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The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 73. Vorthraxx is coming
The voice came from behind him, sweet and completely unbothered.
Owen moved on pure instinct — a sideways drift that cleared three feet of distancs between himself and whatever had just put its face close enough to his neck that he felt breath on his scales.
He turned.
And there, the demon stood where he had been standing, as if she had always been there and the world had simply arranged itself around her.
He took her in.
Purple-tinted skin, a fitted black suit with cutouts placed in ways that were structurally unnecessary and clearly intentional to be sexually appealing. Small black horns curving back from her forehead and slim tail with a pointed tip that moved with an idle, independent quality, like it had its own opinions.
Her beauty was Objectively striking and alarming.
Owen had faced Greater Dragons. He had stood in Dominus’s presence and felt the weight of a thousand years of power pressing down on him like weather. He had fought cultists, hollow men, a First Seat consuming Outer-Divinity miasma.
But this was different.
It wasn’t that she felt stronger than those things exactly. It was the absence — the total, smooth absence of any readable presence. Standing in front of her was like standing in front of a mirror that didn’t show his reflection. Something was there. His mana sense just simply couldn’t measure it.
His first demon, in the flesh.
He had heard about them back when he was human — news coverage of demonic beast swarms pushing off the sealed continent, the annual reports of mutation rates, the political discussions about whether the sealing was holding. But actual demons, true demons with the purple skin and horns and a tail — he had never seen so much as a photograph.
"Oh, how feisty," she said, the words carrying the tone of someone who found the situation genuinely delightful.
Then she walked past him entirely, moving toward Eckstein with the unhurried stride of someone who had already decided how this scene ended.
Eckstein scrambled backward, putting Aaron and Paul between himself and her approach, his earlier bravado resurfacing.
"Ha!" His voice cracked upward. "You’re finished now, dragon man! You hear me?" He jabbed a finger past the demon toward Owen. "Well? What are you waiting for? Kill it!"
The demon’s tail moved.
It was fast — genuinely fast, faster than Owen’s eyes fully tracked despite his enhanced perception. One moment it was coiling loosely behind her. The next, the pointed tip had crossed the distance to Eckstein’s forehead and punched through.
"Wh—what...the...fuck," Eckstein managed to mutter before the demon pulled her tail free and he crumpled, hitting the grass without another word.
The demon crouched briefly and wiped the blood from her tail’s tip on the hem of Eckstein’s expensive clothing, then straightened with the satisfaction of someone who had been waiting to do that for a long time.
"Finally." She exhaled. "That man always disgusted me. And I’m meant to be the demon here."
Aaron and Paul stood on either side of her, motionless and expressionless.
"Loyalty is truly lost," Owen said.
He was watching all three of them, repositioning slowly. He was unsettled — he could admit that much to himself — unsettled by her arrival, by the killing, by the casual intimacy of the whole sequence. This had been planned. Not improvised.
"Oh, please." The demon reached up and touched Aaron’s jaw with one finger, a gesture so languid it was almost theatrical. "He was just a means to an end." 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
Then Aaron’s skin changed.
It started at the jaw where she had touched — the human-toned flesh crumbling away at the edges like old paper, revealing the luminous purple beneath. The horns came next, pushing up through the forehead, then Paul’s transformation followed immediately after, same sequence, same reveal.
Three demons.
Three demons, in the human continent, outside their sealed continent, standing in a dungeon that wasn’t on any official registry, next to the body of a man whose trafficking operation had apparently been their operational cover.
Owen reset his footing. His wings spread slightly — not a combat posture exactly, but the instinctive preparation of something that needed to be ready to move in any direction.
The demon looked at him and raised one hand, palm out.
"Relax." The amusement hadn’t left her voice. "I’m not here to fight you... Yet."
She reached into the neckline of her suit and withdrew the amulet, She pressed her thumb to the tip of one claw, drew it across her palm with complete indifference to the pain, and let three drops of purple-black blood fall onto the amulet’s surface.
The circle blazed to life.
Light coalesced in the air above it, forming the suggestion of a face — blurred, distorted, reality refusing to render it fully. But the eyes came through.
Golden and Burning in a way that resonated in Owen’s chest like it struck a bell.
Owen felt it before the voice came. A recognition that moved through his blood and his scales and the draconic heritage Dominus had given him — something enormous and familiar and terribly pressing through a small hole in the fabric of distance.
