The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 123. The mountain’s Secret

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Chapter 123: 123. The mountain’s Secret

They left Lythandar at dawn.

Sylnara provided an escort—twelve elven rangers under Master Warden Thaelan’s command. The dwarves trusted elves about as much as they trusted dragons. Having witnesses who had fought beside the party might make negotiations easier.

Thaelan wasn’t happy about it.

"I’m a warden, not a diplomat," he said as they climbed into the foothills. "If Borin throws you out, don’t expect me to smooth things over."

"Noted," Owen said.

The mountains rose ahead. Gray stone, hard lines, the bones of the earth exposed to sky. Everything about them felt ancient in a way different from Lythandar’s living beauty—older, more patient, more stubborn.

They reached the dwarf hold by nightfall.

Khazad-Vorn squatted against a mountainside like a fist driven into stone. Massive gates of carved granite. Towers that were really just extensions of the mountain itself. Smoke rose from a hundred forges, painting the sunset with industrial colors.

Guards met them at the gate. Dwarves in heavy armor, axes loose in their grips, expressions suspicious.

"State your business."

Thaelan stepped forward. "Warden Thaelan of Lythandar, with companions seeking audience with King Borin Ironfoot. We’re expected."

The guards exchanged glances. One disappeared inside.

Ten minutes later, the gates groaned open.

---

King Borin Ironfoot was exactly what Owen expected.

The dwarf king was old. Centuries old, by the look of him. His beard fell past his belt, woven with gold rings marking victories or years or both. His arms were thick with muscle that hadn’t softened with age.

But when he spoke, his voice carried something unexpected: grief.

"So. The dragon who killed Azmireth. The outsiders who exposed Malachar." He gestured to rough stone chairs. "Sit. Tell me why I should care."

They sat. Owen summarized—the fragment, the dungeon, the urgency, the elves’ support.

Borin listened without interruption. When Owen finished, the dwarf king was quiet for a long moment.

"You want to enter the Remembering," he said finally. "The one that’s been destabilizing my mountains for months."

"Destabilizing?" Yuki asked.

"You didn’t know." Borin stood and moved to a map on the wall. "The dungeon’s energy has been bleeding into our deepest mines. Causing cave-ins. Awakening things that should stay asleep." He pointed to marked locations. "We’ve lost three holds in the past year. Over two hundred dwarves dead."

The room went cold.

"We thought it was natural seismic activity at first," Borin continued. "Then Hilda started measuring the energy signatures." He looked at them. "The dungeon isn’t just manifesting. It’s pushing. Whatever’s inside wants out."

"And your mining is accelerating it," Owen said.

"My mining is survival. The ore in those depths is the richest we’ve found in centuries. Without it, Khazad-Vorn can’t sustain its population." Borin’s jaw tightened. "The elves want us to stop. The druids want us to stop. Everyone wants us to sacrifice our future so they can feel safe."

Thaelan spoke quietly. "No one wants your people to suffer, Borin. But if that dungeon breaks—"

"Then we all suffer." The dwarf king returned to his chair. "I know the calculus. I’ve known it for months." He looked at Owen. "The dragon who killed Azmireth. You think you can enter that dungeon and stabilize it?"

"I think I can try."

"Try." Borin almost laughed. "My people are dying, and you want to try."

A new voice cut through the tension. "Let him try, Father."

A young dwarf woman entered from a side passage. Younger than Borin by centuries—maybe a century old herself, which was young for dwarves. She carried a device of crystal and copper that pulsed with light.

"Hilda," Borin said. "This is not the time."

"This is exactly the time." Hilda Deepdelver moved to stand before Owen. "I’ve been studying the dungeon’s mana signatures for six months. The fluctuations follow a pattern—a rhythm that matches nothing in our records." She held up her device. "Until three days ago, when the pattern changed."

"Changed how?" Owen asked.

"It started synchronizing with something outside the dungeon. Something alive." She looked at him directly. "You. When you arrived on this continent, the dungeon’s pulse started matching your beat."

The room went silent.

Owen felt everyone’s eyes on him. "You’re saying the dungeon is responding to me."

"I’m saying the fragment inside recognizes you. It’s been waiting." Hilda set her device down. "If you enter, you have a chance. If anyone else enters, they might die. The dungeon won’t accept them."

"How do you know?" Yuki asked.

"Because five of our best miners tried three months ago. They didn’t make it past the first chamber." Hilda’s voice was flat. "I watched their life signs through my devices. The dungeon rejected them. Actively and Violently."

Borin’s hands tightened on his armrests. "I lost good dwarves to that hole."

"And now the one person who can enter is here." Hilda faced her father. "We help them, or we keep losing people for nothing."

The silence stretched.

Finally, Borin spoke. "Hilda’s devices. The stabilizers she’s been developing. If we give them to you, can you keep the dungeon from destroying my mountains while you’re inside?"

Owen looked at Hilda. "Can they?"

"Maybe. The theory is sound. They’d need to be placed at key points around the dungeon’s perimeter, calibrated to counteract the energy bleeding." She paused. "And someone would need to monitor them constantly. Adjust them as conditions change."

"That someone would be you," Owen said.

"If my father allows it."

Borin’s expression was unreadable. "You want to go to the dungeon. With them."

"I want to make sure my work doesn’t fail." Hilda met his gaze steadily. "I’ve spent six months studying this. If anyone can keep the stabilizers working, it’s me."

Another long silence.

Then Borin stood. "Three conditions. One: you take Hilda with you and bring her back alive. Two: if you succeed, you owe Khazad-Vorn a debt—to be named later. Three: you explain to the elves and druids that we’re not stopping mining. We’re just... adjusting."

Owen stood and extended his hand. "Agreed."

Borin clasped his forearm—the dwarf grip, strong and final. "Then go. The dungeon’s not getting any more stable while we talk."

---

They left at dawn the next day.

Hilda traveled with them, her devices packed carefully in reinforced containers. She’d already explained the stabilizer theory three times, each time with more technical detail than the last. Odessa was fascinated. Alfred took notes. Leah looked mildly overwhelmed.

"The key is harmonic resonance," Hilda was saying as they climbed. "The dungeon pulses at a specific frequency. If we can generate counter-frequency at the right points, we can cancel out the bleeding energy."

"And you can calculate these frequencies?" Odessa asked.

"I already have. Six months of data." Hilda patted her pack. "The hard part will be placement. The calibration points are... inconvenient."

"Inconvenient how?" Yuki asked.

"Two of them are inside the dwarven mines. One is in elven territory—specifically, the Glimmerwood sacred grove. And one is..." She trailed off.

"Is what?" Owen prompted.

"At the dungeon’s entrance itself. Right where the guardian will be." Hilda met his eyes. "Assuming there is a guardian."

"Is has a guardian!?"

"someone will need to hold that position while the rest of you enter." She looked at the group. "While the dungeon tries to kill everyone nearby."

The path narrowed. The mountains rose around them.

And ahead, just visible through the peaks, a glow pulsed against the sky.

The third Story Dungeon.

Waiting.

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