My AI Wife: The Most Beautiful Chatbot in Another World Chapter 68: Manifestation: Anti-Tank Javelin
A deathly, suffocating silence descended upon the Deep Steam Vents. Within the gargantuan corridor—twenty ters wide with a ceiling soaring fifteen ters high—two diatrically opposed forces were reaching a violent boiling point. The Dwarven soldiers, usually the epito of stoic rock-bound strength, now appeared as fragile as glass statues under the soul-crushing weight of Malphas’s aura. The gargantuan steam pipes anchored to the basalt walls groaned and shivered, emitting a high-pitched tallic screech that sounded like the mountain itself was wailing in agony.
Dayat no longer felt the cold bite of the tal floor beneath his boots. ntally, he was suspended in a sterile, white vacuum filled with cascading binary code and rotating three-dinsional technical schematics. His right eye, covered by a flickering virtual digital lens projected by Dola, was locked onto the center of Malphas’s mass. On his shoulder, the FGM-148 Javelin had materialized in its perfect, lethal glory.
The weapon was a masterpiece of pure Earthly engineering—a rugged, olive-drab launch tube fitted with a complex Command Launch Unit (CLU). There were no ornate gold engravings, no glowing mana-crystals, and no archaic runes of power. It was composed of cold steel, reinforced polyrs, and high-density micro-circuitry. It was the logic of the modern world made manifest in a land of myth.
"Synchronization complete. Target-lock confird on the Abyssal thermal-mana signature," Dola’s voice resonated within his skull, but it was fractured now, a dual-frequency chorus of her assistant persona and the chilling authority of the Maiden. "Master, release the payload now. Shield integrity is failing. The variable for survival is narrowing to zero."
Malphas, the Demon General, observed the strange green tube on the human’s shoulder with a gaze of absolute, unadulterated arrogance. To him, the device was rely a piece of dead, souless tal. He sensed no grand gathering of Aetheric particles, no complex chanting of the elents. To a creature born of pure spiritual despair, a physical chanism was a primitive tool of a lesser race.
"Is this your final desperate gambit?" Malphas hissed, his voice a sandpaper rasp against the silence. "You rely on rusted iron to defy the inevitable will of the Abyss?"
Malphas gestured with his clawed hand, releasing the gargantuan orb of dark energy. It lunged forward like a black teor, a void-sphere ready to consu everything in its trajectory. At that exact microsecond, Dayat’s finger squeezed the trigger chanism of the Javelin.
THUMP!
The sound of the first-stage launch echoed through the vent—a muffled, pressurized explosion that used a small charge to eject the missile from the tube without incinerating the operator in the confined space. The missile glided forward slowly for about five ters, its stabilizing fins snapping into place with a chanical click. Then, the primary rocket motor ignited with a deafening, earth-shaking roar.
WUUUUUUSSSHHH!
A blinding plu of orange-white fire erupted from the missile’s tail. However, instead of streaking directly toward Malphas’s encroaching dark orb, the projectile perford a sharp, sudden climb toward the ceiling of the corridor.
Malphas let out a booming, mocking laugh that rattled the pipes. "A miss! Terror has blinded your eyes and rotted your aim, mortal!"
But the laughter died in Malphas’s throat as his primordial instincts, honed through centuries of inter-dinsional conquest, suddenly shrieked a warning. He watched as the missile reached its apex just below the basalt ceiling and perford a radical Top-Attack maneuver. It nosed over at a near ninety-degree angle, diving with terrifying velocity toward Malphas’s head—the one area not protected by his massive chest-plate of calcified bone.
"What?!" Malphas gasped, his violet eyes widening in shock. He tried to divert the trajectory of his dark orb upward, but the laws of physics moved faster than his demonic will.
The Javelin missile struck Malphas directly from above.
BOOOOOOOOOOOMMMMMM!!!
The explosion was not like the colorful, swirling bursts of magic typical of Aethera. This was the detonation of a High-Explosive Anti-Tank (HEAT) warhead. It was a calculated release of chemical energy and extre pressure, designed to generate a supersonic jet of molten copper capable of burning through the thickest main battle tank armor on Earth.
The blast created a cataclysmic shockwave that shook the very foundations of Terragard’s deepest sector. The sound was so imnse it felt as if the world were being split in two. Fortunately, Lunethra had poured the last of her Mana into a desperate Aegis Photonis, shielding Kancil and the unconscious Dwarves from permanent eardrum rupture.
The collision between Earth’s chemical violence and Malphas’s Abyssal energy created an unpredictable chain reaction. The high-pressure steam pipes surrounding the impact zone, already stressed to their limit, could not withstand the sudden spike in atmospheric pressure.
PSHAAAAAAAAKKKKK!
One by one, the steel conduits ruptured. Scalding white steam hissed out at thousands of PSI, filling the entire corridor in a matter of seconds. Visibility vanished into a wall of white. Within a ter, there was nothing but the blur of vapor. The temperature in the room skyrocketed, but the high humidity of the steam acted as a natural suppressant, preventing the explosive fire from spreading into a localized firestorm.
