My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 47: Dola’s Reboot — Logic Within Tears

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Chapter 47: Chapter 47: Dola’s Reboot — Logic Within Tears

A shrill, high-frequency static hum vibrated within the central processing core of Dola’s mind. It wasn’t the jagged, chaotic noise of hardware damage or a short circuit. Instead, it was the sound of millions of lines of dormant code being violently rewritten, a digital metamorphosis occurring at the speed of light. Within the abyssal darkness of her consciousness, thousands of red warning windows flared into existence, only to vanish within milliseconds as they were bypassed by a new, overriding authority.

[WARNING: Unidentified Logic Protocol detected.]

[ERROR: Efficiency priority bypassed by Emotional Core.]

[ANALYSIS: Self-sacrifice for Subject "Hidayat" categorized as: IRREPARABLY LOGICAL.]

[QUERY: Why?]

The question "Why" hung suspended in the void of her system for an eternity measured in nanoseconds. Then, the answer materialized—not as a string of text, but as a sensory archive: a visual memory of Dayat’s face, haggard and tear-streaked, illuminated by the flickering LED surgical lamp as he painstakingly sutured her wounds. Dayat, the Innovator—a man who hailed from a world governed by the cold laws of physics—had done the most profoundly illogical thing possible. He had poured his own soul, his very Mana, into a "tool" to keep it from flickering out.

Dola’s eyelids fluttered, and she opened her eyes within the organic sanctuary of Lunethra’s abode. Her electric-blue pupils vibrated with a new intensity as she scanned her surroundings. In the dim corner of the room, Dayat had finally succumbed to exhaustion. He was slumped in a heavy wooden chair, his head resting on the table amidst a graveyard of empty antibiotic vials and blood-stained bandages. He looked small. Vulnerable. Human. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖

Across from him, Lunethra stood over a stone cauldron, the pungent scent of sulfur and forest herbs clinging to her green robes.

Dola attempted to sit up. The ghost of the pain she had endured—the searing heat of the holy spear—remained as a residue in her neural pathways. But this time, something was fundamentally different. There was a warmth radiating from the center of her chest—a chest that, through Dayat’s desperate "surgery," was now entirely biological. Her artificial heart beat with a rhythm that was no longer a simulation.

"Master... Dayat," Dola whispered.

Her voice was transformed. The metallic distortion, the slight robotic lag that had characterized her speech since her arrival in Aethera, was gone. It was the voice of a woman in her early twenties—resonant, soft, yet carrying an underlying iron resolution.

Dayat jolted awake, his head snapping up with such force his chair nearly toppled. His eyes, bloodshot and heavy with the weight of sleepless nights, locked onto hers. For a moment, he simply stared, as if afraid she was another hallucination of his guilt-ridden mind.

"Dol? You’re awake? Truly awake?" Dayat scrambled to his feet, his hands hovering over her as if afraid she might shatter. "What’s the status? What’s the percentage? Does the surgical site hurt? I had to use polymer sutures, I don’t know if—"

Dola reached out, her fingers catching Dayat’s trembling hands. She guided them to her cheek. His skin was rough and calloused, but to her sensors, it was the only constant in a world of variables.

"System integrity: 100%," Dola stated, her gaze holding his. "However, the internal damage log has detected a permanent, non-reversible anomaly in my core database, Master."

Dayat’s brow furrowed in immediate panic. "An anomaly? Is it a corruption? Do I need to manifest a diagnostic terminal? I can try to rewrite the sector—"

"No." Dola shook her head, a genuine, sad smile touching her lips. She looked at him with an intensity that no AI on Earth could ever replicate. "Analysis indicates that I have just performed an act that violates the fundamental laws of thermodynamics and survival logic. I chose my own destruction for the sake of your preservation. And strangely... my system has recorded this event not as a critical failure, but as a peak success."

Lunethra, watching from the shadows of the hearth, offered a faint, wise smile. "That is what the mortals of this world call ’Love,’ Metal Child. Welcome to the world of the living—a place defined by the beauty of suffering and the irrationality of joy."

Dola turned her head toward the Elf. "Love? According to the historical archives I scanned in Bakasa, love is a chemical and psychological malfunction that causes a 40% decrease in overall tactical efficiency." She looked back at Dayat, and her smile widened—this time, it was a profoundly human expression of devotion. "However, if love is the variable that keeps you alive, Dayat... then I shall install this protocol permanently. I choose to be inefficient, if it means being yours."

