©NovelBuddy
The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 83. Vashari
Vashari in the morning moved at a pace that the human continent’s cities didn’t.
There was plenty happening. Merchant stalls operating. Port traffic managing itself through the organized chaos of a functioning international hub. Children of seven or eight different beastfolk species running errands or simply running, as that is what children did regardless of species.
The difference was in the quality of the activity. Nobody seemed to be performing urgency. Things happened because they needed to happen, at the speed at which they needed to happen, without the ambient pressure Owen had always registered in Nexus Prime’s streets: that city-wide hum of people in a hurry to get to things that were also in a hurry.
He walked through the market district with Yuki and Odessa, in his humanoid form with a traveling coat that Odessa had insisted on purchasing because "you look like you escaped from a fantasy novel and that will cause problems in a port city, you need to look like you belong here."
The coat helped with the wings. Nothing really helped with the golden eyes, but beastfolk had more variety in that department than humans did and his just registered as unusual, rather than alarming.
He was, nonetheless, looked at constantly.
Not with hostility. Mostly with the specific quality of attention that something unprecedented received: the focused, slightly awed regard of people encountering something their history had told them about and their experience had never confirmed.
"I think They know what you are," Yuki said quietly, walking close.
"Maybe..." Owen said. "The ones old enough to have learned the old histories."
A wolf-folk elder, grey-muzzled, moving with the careful dignity of very old age, leaning on a carved staff, stopped in their path. His grey eyes fixed on Owen intensely.
He said something in a language Owen didn’t recognize. The cadence was formal. Ritualistic, almost.
Yuki looked at Owen. Owen looked at the elder.
"I’m sorry," Owen said. "I don’t know that language."
The elder switched, not to the common human-continent tongue but to something closer, an older register of it. "I said: we thought your kind were extinct"
"Well, i’m not" Owen said.
"No." The elder looked at him for another moment. Then he did the same gesture Commander Ossa had done: fist to chest, head inclined.
"The elders of the Greymane Pack acknowledge your presence. We have kept the old prayers."
Owen returned the gesture, as he had the day before. The elder nodded once and moved on, his staff making a soft rhythm on the stone.
Odessa watched him go. "Old prayers?" she repeated. "Owen, they have old prayers for you?"
"For dragons, I presume" he said. "Not for me specifically."
"Well, You’re the only dragon now. There is no distinction now." Odessa retorted.
She wasn’t wrong.
---
Leah had arranged for a guide, a young lion-folk woman named Sera, barely out of adolescence by the look of her, with tawny fur and quick eyes and the particular energy of someone who had been given an important responsibility and was taking it seriously while trying not to show how seriously she was taking it.
Sera guided them through Vashari with the proprietary confidence that proved she had grown up in the city’s streets and had opinions about every district. She had clearly been briefed on the group’s composition, because she addressed Owen with the careful formality of someone she reverred.
"The diplomatic quarter is to the east," she explained, leading them through a market section that smelled of spices Owen didn’t recognize and couldn’t identify but wanted to.
"The port authority manages the western approach. The old city: the four-thousand-year section, is central, but visitors aren’t usually taken there without invitation from the City Council."
"What’s in the old city?" Yuki asked.
"The Founding Stones. The Shamans’ Hall. The Memory Archives." Sera glanced at Owen. "The Shrine of the Last Dragon that visited Vashari a century ago"
Owen kept his expression neutral. "There’s a shrine?"
"There’s a shrine to all the great races that the world lost. The Shrine district has seven of them." Sera’s ears flicked as she glanced at Owen.
"The Dragon Shrine has been maintained continuously. The Shamans hold a prayer there on the full moon, a prayer For their return."
A short moment of Silence passed for three steps.
"So, they’ve been praying for their return for a thousand years?" Yuki asked, her voice careful.
"Yes," Sera said simply. "We are patient people."
Alfred, who had been walking slightly behind them taking everything in with the quality of attention he applied to everything, spoke for the first time. "Sera. The shamans. Would they receive visitors?"
Sera looked at him. Then at Owen. Then back at Alfred. "The shamans would receive a dragon" she said carefully. "They would consider it an answered prayer. Whether they’d receive the dragon’s companions would depend on the dragon’s introduction."
"Make the arrangements," Owen said. "Please."
Sera’s ears went up. She composed herself with visible effort. "Yes. I will do that."
She led them onward, but Owen noticed her pace had quickened slightly, with the energy of someone who had just realized they were going to have a very good story to tell for the rest of their life.
---
Trouble found them in the late afternoon.
