My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 104: The Signature of Doom
Dayat’s footsteps felt uncharacteristically light as he traversed the long, winding corridors of the Emerald Palace’s East Wing, yet the air around him felt as heavy as lead. The soothing fragrance of Kenanga flowers, which usually drifted through the palace as a natural sedative, seemed to fail in its task tonight; it could not pierce the fog of suspicion that had been left behind by the tension of the banquet.
Behind him, Kancil walked with a buoyant skip, humming a nonsensical tune under his breath. The boy from the gutters of Bakasa was practically glowing with satisfaction, his stomach full of the succulent stag venison he had just devoured. Beside Dayat, Lunethra walked with her usual regal grace, yet her brow was pinched by a thin, persistent crease—a clear sign that the eldest princess of the Elves was still processing the verbal sparring that had occurred at the dining table.
"Seriously, Bang, that bread back there... the texture was totally different from the hard, crusty stuff we usually got in Bakasa. It was like taking a bite out of a cloud!" Kancil chirped, his voice bright and eager as he tried to break the stifling silence.
Dayat managed a thin, weary smile, glancing over his shoulder at the boy. "I’m glad you liked it, Cil. At least our struggle so far has yielded some tangible results, right? Getting to sleep in a soft bed and eat like kings for once."
"However, Master," Dola interrupted, her voice crystalline and flat, yet sounding slightly discordant to Dayat’s practiced ears. "Environmental analysis indicates that the Mana frequency in our immediate vicinity has shifted by approximately 12%. There is a non-synchronous resonance between the organic structure of the palace wood and my internal core. My system archives suggest that the ’warm welcome’ of the Vaelith citizens may be a temporary phenomenon with a rapidly approaching expiration date."
Lunethra let out a long, heavy sigh as they reached the grand, ornate doors of Dayat’s luxurious quarters. "Dola is right. Those elders... they have memories that span millennia, Dayat. Especially Thalmirion and Faelar. It isn’t just that they don’t believe in you; it’s that they are terrified. And in Verdia, fear is a poison that spreads faster than any Abyssal venom."
They entered the East Wing’s primary suite. The room was vast, with walls of ancient ironwood that emitted a soft, pulsing emerald bioluminescence. Lunethra took a seat on a wooden chair that appeared to grow directly from the floor, while Kancil immediately threw himself onto a massive sofa draped in fine, shimmering silk.
"Tomorrow, there will be a grand celebration in the palace courtyard," Lunethra said softly, her emerald eyes meeting Dayat’s with a piercing seriousness. "Verene has made the official announcement. She wants to show the people that the World Tree has been fully restored through your efforts. I want you to enjoy the feast, Dayat, because you have earned it. But please... stay vigilant. I know my sister; she loves her people with a fierce desperation, but she is also dangerously susceptible to the influence of the Root Guardians when the security of the kingdom is called into question."
Dayat sat on the edge of the bed, slowly pulling off his tactical cargo boots, which had been meticulously cleaned by the palace attendants. "I understand, Lunethra. I won’t let my guard down. Besides, it’s just a party tomorrow, not a war."
After Lunethra excused herself to return to her own wing and Kancil had fallen into a deep, exhausted slumber on the sofa, the silence in the room became absolute. Dayat stood on the balcony, staring out at the vast, rustling darkness of the Verdia forest under the cold light of the twin moons, Aethera and Nura. Dola stood beside him, as motionless as a silver statue.
"Master," Dola began. She didn’t look at him, but instead fixed her gaze on the central spire of the palace. "I wish to convey an observation."
"What is it, Dola?"
"I wish to apologize. Because of my existence, the ’Hero’ status you have fought so hard to secure is now being jeopardized. If I were not by your side, those elders would undoubtedly accept you without hesitation. I am a binary stain upon their organic history."
Dayat turned, looking into Dola’s electric-blue eyes, which seemed slightly dimmer than usual. "Don’t talk like that. You’re not a burden, Dol. You’re my assistant, my partner. Without you, I’d probably be a heap of bones in Sector Delta or golem-chow in Terragard. If they hate you, it means they hate me too. We’re a package deal. Logic, remember?"
Dola paused for a few milliseconds, her internal processors whirring. "Your reasoning is highly illogical based on the primary principles of survival, Master. However... my system records a significant increase in emotional stability upon hearing that statement. Thank you."
Meanwhile, in the deepest, most inaccessible reaches of the Emerald Palace—far beneath the roots that have never felt the warmth of the sun—lay a forbidden chamber known as The Chamber of Ancestral Relics. The room was a perfect dome, its walls covered in ancient stone inscriptions that told the grim history of the world’s collapse.
