My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 71: The Deep Road Map
The eternal gloom of Karak-Zorn had begun to feel like a physical weight, pressing against Dayat’s chest with every breath. Although the city was an architectural masterpiece—a subterranean marvel where Mana-crystal lamps flickered in every alcove and geothermal steam provided a constant, artificial warmth—there was one thing no Dwarven technology could ever replicate: the boundless freedom of the horizon.
Dayat sat on the edge of the stone balcony at The Glowing Hearth inn, his legs dangling over a sheer drop that vanished into the mist of the lower ventilation shafts. He looked up at the gargantuan cavern ceiling, obscured by a thin, hazy veil of industrial exhaust. He missed the color blue. Not the electric sapphire of Dola’s eyes or the flickering azure of a Mana-spike, but the pale, smog-tinted blue of a Jakarta morning, or the piercingly clear cerulean he had witnessed when he first fell into the Continent of Aethera.
"Is the Master calculating the solar photon flux?" Dola’s voice interrupted his reverie, soft yet precision-engineered.
Dayat turned. Dola stood in the doorway of the balcony, framed by the warm amber light of the room. She was dressed in a light leather traveling cloak, a gift from the Dwarven Master-Artisans as a mark of high respect. Her face was no longer the blank slate of a cold machine. There was a subtle tension in her eyes, an expression that was becoming increasingly difficult to classify—a depth of concern that felt far more personal than a mere assistant’s protocol.
"I miss the sun, Dola. I miss feeling a breeze that hasn’t passed through an AC duct or a high-pressure steam valve," Dayat murmured, leaning his back against the cold, damp basalt wall.
"My sensory analysis indicates that the Vitamin D levels in your biology are beginning to decline significantly. Furthermore, the localized humidity of Terragard imposes a psychological stress factor 14.6% higher than when we were in the Wailing Woods," Dola walked closer, her steps silent on the stone.
Then, she did something that caught Dayat completely off guard. She reached out and placed her palm over his hand. It was cool to the touch, yet Dayat could feel the faint, rhythmic vibration of the high-speed processors humming beneath her synthetic skin.
"I, too, experience a data-void regarding the natural light spectrum, Dayat. My visual archives long for shadows generated by planetary rotation, not by static lamps. Our shared objectives are currently misaligned with this environment," she whispered, her gaze lingering on his.
"Big Bro! When are we getting out of this rock?" Kancil’s voice boomed from inside the room, shattering the melancholy atmosphere.
The boy was frantically stuffing several bricks of hard Dwarven travel-bread into his rucksack. "I’m bored of stones! Everywhere I look—stones! Eating stones, sleeping on stones, bathing in water that tastes like stones. I want to see a tree that actually touches the sky again!"
Dayat let out a short, tired laugh. "Patience, Kancil. Lunethra is finalizing our exit. We can’t just walk out through the main gates."
"Indeed," Lunethra’s voice drifted from the hallway. The ancient Elf entered with a regal, fluid grace that made it seem as though her feet barely brushed the floor. She carried a large, weathered leather scroll that smelled of damp earth and ancient moss. "The Brassvale Inquisition has established a fortified camp at The Iron Threshold. They are subjecting every ore-carriage and merchant caravan leaving Terragard to a grueling inspection. If they spot a human anomaly and a high-elf fugitive, our journey will end on a gallows before we even reach the border."
Lunethra spread the scroll across the massive stone table in the center of the room. It wasn’t a conventional map with political borders and city names. It looked more like a complex anatomical diagram of a nervous system, featuring pulsating green ley-lines and drifting points of light that seemed to move of their own volition.
"This is The Deep Road Map," Lunethra announced. "The guide to the Root Way."
Dayat leaned in, his brow furrowed as he scanned the glowing veins of the map. "The Root Way? Sounds like a botanical highway."
