What you're placing at the address of string
is a numerical value, not the string representation of that value.
The value 12 and the string "12" are two separate things. Seen as a 16-bit hexadecimal value, 12 would be 0x000C while "12" would be 0x3231 (0x32 == '2', 0x31 == '1').
You need to convert the numerical value into its string representation and then print the resulting string.
Rather than just pasting a finished solution I'll show a simple way of how this could be done in C, which should be enough for you to base an 8086 implementation on:
char string[8], *stringptr;
short num = 123;
string[7] = '$'; // DOS string terminator
// The string will be filled up backwards
stringptr = string + 6;
while (stringptr >= string) {
*stringptr = '0' + (num % 10); // '3' on the first iteration, '2' on the second, etc
num /= 10; // 123 => 12 => 1 => 0
if (num == 0) break;
stringptr--;
}