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The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 92. Marak
They were intercepted before reaching the settlement’s outer boundary.
This time it was not an ambush. Eight Ironmane warriors approached in formal regalia. Their weapons were visible but lowered. Their spacing was symmetrical and deliberate, the posture of a ceremonial escort rather than an attack unit. Vorak walked at their front.
He appeared different here than he had in Vashari’s market. In neutral territory he had projected authority. Here, inside Ironmane land, he did not need to project. The confidence was natural. His dark mane had been arranged formally. His armor was lighter than standard combat gear but marked clearly with rank insignia worked into the metal. It had been prepared for a public encounter.
He had known they were coming.
"The Dragon," Vorak said, stopping ten meters from Owen. "And the Auric Pride’s daughter. You are persistent."
"You have twenty-two fewer warriors than this morning," Owen replied evenly. "You are also persistent."
Vorak’s jaw tightened. "None of them are dead."
"I told you that would be the case," Owen said. "I kept that promise."
Something shifted in Vorak’s expression. Not approval, but acknowledgment. He looked at Leah.
"The Pride-Mother’s daughter passed through the Narrows."
"The Pride-Mother’s daughter used the neutral route guaranteed by inter-clan agreement," Leah said calmly. "As did her companions."
"Chief Marak closed the eastern Ashplain Route."
"Chief Marak does not have unilateral authority to close neutral territory," Leah replied. "As Second Fang, you are aware of that."
Vorak held her gaze a moment longer than necessary. The pause suggested internal strain.
"The Chief will see you," he said at last.
"We did not request an audience," Alfred said.
"Nonetheless, He requests it," Vorak replied. His eyes returned to Owen. "He is interested in the dragon."
The word ’interested ’ was deliberate. Not curiosity but Evaluation.
"Then we will meet him," Owen said.
---
The settlement’s central hall was larger inside than the exterior implied. The architecture used an old expansion technique common in long-established clan structures. Owen had seen similar construction in Vashari’s shaman hall. Efficient. Refined through generations.
But several objects in the room did not fit Ironmane tradition.
Artifacts hung on the walls that did not match the aesthetic he had observed since entering Ironmane territory. Instruments of unknown function were arranged along one side. There was also a faint scent beneath the stone and wood. Subtle, but not natural to the space.
The miasma was stronger here than outside. Slightly stronger, but measurable. His sovereignty reacted to it.
Chief Marak waited near the center of the hall.
He was younger than Owen expected. In human terms, mid-thirties. Not inexperienced, but not elderly. His build was that of a seasoned warrior. Controlled posture. No wasted movement. His amber eyes tracked the group’s entrance carefully.
When his gaze settled on Owen, the quality was analytical. He was assessing his potential value.
"Dragon..." Marak said. His tone was controlled. "...The reports about you were incomplete."
"Your Second Fang mentioned your interest" Owen replied.
"Yes, I am interested..." Marak said, rising.
He did not perform the formal motion of granting audience. Instead, he stepped down from his seat and approached directly. He circled slightly, maintaining distance while examining Owen from multiple angles. It was the posture of someone inspecting an asset.
"The return of a dragon has been spoken of in shamanic traditions for centuries," Marak continued. "I assumed it was just symbolic nonsense."
"Symbolic traditions usually begin with real events," Owen said.
Marak stopped approximately two meters away. The position was neutral in appearance but strategically chosen. Close enough to observe, far enough to react.
"Now that you are real..." Marak said, "...what does a dragon want in my territory?"
"We returned forty-one of your continent’s people who were enslaved in the human lands," Owen said. "That objective is complete. We are also here because a significant mana formation is developing in your eastern territory. The shamans call it a Remembering. We call it a Story Dungeon. I intend to enter it when it manifests."
"My territory..." Marak repeated.
"Yes..."
"So you require my permission..." 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚
"I prefer cooperation..." Owen said. "...Permission may not be necessary."
Marak was silent for several seconds.
"I have been informed..." he said finally, "...that you are something I should acquire. That your core would provide substantial strategic advantage."
The air in the hall shifted.
"Informed by whom?" Owen asked.
"By the advisor who has assisted the Ironmane’s recent expansion."
Azmireth.
"And what was offered to you?" Yuki asked.
"Power..." Marak said. "...Enough to unify the three great clans under Ironmane leadership. An end to three centuries of unstable balance."
Leah stepped forward slightly. "You destabilized your own territory for that promise."
"I did not destabilize it," Marak replied. "I strengthened it."
"You sealed borders. You exposed your warriors to contamination," Leah said. "You forced confrontation on neutral ground."
"I did not kill Varo..." Marak said sharply, responding to her unspoken accusation. "He was dying. The hunting accident was genuine. But I accelerated succession. The inter-clan agreement has limited Ironmane influence for generations. I acted on opportunity."
"And The advisor created that opportunity?," Owen asked.
"She revealed a path I was already prepared to take."
Owen watched him closely. Marak was not acting out of chaos. He had long-standing grievances that the demon had identified and provided direction for.
"You are being used," Owen said calmly.
"The contamination in your territory is not incidental. Your warriors question orders less. Their responses are more rigid. You have noticed this."
Marak did not respond immediately.
"The advisor’s goal is not Ironmane unification..." Owen continued. "She wants access to the Story Dungeon forming in your eastern lands. That requires control of this region. She told you my core was valuable. That part is true. I am a threat to her plans. She wants me removed before the dungeon manifests."
The silence extended.
"You are not her partner," Owen said. "You are a tool."
Before Marak answered, a voice entered the hall from the eastern passage.
"That is a harsh way to describe cooperation," Azmireth said.
She stepped into view. Purple skin. Curved horns. Dark suit precisely tailored. Her expression was relaxed.
"You killed Your last ’Partner’ " Owen said, referring to Eckstein.
"Yes," she replied without visible regret. "He was no longer useful."
"It seems You have been here for months"
"eckstein was a temporary assignment. The Beastfolk territory has been more productive." She glanced at Marak. "The Chief has been decisive."
Marak did not look at her.
Azmireth’s attention returned to Owen. "You interfered in my work once already. I would prefer to resolve that."
Owen felt the miasma thicken slightly.
"Marak," he said without looking away from her, "when this is over, remove your warriors from this region. Let your shamans treat the contamination."
"And if I do?" Marak asked.
"Then you retain your clan’s long-term strength," Owen said. "Unification can be negotiated without external manipulation."
Leah added quietly, "Speak to Sael before you decide your future."
Marak’s silence lasted several seconds.
"Deal with your demon," he said at last. "Afterward, we will discuss terms."
Owen focused fully on Azmireth.
She met his gaze without smiling.
The hall remained still for one final moment before the next conflict began.







