©NovelBuddy
The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 81. A Family of Six
The next night, Owen flew.
He transformed off the stern, in the dark, when the ship’s navigation lights were the only illumination and the nearest shipping lane was forty kilometers east.
His wings caught the ocean wind and he rose high, soaring up into the night sky until the Aureline was a lit rectangle far below and the horizon was a clean line between the dark water and the stars.
He flew for two hours. Not racing anywhere. Not burning off frustration, exactly, though there was some of that. Mostly he needed his actual body, his real form, the size and weight and sensory experience of being what he was rather than the compressed approximation of his humanoid form.
The ocean smelled different from two hundred meters up. Cleaner. Older. Like something that had been here before anything else and would be here after.
Then he thought about Dominus.
About the choice the Dragon King had made, to scatter his power through time rather than simply die with his race. To plan for a future that he would never personally inhabit. To trust that whatever soul the pocket dimension pulled across impossible distances to complete his equation would be worth trusting.
That must have been a significant act of faith, Owen thought, for someone who had just watched everything he had built get unmade in minutes.
He circled back toward the ship’s position, tracking it by its mana signature against the blank ocean.
On the deck, through his Dragon’s Eye, he could see four figures gathered at the stern. Yuki, Odessa, Alfred and Leah. Waiting.
He descended.
He landed on the stern deck in his full form.
The ship’s structure held, the Aureline was built for the possibility of large beastfolk passengers, and its stern deck had reinforced plating for exactly this kind of weight.
Owen folded his wings and settled into a crouch that brought his head roughly level with the people standing in front of him.
Leah had known what was coming, Yuki had told her only that there was something important to discuss and that Owen would be there.
The actual sight of his juvenile dragon form at close range, lit by the ship’s rear lights against the dark ocean, produced a reaction that she controlled almost completely. Almost. Her tail went rigid for exactly two seconds before she forced it back to neutral movement.
Odessa had no such control and didn’t seem to feel it was required. "Damn" blushed, as memories of the previous night flooded her mind.
But she quickly caught his gaze and averted it, trying to maintain her normal playful demeanour, unaware that Owen already knew that she was watching. "you are even more impressive in thedark. The scales pick up the starlight differently. Alfred, are you seeing this?"
"I am seeing this, Miss Odessa," Alfred said, with the patient tone of a man who had decided decades ago that his employer’s daughter’s enthusiasms were one of life’s fixed features.
"Okay," Yuki said, and her voice brought the energy of the gathering to a different register.
"Everyone sit. This is going to be a long conversation."
They sat on the reinforced deck, four people and a dragon and a primordial slime who had emerged from Yuki’s pocket to perch on her knee and pulse with quiet attention.
Owen talked for a long time.
He started at the beginning , the sky above the Shadowgrave, Dominus and Chronara, the revelation about what the system actually was. He told it straight, without softening the implications or reaching for reassuring framings.
The Will of the World as a consuming force. The dragon extinction as managed risk elimination. Drak’thar as a contingency hidden from the entity that had built the world’s fundamental infrastructure.
He told them about Vorthraxx. Not just the version from the Tower of Royals prophecy, but the updated crises too. The grief. The burning. The thousand years of isolation with nothing but conviction for company and a seal that was slowly weakening.
He told them about the two remaining Story Dungeons. About the fragments of Dominus’s power that Drak’thar needed to fully activate.
He told them that Azmireth was free somewhere in the world, and that she worked for Vorthraxx, and that three demons had operated in the human continent under cover of Eckstein’s network, which meant the sealing of the demon continent had already been partially compromised in ways the Hunter Association didn’t yet know.
When he finished, the ocean moved under them and the ship’s engines maintained their steady note and nobody said anything for a while.
Alfred spoke first.
"The system that every awakened hunter uses," he said, in the careful tone of a man processing something large by taking it apart into manageable pieces, "is a monitoring and optimization infrastructure built by an entity that views human life as a resource."
"Yes," Owen said.
"And the dungeons that hunters clear for experience and loot are—"
"Rifts of visions from the past that manifest into present reality, but also training grounds. To increase the value of the harvest."