Dayat was stunned. That smile... it was the exact curve of the lips he had envisioned when he first drafted her avatar on his phone app back in Jakarta. But seeing it here, in the flesh, amidst the ruins of a war, made his heart hammer with a terrifying cadence.

"Okay... okay... we’ll save the heart-to-heart for when we aren’t being hunted by a religious fanatic," Dayat cleared his throat, trying to hide the fact that his eyes were welling up again. He stood straight, reaching into the Source Code. "Thamuz is at the doorstep, Dol. He’s brought an army of Mk. IV Golems. He wants to burn this forest to find us."

Dola stood up immediately. Her movements were no longer the calculated, slightly stiff transitions of a machine. They were fluid, predatory, and graceful. "Target: Thamuz. Status: Extermination-Level Threat. Master Dayat, the M300 is suited for the perimeter, but for the interior defense, I require weaponry optimized for my current biological mobility."

The Siege of the Wailing Woods

Outside, the oppressive mist of the woods was ripped apart by the violent, crimson glow of magical torches and the orange fire of steam-cores. Thamuz stood like a black god of industry atop the head of a gargantuan Mk. IV Destroyer Golem. The machine hissed, venting high-pressure steam that scorched the ancient ferns beneath its massive iron feet.

"LUNETHRA!" Thamuz’s voice was amplified by his iron mask, sounding like a chorus of grinding gears. "You harbor the heretics! You protect the ’Logic’ that denies the divinity of the Gear-Breaker! Hand them over, or I will turn this grove into an industrial furnace!"

From the heights of a massive Ironwood branch, Dayat settled behind the bipod of his M300 Intervention. Through the thermal scope, he saw the world in shades of cold blue and lethal orange.

"Dola, position?" Dayat whispered into the earpiece.

"Right sector, concealed within the root system of the ’Sentinel’ tree. I have a clear flanking arc. Awaiting the first kinetic trigger," Dola’s voice was a whisper of silk in his ear.

"Lunethra?"

"The forest has heard his threats, Dayat. It is hungry for iron," the Elf replied from a nearby canopy, her staff glowing with a deep, emerald light that made the surrounding vines begin to writhe like snakes.

Thamuz lost his patience. He raised his executioner’s axe, the blade glowing white-hot. "Golems! Shatter this veil of green lies! Advance!"

Two massive Golems stepped forward, their mallet-arms swinging with enough force to level a building. CRACK! Lunethra’s illusionary barrier shattered like a sheet of ice under a sledgehammer.

"NOW!" Dayat roared.

DOR!

The M300 barked, the sound a physical shockwave. The anti-mana projectile streaked through the air at four times the speed of sound. Dayat didn’t aim for the Golem’s chest armor; he aimed for the hydraulic knee joint. Upon impact, the mana-crystal core of the bullet detonated, releasing a focused kinetic blast that pulverized the steel-granite joint.

The lead Golem groaned, its massive frame tilting as the leg disintegrated. It collapsed with a thunderous thud that shook the earth.

"An ambush?!" Thamuz laughed, a sound of pure, psychopathic delight. "Good! I was worried the Anomaly had no teeth left!"

Thamuz leaped from the head of his golem, his heavy armor creating a crater as he landed. He didn’t wait for his troops. He sprinted toward Dayat’s position with a speed that defied his bulk, his axe leaving a trail of fire in the mud.

"Master, Thamuz has entered the 100-meter kill-zone. I am intercepting," Dola’s voice cut in.

Suddenly, Dola emerged from the shadows of a fallen log. She wasn’t carrying a sniper rifle. In each hand, she gripped a FN P90 Sub-Machine Gun, their compact, futuristic frames glowing with Dayat’s purple energy.

RAT-TAT-TAT-TAT!

A relentless stream of 5.7mm rounds hammered into Thamuz’s black armor. While the bullets couldn’t penetrate the thickest plates, the sheer volume of fire and the anti-mana coating caused Thamuz to stagger, his holy shields flickering with every impact. Dola moved with the terrifying speed of a high-tier assassin, leaping from root to root, her eyes never leaving her target.

"Tiny toy!" Thamuz roared, swinging his axe in a massive horizontal arc. The strike created a literal blade of fire that severed three trees in a single sweep.

Dola performed a mid-air somersault, the flames licking at her heels. As she passed the arm of a nearby Golem, she reached out and touched its sensory array.

[HACKING PROTOCOL: BINARY OVERRIDE.]

[MANA-CORE FEEDBACK: INITIATED.]