Then the voice spoke, and the sound of it moved through Owen like a shockwave through water. Layered. Multiple registers occupying the same frequency. The voice of something that had been alone with its own thoughts for a very long time.
"Hello, little brother."
The dungeon went quiet in a way that had nothing to do with sound.
"What—" Owen heard his own voice come out hoarse. "Who are you?"
"You know who I am." The presence in the projection seemed to lean forward, filling more of the space the amulet allowed it. "Do not deny your instinct."
Owen held himself still. He reached inward — past his own thoughts, past the Dragon King System, past the layers of inherited memory Dominus had left in his bloodline like sediment in stone. He let the recognition happen.
"Vorthraxx," he said.
"There we go."
The name sat in the air between them. Owen’s mind ran the math automatically — the story he had heard in the sky above the Shadowgrave, the Dragon King’s grief, the woman burned in a town square, the war that had reshaped continents and ended with a sealing that was supposed to be permanent.
"How," Owen said. "The seal—"
"It has been a millennium." Vorthraxx’s voice carried something that might have been exhaustion if exhaustion could be layered with contempt.
"Nothing made by living hands lasts forever. Father’s seal weakens." A sound that might have been a laugh. "I should thank him, actually. If he hadn’t cast me out when he did, I would have been consumed with the rest of Our kind when the Will made its decision. His attempt to destroy me preserved me instead. Poetic, isn’t it?"
Owen said nothing. He was listening, but he was also watching the three demons, tracking their positions, mapping the distance to the villa’s entrance in case Leah and the others were still moving through the underground corridor.
"But this time," Vorthraxx continued, his voice dropping into something that resonated with genuine intent, "I will do things differently. The Will’s function is consumption — it farms mortals, harvests their life force, uses their deaths to sustain itself. I understand this now. I have had considerable time to think." The projection’s eyes burned brighter. "So I will eliminate its food source. Quickly. Completely. And then, without livestock left to sustain it, I will eliminate the Will itself. And when it is gone, I will take its place. I shall become the Will. Rewrite this world as it deserves to be written."
"Big dreams," Owen said, "for someone who can only speak through an accessory."
Silence.
The demon beside him went very still. Aaron and Paul exchanged a look.
Then Vorthraxx sighed heavily.
"I had forgotten," he said finally, "what it was like to have family who could actually respond to me with such banter. A thousand years of silence does things to one’s patience for wit." Something shifted in his tone. "But unto serious matters. The seal weakens, but not quickly enough. I require a catalyst to accelerate its collapse. Your power, little brother, would serve beautifully."
Owen looked at the amulet.
"And what..." he said, "...makes you think I’ll help you."
"Don’t be the fool our father was." The warmth in Vorthraxx’s voice hardened at the edges. "You have inherited his memories — I can see it in how quickly you’ve grown, in the fact that you’re standing here at all. You know what the Will is. You know what it does. You know that every mortal alive right now is livestock, being cultivated toward a harvest they’ll never see coming." The projection leaned closer, filling the amulet’s projected space completely. "We do not need to be just its executioners. We can be something greater. Beyond guardians. Beyond kings. The only Godly powers in existence, little brother — us. No Will above us. No duty controlling our decisions. Just us Brothers, ruling as we were always meant to."
The dungeon’s false sky stretched overhead, unchanged and indifferent.
"You want to destroy humanity, life itself, to hurt the Will," Owen said. "Stop pretending this is a just cause, you’re just a mad tyrant!"
The silence stretched.
Then Vorthraxx’s voice returned, and the rawness was gone. What replaced it was something colder and far more considered.
"I would have liked a brother," he said quietly. "Genuinely. A thousand years is a long time to be entirely alone with one’s convictions." A pause. "But a tool I cannot use willingly, will serve just as well when broken."
He spoke to the demon next then the demon’s amusement dropped away instantly.
She straightened, her tail coiling tight, and something in her eyes changed — the performance of languid interest gone, replaced with the flat focus of something that had been waiting for permission.
"Azmireth, Bring him to me." Vorthraxx said. "Dead if necessary. His core alone will serve my purpose."
Then the amulet’s light went out.
Azmireth smiled, a wide smile that reached her void-black eyes.
"Nothing personal,"







