should have been the most peaceful rest Kancil had ever experienced. After weeks of living as a hunted fugitive, breathing the sulfur-choked air of the Lamenting Woods, and nearly losing his life in the suffocating, lightless corridors of the Terragard bunkers, the bed in the Elarwyn guesthouse felt like a portal to paradise. The mattress was miraculously soft, woven from elastic fibers that cradled his body; the pillows smelled of fresh mint leaves, and his stomach was comfortably heavy with the savory, honey-wood spices of the Mana-Ox steak he had devoured earlier.
But at exactly two o’clock in the morning, while the entire city slept in the emerald embrace of the World Tree’s boughs, Kancil’s eyes snapped open.
He didn’t wake up because of an explosion. He wasn’t jolted awake by a high-frequency alarm from Dola’s sensors. He woke up because of something far more subtle: a feeling. A primal, visceral itch at the base of his skull that he couldn’t ignore.
Kancil lay perfectly still, staring up at the ceiling made of finely intertwined, glowing roots. The silence in the room was absolute—heavy and expectant. In the bed across from him, Dayat was snoring softly, the steady rhythm of his breathing a testament to how exhausted the man was after a full day of intellectual warfare with the Elven Council. In the corner of the room, Dola stood like a statue carved from moonlight. The electric-blue glow in her pupils was completely extinguished. Following Dayat’s instructions to conserve energy and perform a deep-system recalibration, the Bio-Synthetic assistant had entered a state of total hibernation. She was, for all intents and purposes, offline.
"Just my imagination... right?" Kancil whispered to himself, his voice a ghost in the dark.
He tried to squeeze his eyes shut again, attempting to force his brain back into the velvet comfort of the pillow. But a sudden tightness gripped his chest. There was a vibration in the air—not a sound that could be heard with the ears, but a frequency that resonated against his skin. The street instincts he had sharpened in the gutters of Bakasa—a place where you died if you didn’t notice the change in the wind or the shift of a shadow in an alleyway—were now screaming at him. Something was fundamentally wrong in the world outside their door.
Kancil glanced at Dayat. He considered reaching out and shaking the man awake. But hesitation held him back. If I wake Big Bro up just because of a ’feeling,’ he’ll think I’m hallucinating or just being a kid. He needs the rest. Dola is dead to the world. I don’t want to be the coward of the group—the kid who can’t even sleep through the night without crying for help, Kancil thought, his jaw tightening with a newfound sense of pride.
With movements that were practiced and silent, Kancil slipped out from under the heavy blankets. He eased himself off the bed without a single creak of the wooden frame. His hand reached beneath his pillow, his fingers closing around the cold, textured grip of the Glock 17. The weight of the weapon was a comfort, a piece of Earth’s lethal logic in a world of shifting magic. He checked the leather holster at his waist, ensuring the sidearm was secure, and grabbed his Ear-comm. He slid it over his left ear, even though he knew Dola wouldn’t answer. At the very least, it gave him a psychological anchor.
He crept to the window, sliding the vine-latched frame open inch by agonizing inch. With a final, silent breath, he vaulted onto the balcony branch. The night air of Elarwyn hit his face—cold, crisp, and carrying a metallic scent that tasted like a coming storm.
Kancil moved like a shadow amongst the massive boughs. He didn’t use the primary walkways or the well-lit root-paths. His years of traversing the crumbling rooftops of Bakasa had made him a master of unconventional routes. He leapt from one branch to another, his feet—clad only in thin cloth shoes—making almost no sound as they touched the rough, ancient bark of the World Tree.
His destination was the Hanging Fields of Sector 4. For some reason, his mind was locked onto the irrigation system Dayat had manifest.
"Dola? Dol? You there?" Kancil whispered into the Ear-comm as he moved through the canopy.
Nothing. Only a low-frequency static hum. The absence of Dola’s clinical, robotic voice made the night feel infinitely more dangerous. In a world saturated with magic and ancient gods, being truly alone—without the guiding hand of Dayat’s technology—felt like walking naked through a blizzard.
He reached the perimeter of Sector 4. From behind a cluster of giant, drooping Kenanga leaves, Kancil peered out toward the fields. The sapphire moonlight of Aethera illuminated the transparent polymer pipes of Dayat’s system, making them look like a sprawling, glowing spiderweb. The Manaferum Sativa stood silent, their leaves shimmering with dew that looked like liquid silver.
