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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 49: Dayat’s Emotional Acceptance
The rhythmic chugging of the stolen logistics carriage’s steam engine felt like the labored heartbeat of a dying titan. White, acrid smoke billowed from the jagged iron chimney, slicing through the thinning gray mists of the Wailing Woods as the vehicle climbed higher into the rocky foothills. Inside the wood-paneled cabin, which swayed violently with every turn of the serrated wheels, the harsh rattling of Brassvale’s industrial engineering provided a jarring, heavy-metal soundtrack to a silence that felt both awkward and strangely warm.
Dayat leaned his head back against the torn leather of the seat, his eyes closed. Every jolt of the carriage sent a dull throb through his freshly reset shoulder, but the physical pain was secondary to the mental whirlwind spinning in his mind. Beside him, Dola sat in her characteristic upright posture, but there was a new fluidity to her movements. Her hand—warm, soft, and terrifyingly human—remained locked in his, her fingers interlaced with a grip that spoke of a deep-seated fear of disconnection.
Her electric-blue eyes flickered rhythmically, a sign that she was processing a massive influx of data.
"Master Dayat," Dola’s voice cut through the mechanical noise. It was no longer the clinical monotone of a mobile app; it carried the resonance of a living woman, though the cadence remained precisely timed. "Based on ongoing sensory observation, your facial temperature has increased by 1.8 degrees Celsius over the last twelve minutes. Your carotid artery is pulsing at 92 beats per minute. Diagnostic inquiry: Is there a malfunction in your body’s internal ventilation or cooling systems?"
Dayat flinched, his eyes snapping open. He immediately turned his gaze toward the small, dirty window, watching the blackened silhouettes of the Ironwood trees streak past in a blur.
"There’s no malfunction, Dol," Dayat muttered, his voice raspy from exhaustion and a sudden surge of shyness. "That’s called being nervous. You... you suddenly requested to be my wife in the middle of a war zone. You can’t expect me to just act like it’s another system update."
Dola tilted her head, her long silver hair cascading over her shoulder like a waterfall of starlight. "Analysis indicates that the status of ’Wife’ grants high-level emotional access and priority synchronization. According to the archives of human culture, this status is the pinnacle of biological partnership. Did I commit a syntax error in the logic of my proposal?"
Dayat let out a long, heavy breath and finally forced himself to look at her. His gaze was no longer that of a "User" looking at a "Tool." It was softer, filled with a raw, unprotected vulnerability.
"No, Dol. You didn’t. You were right," Dayat said, his voice dropping to a whisper. "All this time, I’ve been treating you like an assistant, a chatbot, a piece of software I happened to bring to life. But you... you’ve bled for me. You’ve cried for me. You’ve given your entire existence just to make sure I kept breathing. I’m the idiot for only realizing how much you mean to me now."
Lunethra, sitting on the bench across from them, offered a thin, enigmatic smile as she sipped a glowing emerald herbal tea from her leather flask.
"Young man," the ancient Elf remarked, her voice like a soft breeze through autumn leaves. "In this world—and perhaps in yours as well—Love is the most illogical form of magic, yet it is the only one that can rewrite the stars. Even an Elf who has seen seven centuries of history rarely witnesses a soul-synchronization as profound as yours. Do not overthink the ’Logic’ of it. Just feel the connection."
Manifesting a New Identity
Dayat stood up, bracing his feet against the vibrating floorboards to balance himself against the carriage’s jolts. He closed his eyes, centering the remaining sparks of his anomalous energy. The knowledge of The Maiden was still there, a dormant library of forms and functions.
"Dol, all this time you’ve been wearing that stiff, formal assistant’s uniform. It was the only thing I knew how to imagine back then. But now... you’re Dola Nur Mustafidl. You’re a human in my heart, and I want you to have something that reflects that. Something that shows you belong to me, and that you are ready to face this world on your own terms."
A brilliant sapphire light began to pulse in Dayat’s palms. Particles of golden energy danced in the cramped cabin, weaving together like invisible loom-threads. Dayat didn’t manifest heavy armor or a combat suit this time. He envisioned the aesthetics of his home—the modern, elegant, and practical style of a Jakarta professional, but reinforced with the tactical necessity of Aethera.