Queen Verene stood in the center of the cold, damp room, flanked by Thalmirion, Eldara, and Faelar. Before them, resting upon a crystal altar that hummed with a low-frequency Mana, was a black metallic sphere, cracked in several places and leaking a faint, oily energy. This was The Echoing Core, an ancient relic from the era of the God-Wars, sealed away for thousands of years.
"Your Majesty, look at the resonance," Faelar said, his voice carrying a note of dark triumph. He moved his hand with a practiced grace, channeling a thin stream of Mana toward the metallic sphere.
Instantly, the sphere began to vibrate violently. A blood-red light began to pulse from its cracks, casting long, dancing shadows against the ancient walls. In the air above the altar, a projection of flickering binary code appeared—an energy frequency that was a perfect, terrifying match for the signature the Aura Filter had captured during the banquet earlier.
"It... it cannot be," Verene whispered, her face turning a ghostly pale. "The energy signature... it’s identical."
"It is the source code of the World Destroyer, Your Majesty," Thalmirion barked, his voice heavy with the weight of prophecy. "The silver girl that human carries with him is not a mere construct. She is a functional unit of the Maiden of Steel. We have been deceived from the start. The restoration of Vaelith was merely a lure, a gambit to make us lower our guard so this parasite could embed itself in the heart of our kingdom!"
Eldara attempted to speak, though her voice wavered with doubt. "But Dayat has helped us. He healed the World Tree. Is it possible he himself has no knowledge of what she truly is?"
"Or perhaps he is the ’Host’," Faelar countered ruthlessly. "The human may be nothing more than a puppet, controlled through Maiden technology or sorcery to manipulate us. Think, Your Majesty! If we allow them to remain free, tomorrow, when the feast begins and our people are gathered, they could activate a sabotage protocol far more devastating than a simple poison. They could collapse Vaelith from within!"
Verene lowered her head, her hands trembling. The shadows of the dark history of the Maiden—the entity that had nearly wiped out Verdia millennia ago—haunted her thoughts. As a ruler, she had been taught that the survival of the many outweighed the lives of the few. She could not afford to take even a microscopic risk.
"What is your plan?" Verene asked, her voice barely a breath. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
"We cannot arrest them openly tonight," Thalmirion said, his eyes gleaming with cold calculation. "The human possesses strange, lethal capabilities that would be too dangerous in the confined spaces of the palace. We will do it tomorrow, in the middle of the celebration. When they feel most secure, when the people are gathered to worship them as heroes—that is when we will strike and neutralize them with the Ancient Mana Net."
Thalmirion stepped closer to Verene, staring into her eyes with a frightening intensity. "Your Majesty, this is not about a grudge. This is about the survival of the Elven race. You must sign this decree of detention. For the safety of the World Tree. For the safety of us all."
Verene stared at the parchment resting upon the altar. With a heavy hand, she picked up the quill and scratched her signature across the bottom. Each stroke of the ink felt like a betrayal of her own heart, but the ancient fear of the Maiden had successfully silenced her moral compass.
Back in the East Wing, Dayat was still standing on the balcony. He was unaware that in the bowels of the palace, his fate had been sealed in ink. However, his instincts—the instincts of a man who had survived the predatory streets of Jakarta—began to send out a sharp, rhythmic warning.
"Dola, I feel like something is fundamentally off," Dayat whispered, his eyes scanning the quiet canopy. "The palace has suddenly become too silent. Even the sound of the Pixies outside has vanished."
Dola closed her eyes for a moment, performing a long-range passive scan of the palace’s energy grid. "Master, I am detecting a concentrated movement of Mana around the Chamber of Ancestral Relics. An ancient energy resonance has just been activated. It appears the elders have awakened something of a diagnostic nature."
"Do we need to leave? Now?" Dayat asked, his hand hovering near his waist, ready to manifest a weapon at a moment’s notice.
"Not yet, Master. If we flee now, we only validate their suspicions and jeopardize Lunethra’s position. We must wait until morning. However... I strongly advise you to sleep with your Ironwood armor equipped beneath your robes tonight."
Dayat nodded, his expression grim. He walked back into the room, looking at Kancil, who was still snoring peacefully on the sofa. It pained him to see the boy so enthusiastic about tomorrow’s feast. The celebration that was supposed to be the pinnacle of their journey in this world had now transformed into the front line of an inevitable betrayal.
That night, under the pale green glow of the ironwood walls, Dayat slept with his fists clenched. Outside, in the shadows of Vaelith’s branches, the Paladins began to sharpen their spears, preparing to celebrate the hero they would call an enemy by noon.
The clock was ticking, and the signature on the parchment was already beginning to draw the noose tight.