Kancil held his breath, his hand resting on the grip of the Glock. He didn’t draw it yet; he just needed to know it was there. He moved with the agonizing slow pace of a hunter, his eyes scanning every shadow, every rustle of the leaves. Every creak of the tree in the wind made him flinch.
"Stay cool, Cil. Don’t be an idiot. There’s nothing here but the wind and the trees," he whispered, trying to anchor his racing heart.
But then, at the very edge of his vision—near the primary nutrient distribution valve—he saw it. It wasn’t a solid figure. It wasn’t a hulking monster or an armored Paladin. It was a distortion. A Shadow.
The entity appeared to be fashioned from a darkness far deeper and more absolute than the natural night of the forest. It had no solid form, yet it possessed a silhouette that was unnervingly tall and slender, vaguely human but fundamentally wrong. The shadow didn’t walk; it flowed over the polymer pipes without weight or friction, as if the laws of gravity were mere suggestions it chose to ignore.
Kancil froze. His pulse was hammering so loudly in his ears he feared the shadow might hear it. He squinted, trying to discern if it was truly a living creature or just the play of moonlight on the rising mists. The shadow stopped directly in front of the main valve. It made a series of fluid, delicate hand gestures—movements that looked more like it was stroking the air than interacting with a physical object.
What the hell is that thing? Kancil wondered, his fingers beginning to tremble. Wait... what is it doing to the pipes? Is it going to cut them again?
Kancil wanted to draw his weapon and scream for the guards, but his tongue felt like lead in his mouth. The fear he felt wasn’t the fear of a street brawl or a gunshot; it was a primal, ancestral terror of something that didn’t belong in the light.
Suddenly, the shadow stopped. Its head—or the space where a head should have been—turned slowly, with a sickeningly smooth motion, toward the exact spot where Kancil was hiding.
Kancil ducked instantly, pressing his face into the rough bark of the branch. He squeezed his eyes shut, his heart feeling like it was trying to punch its way out of his ribs. He waited. He waited for the sound of approaching footsteps, for the hiss of a spell, or the cold touch of a blade.
One minute passed. Silence.
Two minutes. Still only the rustle of the leaves.
Kancil forced himself to peek over the edge of the branch once more. The area around the valve was empty. The shadow was gone. The polymer pipes remained exactly as they were, shimmering peacefully under the blue moon as if they had never been touched by anything more malicious than a breeze. The night wind blew softly, carrying the sweet scent of night-blooming jasmine—there was no smell of rot, no ozone of magic, no trace of an intruder.
Kancil emerged from his hiding spot, his legs still feeling like jelly. He walked toward the irrigation hub, his eyes searching for a footprint, a scratch, or a drop of blood. He ran his hands over the smooth surface of the pipes. Nothing. No leaks. No cuts. No residue.
"There’s nothing here..." Kancil muttered, his voice sounding hollow and alien to his own ears.
He stood there for several minutes, staring into the impenetrable darkness of the surrounding forest. He tried to call Dola one last time, but the static remained unchanged. Everything was normal. It was too normal.
"Maybe I really am just exhausted. Or maybe I’ve been listening to too many of those Dwarf ghost stories," Kancil sighed, his shoulders slumping as the adrenaline began to drain away, replaced by a crushing fatigue.
A wave of embarrassment washed over him. He felt like a fool—skulking through the night, drawing his weapon, and being terrified of his own shadow just because he had a "feeling." He imagined how much Dayat would tease him if he found out Kancil had gone on a midnight ghost hunt for no reason.
"Cil... you’re pathetic. You’ve become a scared little kid ever since you started living in a tree," he mocked himself.
He holstered the Glock, ensuring the safety was engaged. Kancil decided to head back to the guesthouse before the first rays of dawn caught him. He walked back with a more relaxed gait, trying to convince himself that the distortion he saw was just a trick of his tired eyes and the shifting moonlight.
However, on the very branch where Kancil had stood, directly beneath the main irrigation valve he had deemed "safe," a tiny, liquid-black stain—no larger than a drop of ink—began to seep into the pores of the World Tree’s bark. The stain didn’t trigger any Mana alarms. It didn’t emit an odor. But it moved with a malevolent intelligence, a microscopic virus seeking the primary sap-veins of the tree.
Kancil didn’t see it. He had already leapt away toward his room, his mind already drifting toward the hope of a few more hours of sleep before the sun of Elarwyn woke him with a new set of chores. He left behind a silent, invisible rot that was already beginning its work, a shadow that had not disappeared, but had simply changed its form.







