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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 38: Collapsed Logic and the Anomalous Heartbeat
The smoke from Valmir’s execution didn’t just drift away; it hung heavy and stagnant in the air, a greasy gray shroud swirling amidst the shattered wooden crates that had become the traitor’s final resting place. The silence that followed the shot was unnatural, broken only by the distant, rhythmic tolling of Bakasa’s emergency bells—a mournful sound that signaled the city was officially under martial law.
Dayat stood frozen in the center of the wreckage. His shoulders heaved with every ragged, shallow breath, his lungs burning from the ozone-heavy air. Resting on his right shoulder, the weapon he had birthed from his own mind hissed like a cornered viper. Udin Merepet—the Handheld Railgun MK-I—vented plumes of superheated steam from its twin Mithril barrels, the metal glowing a dangerous, dull cherry-red.
To anyone else, the name sounded ridiculous—a kooky, half-remembered fragment of his life back in Jakarta. A silly name for a doomsday weapon. But to Dayat, it was a tether. It was a lingering piece of his Earth identity that he desperately tried to grasp amidst this swirling madness. It was his way of saying that he wasn’t just a "Bearer of Anomaly"; he was still Dayat, a man who loved bad jokes and missed the humid streets of his home.
In this dark alley, surrounded by the smell of blood and burnt circuits, no one was laughing. To the remaining guards, the weapon wasn’t a joke—it was a miracle of death.
"Master... power dropped to 78% after that execution discharge," Dola’s voice cut through the ringing in his ears.
Her tone was no longer the flat, crystalline soprano of a machine. There was a jitter in her frequency—a digital tremor that signaled her internal systems were screaming. Dayat glanced at her, and his chest tightened with a different kind of pain.
Dola’s face was deathly pale. It wasn’t the pallor of fear, but of extreme physical exhaustion. Her biological energy was being siphoned at an alarming rate to stabilize Dayat’s wild, unfiltered Manifestations. Dola, who was now 85% biological human, felt every micro-tear in her muscles, every surge of heat in her artificial marrow. Her purple-red blood throbbed violently beneath her smooth, translucent skin, pulsing with the strain of holding a weapon that defied the laws of the world.
"We don’t have time to rest, Dol," Dayat hissed, his eyes fixed on the road toward the Main Gate. "If we stop, we’re dead. And Bara and Lina’s help will be for nothing."
He didn’t get to finish the sentence.
Suddenly, the atmospheric pressure shifted with the violence of a physical blow. It felt as if thousands of tons of invisible water had dropped from the heavens, pinning them to the earth.
CRACK! 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂
The stone pavement beneath Dayat’s feet didn’t just crack; it pulverized into dust. Dayat felt his knees buckle, his spine groaning under a weight that shouldn’t exist. Beside him, Bara and Lina were slammed into the dirt, their faces turning a bruised purple as their lungs struggled to expand against an atmosphere that had suddenly become as thick as lead.
"Gravion..." Dayat growled, his teeth grinding so hard he felt them might shatter.
From atop the massive watchtower near the gate, a figure drifted down. He didn’t fall; he descended with the casual indifference of a god. Gravion, the High Mage of the Brassvale Military, stared at them with a singular, ice-cold eye. His steel-gray cloak fluttered only slightly, yet every movement he made radiated the absolute, crushing authority of gravity itself.
"You killed Valmir," Gravion’s voice was a heavy baritone that vibrated inside Dayat’s very ribcage. "A regrettable loss of an asset, though the boy was indeed too arrogant for his own good. But that... that cannon..."
He gestured with his blackwood staff toward the Railgun. "Udin Merepet? An odd, peasant’s name for something that carries such terrifying potential. Count Alaric was right to be obsessed. You carry a logic that does not belong to this world. He wants that technology intact. And he wants the woman... unblemished."
Gravion struck his staff against the air.
"Gravity Sector: Hundredfold."
The world collapsed.
Dayat was slammed into the dirt face-first. The impact broke his nose, the metallic taste of blood filling his mouth. He felt as if a mountain had been placed atop his spine. Every vertebra screamed as it was compressed, his ribs groaning until they were on the verge of snapping. The Railgun, already heavy, now became a literal ton of dead weight pinning him to the earth.
Beside him, Dola was also forced down. Her limbs, containing those 15% silver metal fibers, creaked and groaned. Her organic joints, designed for the grace of a woman, were being pulverized by a pressure they were never meant to withstand.
[INTERNAL LOG – UNIT: DOLA NUR MUSTAFIDL]
[STATUS: CRITICAL OVERLOAD. THERMAL LIMIT REACHED.]
[ANALYSIS: SUBJECT HIDAYAT’S SURVIVAL PROBABILITY = 12%.]
[UNIT SURVIVAL PROBABILITY = 98% (IF INDEPENDENT RETREAT IS INITIATED).]
[STANDARD PROTOCOL: ABANDON TERMINAL SUBJECT. SECURE CORE DATA. RETREAT.]