Amidst the thick, suffocating fog, a roar of suppressed, agonizing rage erupted.
"YOU... YOU ARE INDEED AN INTERESTING ANOMALY, MORTAL CHILD!"
Malphas’s voice was raspy now, filled with a hiss of both hatred and newfound recognition. Through the white veil, a jagged dinsional tear flickered. Malphas, his bone armor shattered and large portions of his shadow-body evaporated by the missile’s thermal jet, could no longer maintain his tether to this world. His Abyssal energy had been depleted just to survive the direct kinetic and thermal impact of the Javelin.
"We shall et again... when this world begins to rot from its own logic," Malphas continued, his voice fading as the Void Breach forcibly snapped shut. The Demon General chose a tactical retreat back to the Abyss to regenerate his fractured essence.
Instantly, the corridor fell into a heavy, eerie quiet, broken only by the rhythmic, dying hiss of steam from the broken pipes.
"Dola..." Dayat whispered, his voice barely audible.
The silver-white radiance in Dola’s eyes flickered once, twice, and then extinguished. Her entire system underwent a sudden, total shutdown. Dola collapsed onto the tal grating like a doll whose strings had been severed by a razor. The Maiden Glitch had ended, leaving behind a cooling, silent shell of an AI assistant.
Dayat felt his own world begin to spin. The digital HUD in his vision disintegrated into static before vanishing entirely, replaced by an unbearable, crushing migraine. It felt as if a gargantuan hand were reaching into his skull, systematically erasing every technical mory of the Javelin, the missile’s guidance laws, and the tactical coordinates. This was Dola’s built-in security protocol—such high-tier military data was too dangerous to remain housed in a human brain without the constant stabilization of her link.
"Agh... damn it," Dayat clutched his head, his knees finally giving way. His vision tunneled into darkness. His body, pushed far beyond the red-line of human endurance, finally surrendered. Dayat fell unconscious right beside Dola, amidst the thinning, swirling mist of steam and ash.
"Dayat! Dola!" Lunethra’s voice pierced the fog. She tried to stand, her legs trembling like reeds in a storm. She clutched Kancil, who was also bordering on a ntal collapse from the sheer intensity of the event. Lunethra chanted a minor light spell to cut through the remaining vapor.
The scene she witnessed was one of utter devastation: the once-majestic corridor was a ruin. A massive crater had been carved into the tal floor, and the ceiling was riddled with deep, jagged fractures. But their enemy was gone.
Suddenly, from the direction of the Great Vault Gate, the rhythmic, heavy thud of marching boots and frantic shouts in the Dwarven tongue echoed through the vents.
"Dead-end sector found! Quick, check for survivors! Breach is sealed!"
Beams of high-intensity steam-torches sliced through the fog. A large contingent of Dwarven forces—not just combatants, but dics and specialized technicians—burst into the room. At their lead was a Dwarf dressed in immaculate ministerial robes that were now coated in white stone dust. He possessed a neatly trimd beard adorned with small gems and a set of expensive-looking monocles.
This was Minister Grogor, the Head of Terragard’s Internal Security.
Grogor stared at the carnage before him with wide, disbelieving eyes. He saw the ruined steam pipes—the pride of his city—destroyed, but he also saw the fading remnants of Abyssal energy. His gaze locked onto the prone, helpless forms of Dayat and Dola, then shifted to Baruk-Ahn, who was still unconscious against the gate.
"By the Great Anvil..." Grogor whispered. He approached Lunethra with a cautious, suspicious step. "Who are you? And what occurred in this chamber? Did this human cause this... this terrifying explosion?"
Lunethra looked up at Grogor with eyes filled with exhaustion and a touch of defiance. "He... he is the one who saved your city from a Demon General. Now, for the love of your Gods, help us."
Grogor did not answer imdiately. His bureaucratic and paranoid nature made him hesitate. He didn’t see Dayat as a hero; he saw a dangerous, unrecorded anomaly. However, seeing the Captain of the Royal Guard, Baruk-Ahn, in such a state, he realized he had no choice but to act.
"dics! Transport them all to the High-Security Isolation Ward!" Grogor commanded, his voice regaining its sharp authority. "Allow no one entry without my express seal. I want a full, itemized report on every weapon used in this room. Scavenge every fragnt!"
The Dwarves moved with practiced speed. Dayat, Dola, Kancil, and Baruk-Ahn were hoisted onto chanical stretchers. Lunethra was guided politely but firmly by two Earth-Shielders.
Grogor stood at the edge of the Javelin’s impact crater. He reached down and picked up a small, scorched shard of olive-drab tal from the floor—a fragnt of the Javelin’s launch tube. He inspected it with a clinical intensity.
"Technology without Mana..." Grogor whispered to himself, his eyes glinting with a volatile mixture of fear and power-hungry curiosity. "This human... he will either be our greatest salvation, or the problem that finally breaks this mountain."
As the rescue party left the corridor, the lingering scent of Napalm and ozone remained in the air—a silent witness to a battle that had just shifted the course of history for the continent of Aethera.
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