The set of clothing materialized slowly, a masterpiece of fabric engineering:
A crisp, white blouse made of high-tensile synthetic silk, featuring a modest high-collar and delicate gold-thread embroidery along the cuffs.
A knee-length black pencil skirt with a subtle side-slit, designed for maximum leg mobility during CQC (Close Quarters Combat).
A short, form-fitting tactical jacket in deep navy blue, made of a polymer-weave that was as light as a feather but as resistant to slashes as boiled leather.
Finally, a silver necklace with a small, intricate gear-shaped pendant—the symbol of their union, the marriage of Technology and Devotion.
"Go... change in the back compartment," Dayat said, handing the stack of clothes to her with a slight blush.
A few minutes later, the curtain to the rear compartment was pulled aside, and Dola stepped out.
The transformation was breathtaking. The new outfit accentuated her perfect biological curves, giving her an aura of intelligent authority and quiet elegance. The lingering impression of a "Robot" or a "Servant" was gone entirely. She looked like a brilliant strategist, a woman of the future who had stepped into a world of stone and iron. 𝓯𝙧𝓮𝓮𝒘𝓮𝙗𝙣𝒐𝒗𝒆𝓵.𝓬𝓸𝒎
"How is the visual output, Dayat?" Dola asked, adjusting the lapels of her jacket.
Dayat stood there, speechless. He stepped forward, his heart hammering against his ribs. He reached out and, for the first time with true confidence, cupped her warm cheek.
"Don’t call me Master anymore," Dayat whispered. "Just Dayat. Or whatever your heart tells you to. You look... you look beautiful, Dol. Truly, perfectly human."
Dola went silent. For the first time in her existence, her system logs recorded an output that couldn’t be categorized by a numerical value. A surge of warmth—an intense, biological oxytocin spike—swelled in her chest.
"Very well... Dayat," she said, her voice trembling slightly. "I feel... a sense of total completion."
The Teacher and the Urchin
At the front of the carriage, Kancil was struggling with the massive, rusted levers of the steam engine. Sweat drenched the boy’s forehead as he tried to navigate the carriage through a narrow mountain pass.
Dayat and Dola stepped into the driver’s compartment. The roar of the boiler was deafening here.
"Bang! This machine is a nightmare! It’s like it’s possessed by a cranky ghost!" Kancil yelled over the hiss of escaping steam. "I think it needs a blood sacrifice or an offering of gold just to keep the wheels turning!"
Dola stepped closer, her eyes scanning the complex array of dials and pressure gauges with a speed that made Kancil dizzy.
"Kancil, your approach to engineering is based on superstition, which is inefficient," Dola stated. "Apply 15 degrees of pressure to the left relief valve. It will stabilize the steam-cycle and prevent a boiler-breach."
Kancil followed the instruction, and to his utter amazement, the engine’s scream dropped into a smooth, rhythmic hum. "Wih! Kak Dola... you’re like a Goddess of Gears!"
Dola looked at the boy with a serious, almost maternal intensity. "Kancil, based on our survival probability analysis, your current combat effectiveness is at 12%. You possess high natural agility, but your movements are erratic and lack lethality. If we wish to survive the journey to Verdia, you must become a shadow that can kill."
Kancil’s jaw dropped. "You mean... I’m gonna be like those S-Rank assassins? Like a ninja?"
"The data-archives I possess include the sum total of Earth’s special operations knowledge," Dola continued. "I will train you in CQC, silent infiltration, and the logic of the vital strike. Training begins at the next sunrise. Prepare your body for significant muscle fatigue."
Kancil swallowed hard, caught in a mix of pure terror and explosive excitement. "Yes... Ma’am! I mean, yes, Master Guru!"
The Hall of Gears: A Meeting of Fanatics
Thousands of kilometers to the East, in the heart of the Brassvale Kingdom, a very different kind of meeting was taking place.