They were returning through the market district toward the diplomatic compound when Yuki’s Battle Intuition fired up, a full alert, not the low-level ambient awareness of a crowded space but the sharp, specific signal of directed threat.
"...Owen" she said quietly.
He had already felt it though, His Mana Sense was already spreading.
Four distinct signatures, positioned at the corners of the market section they were moving through. The quality of their mana was unique. The specific energy signature of people who were doing something they were trying to hide.
Beastfolk. All four of them. High C-rank, bordering on B. From the density of their mana.
Not Port Authority. Not city guard. Their positions were too precise for coincidence and too hidden for legitimate purposes.
"We’re being boxed," Owen said, low.
Alfred’s hand moved toward his shield without him looking at it. Odessa’s fingers made a subtle gesture, pre-summoning, her Azure Sky Dragon queued and ready.
Yuki’s hands were already at her katana grips.
Sera had gone very still. "Those are—" She stopped.
"You recognize them?" Leah asked, appearing from a side street with the timing of someone who had also noticed her friends were being followed and had simply come back for the group rather than running.
"Ironmane Clan," Sera said. Her voice had gone flat. "Ironmane scouts use a four-corner enclosure pattern. It’s a territorial hunting technique."
"The Ironmane Clan," Owen said. "That’s one of the three great clans, right?."
"The eastern one," Leah said, and her voice had a quality he hadn’t heard from her before. Not fear. Something harder than fear.
"We have history."
The four scouts moved.
Not attacking but Converging, closing the box, reducing the group’s options without committing to violence yet.
The market around them was thinning fast, local people reading the situation with the efficiency of a population that had learned to clear space when hunters started moving suspiciously.
A fifth figure stepped into the open space the cleared market had created.
Lion-folk, male, older than the scouts, mid-forties in human terms, broad across the shoulders, carrying himself with the specific weight of someone who was used to being the most significant presence in a space.
His mane was darker than Leah’s, almost brown, and his amber eyes moved across the group with a stern gaze that landed on Owen and stayed there.
"A dragon," he said. His voice was deep and measured. "In Vashari. In my city."
"Your city?" Owen said. "Vashari is a free port."
"Vashari is in the Ironmane sphere of influence," the man said, "which you would know if you had done the appropriate courtesy of announcing your arrival to the appropriate authorities rather than sneaking in behind a diplomatic vessel."
"I didn’t sneak in..." Owen said. "...I arrived on a registered Association vessel with full diplomatic clearance and reported immediately to the Port Authority."
"You reported to Commander Ossa. Who answers to the City Council. Who does not report to the Ironmane Clan." The man’s expression didn’t change.
"I am Vorak. Second Fang of the Ironmane Clan. And I am extending the Ironmane’s formal request that the dragon explain its presence and intentions before it proceeds further into beastfolk territory."
At this moment, Leah stepped forward.
Vorak’s gaze moved to her, and something shifted in his expression.Recognition, and underneath it something more complicated. A Calculationg gaze.
"Mad Fang of the Auric Pride," he said. "We heard you were lost."
"Mad...fang?" Owen jested in a whisper but Yuki tugged at his ears.
"I was taken..." Leah said, replying to Vorak, ignoring Owen’s Attempt to joking mock her title.
Her voice was cold, like she didn’t want to spend another second with Vorak there.
"There is a difference. And the dragon that found me and returned me to this continent is under the Auric Pride’s hospitality, which predates whatever claim the Ironmane think they have over the free port of Vashari."
A silence followed as Vorak looked between them. Then back at Owen.
"The Auric Pride’s hospitality?..." he repeated.
"Granted by whom? The pride-mother is two days away."
"By me," Leah said. "I am my mother’s daughter and I speak with her voice until she arrives."
Owen kept his expression neutral and his Mana Sense fully expanded as he let the political weight shift without inserting himself into it.
This was Leah’s territory in the way Drak’thar was his. He watched Vorak process the claim, watched the calculation run behind his amber eyee.
The cost of challenging Leah’s authority versus the cost of the confrontation, the scouts’ positions, the Azure Sky Dragon Odessa had not summoned yet but whose pre-summoning fluctuation of energy Vorak’s beastial instint had probably detected.
"The Ironmane will be in contact," Vorak said finally as he prepared to leave. He looked at Owen one more time with an expression that made Owen think he’s registering something in his mind for later.
"Dragon. We will speak again."
He turned and walked away as the four scouts melted back into the market’s crowd.
Sera let out a breath that she had been holding since vorak’s appearance.
"Welcome to beastfolk politics," Leah said, turning back to the group.
"It’s quite....Invigorating!" Odessa said brightly.







