The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 131. The Gathering Storm

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Chapter 131: 131. The Gathering Storm

Dominus didn’t wake.

They carried him to the palace on a stretcher of woven light, Chronara walking beside him, her ancient hands pressed to his chest, feeding what little life force she could spare into his failing body. His scales were dull. His breathing was shallow. The sovereign chains that had sealed Vorthraxx had burned through nearly everything.

"He lives.." Chronara said as they laid him in the throne room. "But he won’t wake soon. Perhaps not for days. Perhaps..." She stopped.

No one finished the thought.

Zephron stood at the window, staring at the battlefield below. His injured arm hung at his side, forgotten. "We won...but... Why does it feel like we lost?"

"Because we did lose." Verida’s voice was flat. She’d dragged herself from the healing halls despite her wound, despite her grounded wing. "Look at us. Look at what’s left."

What was left: three Greater Dragons, one unconscious King. A few hundred dragons still fit to fight. Thousands of wounded. A Hatchery full of dormant lifeless eggs that might never hatch.

And outside, the world was moving.

---

The first scout arrived at dusk.

An elf, riding a wind-spirit, her face pale with urgency. She landed in the courtyard and demanded to see the Dragon King immediately. When told he was unconscious, she asked for whoever commanded instead.

Zephron met her in the war chamber.

"The celestials are coming!" she said without preamble. "The Arbiter’s chosen. An army of divine beings, marching from the celestial realm. They’ve been watching. Waiting. They see Drak’thar weakened and they mean to finish what Vorthraxx started."

"How... seemany?"

"Thousands. Tens of thousands. I couldn’t count them all." The elf’s hands trembled. "They move under banners of light, and where they pass, the land itself grows still. No birds sing. No wind blows. It’s like the world holds its breath."

Zephron absorbed this. His jaw tightened, but he didn’t speak.

The second scout arrived an hour later.

A dwarf, riding a mechanical construct that belched smoke and steam. He stumbled into the chamber, his beard singed, his armor dented.

"Humans," he gasped. "The church raised a crusade. Every kingdom south of the mountains has answered. They’re marching under the Arbiter’s symbol, convinced that dragonkind must be purged."

"How many?" Verida asked.

"Hundreds of thousands. I couldn’t count them all. They cover the plains like a sea." The dwarf’s eyes were wild. "They’ve got siege weapons. War machines. Mages in every company. They mean to burn Drak’thar to the ground." 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂

The chamber fell silent.

Then the third scout arrived. This one didn’t need to speak. Her wounds told the story.

A dragon....one of the few who’d remained loyal...crashed into the courtyard, her scales torn, her wing broken. Medics rushed to her, but she waved them off.

"The demons..." she gasped. "They’re regrouping. The generals...they’re gathering every surviving demon, every corrupted dragon who’ll still fight. They’re coming back."

Then she collapsed.

---

Chronara stood at the map table, her violet eyes distant. Seeing futures. Weighing probabilities. When she spoke, her voice was steady—upbut Owen had learned to read what wasn’t shown.

"Three armies," she said. "Celestials from above. Humans from the south. Demons from the Nether. All converging on Drak’thar. All arriving at different times."

"Different times?" Zephron leaned forward. "How different?"

"The demons first. Morning tomorrow. They’re closest, and they’re driven by vengeance and madness. Vorthraxx was their king...they’ll want to Rescue him, or die trying." She traced the map. "The celestials next. Two days, maybe three. They move slowly...deliberately. They want to arrive after the fighting has started, when both sides are weakened."

"And the humans?"

"Last. Four days. They’re marching on foot, with all the delays that entails." Chronara looked up. "They’ll arrive to find a battlefield already soaked in blood. They’ll call it divine justice and claim victory for the Arbiter."

"Unless we stop them." Verida’s voice was hard. "Hit the demons first. Crush them before the celestials arrive. Then turn to face heaven with fresh strength."

"With what army?" Zephron demanded. "We have a few hundred dragons left. The demons still have thousands. Even if we win, we’ll be too depleted to face the celestials."

"Then we don’t face them alone."

Everyone turned.

The voice came from the chamber’s entrance. A figure stood there...tall, silver-haired, wearing the formal armor of elven high command.

Sylnara.

Behind her, more figures emerged. Dwarven generals in battle plate. Druid elders in woven bark. And at the edge, barely visible, fairy scouts flickering in and out of sight.

"We received word.." Sylnara said, stepping into the chamber. "The celestials march. The humans follow. You think you face this alone?" She shook her head. "The ancient alliances may be forgotten, but they are not broken."

"The elves stand with Drak’thar," she announced.

Borin Ironfoot pushed past her, his beard bristling. "The dwarves too. You think we’d let those light-blind fools purge dragonkind while we hide in our mountains?" He slammed a fist on the table. "Khazad-Vorn marches at dawn."

Elder Mosswood emerged from the druids’ ranks, leaning on his staff. "The Deepwood remembers what the celestials did in the past. They slaughtered our groves, burned our sacred trees, called it purification." His ancient eyes burned. "The druids will not forget again."

A tiny figure darted forward...Queen Asteria, her crystalline wings catching the light. "The fairies watch. The fairies remember. And the fairies have decided that heaven’s victory would be... inconvenient." She smiled her sharp smile. "We’ll scout. Harass. Make their march as difficult as possible. Every delay helps."

Chronara looked at them...these representatives of races who’d spent millennia apart, nursing old grudges, refusing to cooperate. And now, facing a common enemy, they’d come.

"How many?" she asked.

"Ten thousand elves," Sylnara said. "Our best archers, our swiftest cavalry, our most powerful mages."

"Eight thousand dwarves," Borin added. "Heavy infantry. Siege breakers. Engineers who can build fortifications faster than any magic."

"Three thousand druids," Mosswood said. "Healers. Shape-shifters. Those who can turn the very land against our enemies."

"As many fairies as there are stars," Asteria said. "Which is to say, enough."

Chronara absorbed the numbers. Twenty thousand allies...not counting the fairies’ endless harassment. Enough to make a difference. Maybe enough to survive.

"Then we have a chance," she said quietly. "A small one. But a chance."

---

The war council lasted through the night.

Positions were assigned. Strategies debated. Old grudges surfaced..elves and dwarves arguing over terrain, druids and fairies clashing over tactics...but every dispute ended the same way: with a grudging compromise and a shared understanding that survival mattered more than pride.

Owen watched from the edges, taking notes, memorizing faces, cataloging decisions. This was history unfolding. The moment when ancient enemies became allies. The moment when the world united against heaven’s tyranny.

At dawn, the scouts returned.

"The demons are moving," one reported. "They’ll be here within hours."

Chronara stood. "Then we meet them. All of us. Together."

She looked at the assembled leaders...elves, dwarves, druids, fairies, dragons. Beings who’d spent millennia apart, now standing shoulder to shoulder.

"For the first time since the ancient wars," she said, "we fight as one. Not as separate races with separate grudges. As one people, defending one Truth."

She raised her staff.

"Let the demons come. Let the celestials watch. Let the humans march toward their judgment." Her voice rang through the chamber. "Today, we show them all what unity means."

The war council dispersed to their commands.

Owen found himself on the walls again, watching the horizon. Yuki wasn’t here...she was centuries in the future, waiting for him to return. But he carried her with him. Her strength. Her certainty. Her love.

Behind him, armies prepared.

Ahead, the demon tide gathered.

And somewhere beyond, celestials and humans marched toward a reckoning they couldn’t possibly understand.

The ultimate war had begun.