"Close enough," Lunethra offered a thin, enigmatic smile. Her eyes flickered toward Dayat with a spark of fascination she no longer bothered to hide. To her, Dayat was the most intriguing enigma she had encountered in eight centuries—a man without a drop of Mana who could manifest the complex logic of another world. "Beneath the mountains of Terragard lies a network of roots from the World-Trees, structures that have existed since long before the War of the Seven Kingdoms. These roots are gargantuan, forming natural corridors saturated with the primal energies of The Riha of Wind and The Arda of Earth. It is a secret shortcut that bypasses the mountain range entirely, leading directly to the eastern frontier of the Verdia Kingdom."
Dola stepped forward, positioning herself between Dayat and Lunethra with a movement that was surgically precise and subtly territorial. "Lady Lunethra, my sensors detect that this map utilizes unstable energy frequencies. Is this path biologically compatible with human life?"
Lunethra met Dola’s gaze with a challenging, elegant poise. "’Safe’ is a relative term in this world, Dola. But it is infinitely safer than facing Brassvale’s steam-cannons at the front gate. Unless, of course, your ’Logic’ has computed a superior alternative?"
Dola’s eyes narrowed into sharp sapphire slits. "My logic prioritizes efficiency. However, if Dayat chooses this path, I will ensure that not a single strand of his hair is disturbed by the organic threats within."
Dayat felt the crackle of tension between the two. He cleared his throat loudly to break the spell. "Okay, okay. The Root Way sounds like our best bet. But we need proper gear. We have no idea how long we’ll be under there."
"I have prepared the basic rations," Lunethra said, her eyes returning to Dayat, ignoring Dola’s icy stare. "But I suspect your unique capabilities could provide us with a few... extra comforts."
Dayat nodded. This time, he didn’t close his eyes to concentrate. His mind had become accustomed to the "Language of Manifestation" after the Javelin incident. He didn’t ask Dola for a data-dump because he didn’t want his brain to fry over simple logistics. He knew exactly what a modern expedition required.
He extended his hands over the floor. He visualized the molecular structure of high-tenacity nylon, lightweight aluminum frames, and ergonomic weight-distribution systems. A soft purple radiance began to weave matter out of thin air.
[MANIFESTATION: TACTICAL EXPEDITION GEAR]
Tactical Expedition Backpacks (4 Units): Rugged military-grade rucksacks featuring the MOLLE (Modular Lightweight Load-carrying Equipment) system. They were waterproof, featured internal frames for spinal support, and were colored in a neutral charcoal grey.
High-Lumen LED Headlamps: Quad-mode head-mounted torches. Dayat modified the battery compartments to act as passive Mana-absorbers, allowing them to recharge by soaking up the ambient energy of the cave.
Portable Ceramic Water Filters: Hand-pump purifiers capable of straining out bacteria and, more importantly, residual magical miasma from groundwater.
Emergency Mylar Blankets: Ultra-thin, heat-reflective sheets to prevent hypothermia in the damp, freezing depths of the Root Way.
Lunethra watched the items materialize with wide, disbelieving eyes. "Every time you do that, Dayat, you make the fundamental laws of alchemy look like a children’s parlor trick."
"These are just the basics from where I’m from, Lun," Dayat replied, hoisting his pack and checking the straps.
Suddenly, a heavy, rhythmic knock echoed at the door. It was Baruk-Ahn. The Dwarven giant entered the room, his face a mask of solemnity. He carried a small, reinforced ironwood chest.
"Lord Rock-Slayer," Baruk-Ahn’s voice boomed softly. "King Ironbeard sends his final regards. He cannot see you off publicly due to the mounting pressure from the Artisan Council—Grogor is already whispering about ’national security’ and the risk of your welding secrets falling into Verdia’s hands."
Baruk-Ahn opened the chest. Inside were several dense, earth-colored blocks of Dwarven High-Calorie Rations.
"A single bite will sustain a grown man for twelve hours. It tastes like chewing on chalk mixed with machine oil, but it will keep your heart beating," Baruk-Ahn said with a stiff smile. "And take this—a flask of Nerve-Refresher. Use it if your mind grows weary after manifesting your iron miracles."