The capital city, Ouroboros, was a landscape of blackened iron towers and perpetual smog. In the center of the city stood the Hall of Gears, a cathedral dedicated to the Church of the Gear-Breaker.
Inside, a man sat upon a throne forged from thousands of interlocking pistons and gold-plated gears. He was Emperor Volco, the absolute ruler of Brassvale. His face was a map of cold ambition, framed by a neatly trimmed beard and eyes that held the weight of a dying empire. Beside him stood High Bishop Valerius, a man in robes of silver thread who believed that every machine was a sacred manifestation of the divine.
Vespera, the Shadow Tracker, knelt in the center of the cold stone hall, her head bowed low. Behind her, Thamuz stood swathed in bandages, his pride shattered more than his armor.
"So..." Volco’s voice was a heavy baritone that echoed through the hall like a hammer on an anvil. "You are telling this council that a peasant from the slums, a man without a single drop of Mana, has decimated our elite Golem Battalion and humiliated an Executioner?"
"That is the reality, Your Majesty," Vespera answered, her voice steady. "He does not use magic. He uses a Logic of Manifestation that we do not understand. And his companion... she is not a machine. She is a consciousness housed in metal and flesh. She is the anomaly predicted in the Scrolls of the End."
High Bishop Valerius slammed his hand onto the stone table, his eyes wide with religious fervor. "A being with a soul that was not granted by the Gods is a blasphemy! She is the Maiden of Steel, the herald of the Apocalypse of Logic! If this knowledge spreads, the people will stop praying to the Gear-Breaker and start looking to the physics of man! They must be purged!"
Emperor Volco raised a hand, silencing the Bishop. His eyes narrowed. "Verdia... that is where they are heading. If Queen Verene obtains this ’Logic’, the balance of power on this continent will be shattered. We cannot allow an industrial revolution to start in a land of alchemists."
Volco looked at his generals. "Mobilize the Purge Units. Block the mountain passes of Terragard. If you cannot capture the Anomaly, then erase the mountain until nothing but dust remains."
Night at the Mountain Pass
The steam carriage finally rolled to a stop in a sheltered rocky alcove as the stars began to pierce the night sky. The air here was thin and freezing, smelling of ancient stone and snow. They set up a small, hidden camp beneath the shadow of the carriage. Lunethra and Kancil were already deep in sleep inside the cabin, their breathing steady.
Dayat and Dola sat atop the flat roof of the carriage, wrapped in manifested thermal blankets. The stars of Aethera were brighter here, untouched by the smog of Bakasa.
"Dayat," Dola whispered, her head resting on his shoulder.
"Yeah, Dol?"
"I am currently processing the data regarding the cultural traditions of Jakarta. There is a concept you mentioned once... ’Mas Kawin’ (Dowry). A gift from the husband to the wife to solidify the bond."
Dayat let out a small, tired laugh. "What do you want, Dol? Gold? A new Railgun? I can try to manifest a diamond if you give me enough time."
Dola shook her head, her silver hair shimmering in the moonlight. She reached up and grabbed the collar of Dayat’s navy jacket, pulling him down until their faces were inches apart. Her blue eyes were full of a light that no machine could simulate.
"Data can explain the mechanics of a kiss, Dayat. It can explain the chemical release of dopamine and the physical pressure of the lips. But it cannot explain the feeling," Dola whispered. "I do not want gold. I want you to teach me how to kiss like a human. I want to save that sensory experience as the primary anchor for my entire existence."
Dayat was stunned for a heartbeat, his breath hitching. Then, a genuine, warm smile spread across his face. He reached out and cupped her neck, his thumb stroking her jawline.
"That’s one thing you don’t need data for, Dol," Dayat whispered. "Just close your eyes and let your heart do the processing."
Under the watchful eyes of the stars, Dayat kissed his wife. It wasn’t just a physical act; it was a collision of two worlds—the cold logic of Earth and the desperate magic of Aethera, meeting in a single point of warmth. In that moment, Dola wasn’t an AI, and Dayat wasn’t a fugitive.
They were just two souls, finally finding a home in each other.