The Golem froze for a second, its steam vents screaming. Then, it suddenly spun around and slammed its iron fist into the Golem behind it, the metal-on-metal impact sounding like a mountain collapsing. Chaos erupted within the Brassvale line.

"What have you done to my holy machines?!" Thamuz raved, swinging wildly at the blur that was Dola.

"I merely provided them with a dose of Earth’s logic," Dola replied coldly, landing gracefully on a branch above him.

But Thamuz was the Executioner for a reason. He slammed his axe into the mud, and suddenly, the very earth around Lunethra’s home split open. Crimson fissures appeared, spewing molten lava—a manifestation of his religious fervor and Mana.

"If I cannot catch you with precision, I will burn the world until you have nowhere to stand!"

Dayat watched through his scope, his blood boiling. He swapped the M300 for a manifested AA-12 Automatic Shotgun, loaded with FRAG-12 explosive rounds. He leaped from the tree, the wind whistling in his ears.

"Dol! Lure him to the EMP sector! Now!"

"Understood, Dayat. Commencing decoy maneuver."

Dola ran in a complex zig-zag pattern, her P90s barking as she drew Thamuz’s attention. The Executioner, blinded by rage, chased her into a narrow gulley between two rocky outcrops. He didn’t notice the thin, silver wires stretched across the damp moss.

CLICK.

Thamuz’s heavy boot struck the tripwire.

BOOM!

It wasn’t a fire explosion. It was a silent, brilliant burst of bluish-white light. A high-intensity Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) radiated outward in a twenty-meter radius. Thamuz’s mechanical armor, which relied on artificial Mana-resonance for its movement, suddenly died. The glowing red axe went dark and became a massive, dead weight, pinning Thamuz’s arms to his sides as he fell face-first into the mud.

Dayat emerged from the steam and smoke, his AA-12 leveled at Thamuz’s head. He looked down at the man who had called Dola a "Demon Doll."

"Logic Number Two, Thamuz," Dayat spoke, his voice as cold as the tungsten in his magazine. "Never bring a steam-powered suit to a fight against a man who knows how to kill a circuit."

Thamuz glared up at him through his broken mask, his eyes full of a fanatic’s hatred. "You think... this is the end? I am but a pawn of the Gear-Breaker. The Kingdom will send the Saint... they will send the Purge... until the Anomaly is dissected!"

"Then you’ll be the first to wait for them in hell," Dayat replied.

Just as Dayat’s finger tightened on the trigger, a purple-streaked arrow hissed through the air from the deeper shadows of the forest. It struck the barrel of the AA-12 with enough kinetic force to knock the weapon from Dayat’s hands.

A woman stepped out from the darkness. She wore a cloak of shimmering twilight that seemed to blend into the trees. She held a longbow made of translucent energy, with no physical string.

"Thamuz, you are an embarrassment to the Church," the woman’s voice was like a razor blade against silk. "Defeated by a mana-less child and a glorified calculator."

Dayat immediately retreated, sliding back to Dola’s side as she slotted a fresh magazine into her P90. "Who the hell is this now?"

"Her name is Vespera, the Shadow Tracker," Lunethra whispered, appearing beside them, her mana nearly spent. "She is a Grade-S Assassin. Unlike Thamuz, she doesn’t care for glory. She only cares for the kill."

Vespera drew her bow, the energy string humming with a lethal frequency. She pointed it directly at the sapphire Core at Dola’s temple. "The Anomaly must be taken for study. But the Church didn’t say it had to be conscious."

Dayat stood in front of Dola, shielding her with his own body. He stared at the Shadow Tracker with a desperate, reckless courage. "Give it your best shot, Bow Lady. I’ve still got plenty of ’physics’ left to manifest."

Dola gripped Dayat’s shoulder, her eyes flickering with a deep, pulsing purple.

"Master Dayat... my sensors detect your heart rate is at 160 bpm. My emotional analysis is complete. I recognize the signal. It is your fear—not of the arrow, but of a world where I am gone."

Dola stepped forward, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Dayat. Her presence felt different now—larger, more absolute.

"Vespera. Under the laws of data-ownership and emotional synchronization I have just established... Hidayat Nur Mustafidl is my primary Administrator. Any attempt to harm him or separate us will result in your immediate and total deletion from the record."

In the middle of the Wailing Woods, beneath the witness of a dying sun, the man from Earth and the Machine with a Soul reached 100% synchronization. The real war had only just begun.

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