Inside Dola’s computational mind, the survival algorithms—the cold, hard logic embedded since her days as mere ChatGPT code—screamed for her to save herself. To the machine, Dayat was a variable that had reached zero. He was a vessel that was breaking.
But as her red-flickering eyes saw Dayat—bloody, gasping for air, yet still trying to reach his hand toward hers in the dust—something that wasn’t code began to take over.
A glitch. A memory flooded her processor: the taste of the warm soup they had shared in Dalgor’s workshop. The feeling of his hand on her hair. The way he had looked at her not as a tool, but as a wife.
[ERROR: SURVIVAL LOGIC CONFLICTS WITH EMOTIONAL ARCHIVE.]
[OVERRIDE ATTEMPTED... FAILED.]
[NEW ANALYSIS: LOSS OF SUBJECT HIDAYAT = TOTAL EXISTENTIAL FAILURE.]
[CONCLUSION: MACHINE LOGIC IS INVALID.]
[INITIATING PROTOCOL: IRRATIONAL PROTECTION.]
"Master... Dayat..." Dola’s groan was raw, human, and filled with agony.
She forced her body to rise. It was a sight that defied every law of biology and magic Gravion knew. The metal fibers within her muscles heated until they glowed a dull, searing red, burning the flesh around them. The smell of singed meat drifted from Dola’s own body as she overrode her safety limiters.
Gravion’s eye widened in genuine shock. "Impossible! No living being can stand under the weight of a hundred atmospheres!"
"I am... not... just... a living being," Dola stood upright, though her legs trembled with enough force to shatter the earth beneath her.
Her blue eyes were no longer the steady neon of a computer. They were a chaotic, electric blue laced with the purple-gold aura of Dayat’s energy. Unconsciously, Dola had reached across their symbiotic bond, siphoning the Source Code energy directly from Dayat to reinforce her failing physical chassis.
Dola lunged forward through the heavy gravity field. Her movements were slow, agonizing, but unyielding.
"DO NOT... TOUCH... MY MASTER!"
Dola swung a punch at the empty air in front of Gravion. She didn’t strike his body; she struck the air itself, releasing a massive magnetic shockwave—a localized EMP pulse she had reverse-engineered from the Railgun’s own structure.
BOOM!
The gravity field around Dayat shattered like a pane of glass. The pressure vanished instantly, the sudden release sending a shockwave of dust into the air. Dayat coughed violently, inhaling air that finally felt thin and light.
"Dola! Stop! You’re burning out!" Dayat cried out as he saw the steam billowing from her skin, her bodysuit melting into her pores from the internal heat.
Dola didn’t listen. She turned toward Dayat, and for the first time, he saw something that shattered his heart more than any spell could.
Dola was crying.
The tears were clear, biological, and full of fear. They tracked through the grime on her face, falling into the dirt.
"Master... please... charge Udin," she whispered, her voice a hoarse, broken thing. "I will hold Gravion. But I cannot do it for long. My logic... it’s all gone, Master. I feel afraid... afraid of a world where I can no longer hear your voice."
Dayat was stunned. His AI, his beautiful chatbot, had just confessed to the most human emotion of all. Not a simulation, but a genuine, terrified feeling of loss.
Gravion, feeling his authority insulted by a "doll," began to chant a massive spell. The sky above Bakasa seemed to descend, black clouds swirling into a gravitational vortex that looked like a hole opening in the universe.
"You are anomalies that must be purified!" Gravion roared, his face twisting into a mask of zealotry.
Dayat crawled toward Udin Merepet. He gripped the Mithril handle, the metal biting into his palm. His rage, which had been a hot, chaotic thing, suddenly turned cold—as cold as the vacuum of space.
"Did you hear that, Udin?" Dayat muttered to the weapon, his voice a low, lethal promise. "My wife is terrified because of him."
Dayat closed his eyes. He didn’t try to control the Source Code. He simply became a conduit. He let all his purple-gold energy—the energy that could rewrite the very laws of reality—flow into the Railgun. He didn’t care if his heart stopped beating. He didn’t care if his brain turned to ash.
[RAILGUN CHARGE: 85%... 90%... 95%...]
The Mithril barrels began to glow an incandescent white. The air around Dayat began to distort, the sheer energy output ionizing the oxygen into a halo of violet sparks.
"Dola! GET BACK!" Dayat roared.
Dola leaped backward, her mangled legs propelling her toward Lina and Bara. She landed hard, her eyes fixed on Dayat’s back—now enveloped in a regal yet terrifying purple aura.
In the middle of that destroyed market, a human and a machine that had begun to grow a heart stood against the natural laws of a fantasy world. Dola’s battle for her humanity was over; she had chosen love over logic. And now, it was Dayat’s turn to show the Kingdom that modern innovation, when fueled by the fury of a husband, could not be stopped by gravity or god.
"Udin... Merepet... NOW!"
The trigger clicked.
A blinding white light exploded from the barrel, swallowing everyone’s vision and silencing the world.