Alfred was quiet for a moment. "I have spent forty years as a hunter and hunter-adjacent professional. That is a significant recontextualization, My good sir"
"I know."
"Does knowing change anything practically?" Alfred asked. "About how we operate day to day?"
"Not immediately. The system still works. Skills are still real. Level progression is still real. The Will isn’t malevolent toward mortals, it’s indifferent. It wants them healthy and growing. The exploitation is in the endpoint, not the process."
"That’s a very specific kind of horror," Odessa said. She had been quiet throughout, which was unusual enough that it meant she was doing something serious with the information. Her violet eyes were on the dark water past the ship’s railing. "It takes care of you so you’re worth more when you’re gone."
"Yes," Owen said.
"And you’re trying to build something outside it." She looked at him. "Drak’thar. Dragons who exist outside the Will’s system. A kingdom that can shelter mortals when the Will decides to complete harvest the current population."
"That’s the plan."
"That’s an enormous plan," Odessa said. "For a dragon who was a convenience store worker two years ago."
Owen blinked. Yuki made a sound that was almost a laugh.
"She knows," Yuki said. "I told her. She asked directly and I don’t think we should be lying to people who are fighting next to us."
"That’s fair," Owen said, after a moment.
Leah had said nothing through all of this. Owen had been tracking her in his peripheral vision, the specific quality of her silence, the way her ears had moved through the conversation, orienting toward different speakers, the tail that had gone through several states of motion as the information built.
"The beastfolk continent," she said finally.
Everyone looked at her.
"The beastfolk continent has its own relationship with the Will," she said. "Our shamans have known for generations that the system is not, neutral. That there is something behind it. Most clans treat this as sacred knowledge, not spoken outside ritual contexts." Her amber eyes moved to Owen.
"What you’re describing is what the eldest shamans call the Devourer. The thing beneath the world’s skin that eats what dies."
Owen went still.
"Your people know," he said.
"Some of us have always known." Her tail moved. "I didn’t know what it meant. What could be done about it. I thought it was just — a truth you lived with. Like weather. Or natural disasters"
"It doesn’t have to be," Owen said.
Leah looked at him for a long time. The ship moved under them. The stars above shined beautifully without caring about any of the crisis below it.
"My mother," she said finally, "needs to hear this. The pride-mother of the Auric Pride. The shamans of all three clans need to hear this." A pause. "If a dragon is coming to the beastfolk continent, the first dragon in a thousand years, it is going to mean something to my people. What it means depends on what you do with it."
"What would you want it to mean?" Yuki asked.
Leah’s answer was immediate.
"Hope."
The word sat over the ocean between them, quieter than the wind and more substantial than the ship beneath their feet.
Owen looked at the four people sitting on the deck around him, the woman who had tamed him, the heiress who had followed them into two dungeons and a canyon ambush and was already planning Drak’thar’s gardens, the retired knight who carried restraint cuffs in his inventory and had very specific opinions about efficiency, and the lion-girl who had survived fourteen months in a cell and still had something burning in her amber eyes that Eckstein and his clients and all their resources had not managed to extinguish.
He thought about Dominus’s act of faith. About trusting across impossible distances.
"Then that’s what we’ll make it," he said.
Nobody cheered. This wasn’t a cheering moment. But something settled, in the group, in the air above the dark water, that felt like the particular gravity of people who had decided, collectively, that a thing was worth doing.
Uru pulsed once, a bright warm pulse, and then settled back into the comfortable silence of a creature that had no opinion on cosmological horror but felt strongly about the people carrying it.
"Right," Odessa said, after a moment.
"Someone remind me to call my estate manager in the morning because I’m going to need to restructure some investments if we’re doing this properly."
"Miss Odessa," Alfred said.
"Yes?"
"I already called him."
Odessa stared at him. "When?"
"Four days ago, when it became clear this was the direction of travel."
"Alfred, you absolute legend."
"I try," he said as he stood and produced a thermos of hot tea from somewhere in his inventory, preparing to serve it with tea cups he pulled from his inventory too. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺
Owen watched them and felt something that he hadn’t felt in this particular form since the first moment Yuki had carried him out of that dungeon as a hatchling, small and warm and beginning.
Something very much like belonging.







