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My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World-Chapter 69: The Breach Closure
The residual plumes of superheated steam continued to billow from the ruptured pipes, creating a dense, opaque shroud that swallowed the Inner Vents. The frantic hissing of escaping vapor sounded like the collective warning of a thousand angered serpents, competing with the rhythmic, heavy thud of the Earth-Shielders’ medical teams arriving at the scene. In the center of the mechanical graveyard, a small, trembling figure stood alone. His hands, blackened by soot and grime, clutched a small metallic cylinder he had scavenged from Dayat’s tactical waist-pouch.
Kancil stared at the unconscious forms of Dayat and Dola as they were hoisted onto mechanical stretchers. He felt a hollow, biting loneliness gnawing at his chest, but within his ears, a familiar, chillingly calm voice continued to echo through the Electronic Ear-Muffs he still wore.
"Subject Kancil," Dola’s voice crackled with heavy static, her frequency fading into a digital ghost. "This is the final automated transmission before total system hibernation. Analysis indicates that the Void Breach has not achieved total structural closure. Malphas left behind a necrotic Abyssal anchor that will draw more entities within 300 seconds. Locate the Thermite canister in Master Dayat’s side pocket. Activate the magnetic igniter, place it at the epicenter of the rift, and retreat a minimum of five meters. Do not look directly at the reaction. Good luck, Kancil."
The voice cut off, replaced by a vacuum of electronic silence. Kancil took a long, shaky breath, the sulfurous air burning his lungs. His heart hammered so hard against his ribs that he could feel the pulse in the back of his throat. This wasn’t a game of snatch-and-run in the markets of Bakasa anymore; this was the survival of a kingdom resting on his small, trembling shoulders.
"Hey, brat! Stay where you are!" Minister Grogor’s voice thundered through the mist. 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
Grogor marched forward, his steps calculated to maintain an air of bureaucratic authority despite his well-trimmed beard being matted with ash and soot. Behind him, a dozen Earth-Shielders stood with their golden shields raised in a defensive semi-circle. Grogor pointed a trembling finger at the pulsing black rift at the center of the Javelin’s impact crater. The crack was still weeping a thick, viscous Abyssal fluid that sizzled as it eroded the metal floor.
"Do not touch that rift! It is a dangerous anomaly that must be quarantined and studied by the Council of Stone Guardians!" Grogor bellowed again. "Step aside! My men will secure that area as a high-value state asset!"
Kancil stopped exactly at the edge of the crater. He turned his head slowly toward Grogor. The boy’s face was a mask of dirt and dried blood, his nose still leaking a thin trail of crimson. His hands had a slight tremor—not from fear, but from the raw, jagged adrenaline surging through his system. A sharp, cynical smirk curled his lips.
"State asset, Minister?" Kancil chuckled, a raspy, hollow sound. "Did you just call a hole to hell that nearly ate your best captain and collapsed half this sector an ’asset’? Do all Dwarves have a hobby of collecting catastrophes, or are you just suffering from oxygen deprivation down here?"
Grogor’s face flushed a deep, indignant shade of purple. "Insolent whelp! Seize him! Confiscate everything he is holding!"
The Earth-Shielders began to advance, their heavy boots clanking on the metal grating. However, before they could bridge the gap, Lunethra stepped forward. The ancient Elf stood tall and imposing in front of Kancil. Despite her ghostly pallor and the visible exhaustion in her emerald eyes, the regal aura she radiated forced the Dwarven soldiers to falter.
"Minister Grogor," Lunethra’s voice was calm, yet it possessed the weight of an approaching storm. "If you allow that rift to remain open for a single minute longer just to satisfy your political curiosity, then tomorrow you will have no city left to govern. Let the boy do what must be done."
Grogor sneered, his gaze flicking between the Elf and the boy. "This is Terragard territory, Elf. You have no jurisdiction here. Your ’Light’ failed to close that hole."
"I am not speaking of jurisdiction," Lunethra countered, her eyes flashing with a cold, silver light. "I am speaking of survival. The choice is yours: let him seal that gate, or I will let your men approach it and watch as their souls are flayed into black ash in a heartbeat. I will not lift a finger to save them from their own stupidity."
Grogor went silent. He watched as the rift began to pulse faster, and a bone-chilling cold began to radiate from the darkness, turning the steam into frost. He was a cunning bureaucrat, but he wasn’t a fool. He knew the risk. With a reluctant, angry wave of his hand, he ordered his men to hold their positions.
Kancil didn’t waste another second. He sprinted toward the center of the crater. The heat from the leaking pipes stung his skin, but Dola’s technical data—etched into his memory during the brief link—gave him a path of least resistance through the thermal jets.
He stood at the edge of the terrifying black tear. The Abyssal fluid hissed as it met the air, releasing the stench of burning meat and entropy. Kancil twisted the cap of the Thermite canister exactly as Dola had instructed. He clicked the magnetic igniter, feeling the subtle vibration of the chemical primer activating.
"This one’s for you, you arrogant General," Kancil muttered.
He dropped the canister directly into the pulsating center of the rift and immediately scrambled back, diving behind the wreckage of a massive steam pipe. Recalling Dola’s warning, he shut his eyes tight and pressed his Ear-Muffs harder against his head.
SREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE—!!!