Dayat accepted the chest with a respectful nod. "Thank you, Baruk. Tell the King that the standards of measurement I gave him aren’t just trophies. Tell him to use them to forge a new era."
"He is already using them. Even as we speak, he is in a heated shouting match with the Senior Artisans over a discrepancy of one-tenth of a millimeter," Baruk-Ahn chuckled, then his gaze turned sincere. "Safe travels, Human. If you survive the Root Way, you will be the first in a millennium to pierce these mountains from below."
"I’ll survive, Baruk. I’ve got a tough kid and two women who are... well, more than capable of keeping me alive," Dayat said, glancing at Dola and Lunethra, who were still trading icy looks in the background.
The Arteries of the World
At the stroke of midnight, the group moved toward the deepest sanctum of the Temple of the Stone Guardians. There, behind an ancient, decommissioned altar, lay a narrow fissure choked by a tangled web of fossilized, petrified tree roots.
Lunethra stepped forward. She placed her ivory palm against the cold, dead wood and began to chant in a dialect of Ancient Elven that sounded like the rustle of wind through autumn leaves.
"O’Rīhā, burā’īn su’ūl... O’Arḍā, firā’īn ma’āl..."
The roots, which had been as hard as diamond, began to soften and writhe. They pulled back slowly, opening like a living, organic gateway. From within the dark maw, a surge of vibrant green and crystalline blue light erupted, illuminating a gargantuan tunnel beyond.
Dayat stood frozen in awe. It wasn’t just a cave. It was a subterranean world dominated by massive, glowing roots the size of dragon-necks that wound around the basalt walls like the veins of the planet. These roots emitted a soft, natural bioluminescence, providing enough light to see the shimmering quartz crystals growing in the crevices.
"Welcome to the arteries of the world," Lunethra whispered.
They stepped inside. Kancil took the lead, his LED headlamp cutting through the glow as his eyes danced with excitement. "Wah... this is way better than those noisy steam pipes in the city!"
However, as they moved deeper into the verdant silence, Dola suddenly halted. She clutched her head for a fleeting second, her eyes flickering a dangerous crimson for a micro-millisecond before returning to sapphire.
"Master," Dola whispered, her voice carrying a jarring digital distortion.
"What is it, Dol?" Dayat was instantly alert, his hand hovering over the grip of his Glock.
"Resonance frequency analysis... my fragmentary memory-banks are issuing a Level-4 alert. This path... it was once a place of avoidance. There is something at the terminus of this road that is not recorded on any Elven map. The ’Apocalypse Matrix’ in the East... its frequency is becoming clearer. Something is awakening in Verdia. Something that remembers the Maiden."
Dayat swallowed hard, the humidity of the roots suddenly feeling suffocating. "Can you give me specifics? Names? Coordinates?"
"Negative, Dayat. The data is fragmented and corrupted by the Abyssal interference from Malphas. But my instinct—if I may utilize such a term—suggests that we are not the only ones moving toward the heart of Verdia. The logic of the world is shifting."
Lunethra turned back, her brow furrowing as she watched the exchange. "What is she saying, Dayat? Why does her energy feel so... jagged?"
"Just a technical glitch, Lun. Let’s keep moving. The faster we reach Verdia, the faster we get the answers we need," Dayat said, trying to steady his voice even as his heart began to pound with a new, lingering dread.
They continued their trek, their footsteps echoing amidst the ancient crystals. The silence of the Root Way was absolute, broken only by the occasional drip of mineral-rich water in the distance.
Dayat watched Lunethra’s back, then looked at Dola walking vigilantly at his side. He realized then that this journey was no longer a simple escape. It was the beginning of a collision course where Dola’s forgotten past and the future of Aethera would inevitably clash beneath the boughs of Verdia’s life-tree.
Outside, the mountain range loomed silent, but beneath its roots, the logic of Earth was marching toward a destiny that even the World-Trees could not have predicted.