It wasn’t an explosion. It was a high-frequency, searing hiss that tore through the air. A blinding, magnesium-white light erupted from the center of the crater, piercing the white fog and turning the dark corridor as bright as high noon on the surface. The heat generated was astronomical—reaching upwards of 2,500 degrees Celsius in a matter of seconds.
The Dwarven soldiers who caught a glimpse of the reaction immediately dropped to their knees, shielding their eyes with their gauntlets. Their hearts hammered with a primal, religious dread.
"The White Fire..." one soldier whispered, his voice trembling. "It is... it is the purifying flame of Goddess Narisa!"
"Goddess Narisa has descended to the depths to cauterize the dark!" another cried out, beginning to chant ancient prayers of the forge.
To the Dwarves, what they were witnessing wasn’t a chemical reaction between iron oxide and aluminum powder; it was a divine miracle. The white light seemed to literally consume the Abyssal miasma, burning it down to the molecular level. The dimensional rift shrieked in a frequency beyond human hearing, shrinking and withering under the intense thermal load before finally snapping shut, leaving behind a glowing, molten pool of slag on the floor.
In the corner of the room, Baruk-Ahn, who had regained a fraction of consciousness, opened his heavy eyes. He saw the white light reflecting in the eyes of the boy hiding behind the pipes. The Captain of the Guard offered a thin, bloody smile—a genuine recognition of the boy’s courage—before slipping back into unconsciousness from the sheer gravity of his wounds.
Minutes later, the white radiance dimmed, leaving only a red-hot glow that slowly faded. The corridor was suddenly, eerily silent, save for a low, ominous rumble echoing from the distance.
"Report, Minister!" a Dwarven technician ran toward Grogor, his face pale as ghost-light. "The steam pressure in the primary sector has plummeted! The damage to these conduits has caused us to lose fifty percent of the energy supply to Karak-Zorn! The city is entering a total blackout in the lower districts!"
Grogor clenched his fists. He stared at the sealed crater, then at Baruk-Ahn being carried away by the medics.
"Baruk-Ahn..." Grogor hissed. "A Captain of the Guard allowed the enemy to infiltrate this far and permitted the destruction of vital infrastructure. The King must be informed of the Earth-Shielders’ catastrophic failure to secure the capital."
Grogor didn’t blame Dayat directly. To him, Dayat was an unknown variable he didn’t yet understand, and he was too clever to attack something he couldn’t quantify. But Baruk-Ahn was the political rival of the Artisan Faction that Grogor led. Baruk-Ahn’s failure was Grogor’s golden opportunity.
Kancil walked with a slight limp toward Lunethra. His hands were still shaking, but he felt a strange, electric sense of being alive. The tremor in his fingers had transformed into a surge of newfound confidence. He had faced a demon, and he had won.
"Let’s get out of here, Kancil," Lunethra whispered, wrapping a protective arm around the boy’s shoulders.
The Dwarven medical teams began the grim task of evacuation. Mechanical stretchers powered by mana-crystals carried Dayat, Dola, and Baruk-Ahn out of the death-corridor. Grogor ordered his men to blockade the area with absolute prejudice. He looked down at the fragments of Dayat’s weapons left behind—shattered pieces of the Javelin tube, spent brass casings, and the melted remains of the Thermite canister.
"Not a single bolt is to be removed from this site," Grogor commanded his subordinates. "I want every foreign object brought to my private laboratory for analysis. This is now a matter of National Security."
The group moved through the tunnels of Karak-Zorn toward the safer districts. The journey was somber. The crystal lamps along the path flickered and dimmed, signaling the energy crisis gripping the city. Common Dwarven citizens emerged from their stone dwellings, staring with anxious eyes at the stretchers passing by, whispering in hushed tones about the "White Fire" and the "Black Rot" that had nearly taken their home.
Finally, they reached a majestic structure carved directly into a wall of white granite: The High-Security Isolation Ward. There, a group of Dwarven healers led by an elder named Borin was waiting.
Borin had a long, braided white beard and wore leather robes filled with vials of glowing tinctures. Unlike Grogor, his eyes were calm and filled with a clinical empathy.
"Place them in the Mana-Sterilization chambers," Borin ordered, his voice deep and soothing. "This human... his internal energies are in total disarray. And this woman... I have never seen a biological structure quite like this. It’s as if she is built of solid logic."
Grogor stood at the entrance of the ward, blocking Lunethra and Kancil’s path.
"The two of you will be placed in a guarded waiting area," Grogor stated coldly. "Until King Ironbeard issues further instructions, you are administrative prisoners of Terragard."
Kancil opened his mouth to retort, but Lunethra squeezed his hand. "Play their game for now, Kancil. We have already done our part. Let the shadows talk while we rest."
As the heavy doors of the isolation ward slammed shut, Kancil sat on a cold stone bench in the waiting corridor. He stared at his palms, still stained with the black residue of the Thermite. In the distance, he could hear the tolling of Karak-Zorn’s alarm bells, signaling that while the demonic gate was closed, a new kind of storm was brewing for Dayat and his companions.
Kancil pulled his empty Glock-17 from his waistband, looked at it for a moment, then holstered it with a firm click. He felt the weight on his shoulders had grown heavier, but his eyes reflected a new, hardened resolve.
The world of Aethera was cruel, but today, a street boy from Bakasa had proven that the fire of human science could burn even the deepest darkness of the Abyss.







