The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 98. Cleansing

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 98: 98. Cleansing

The shamans worked through the night.

Owen watched from the settlement’s edge. Twelve of them—drawn from all three clans, with Elder Moss coordinating—moved through the eastern territory in a systematic patterns. They weren’t burning the miasma out. They were dismantling it, finding the anchor points where contamination had rooted into the local mana structure and removing those roots one by one.

Slow and precise work.

By dawn Owen was almost fully recovered. The formation’s ambient output was clean. His system pulled everything available through the passive resonance field.

Elder Moss found him at first light.

"You look bettee," the old wolf-folk said, sitting beside him. "The eastern section is done. The settlement takes longer."

"How long for full cleansing?"

"Another day. Maybe less." He looked at the formation. "The Remembering’s pulse rate is increasing."

"We will leave tomorrow morning."

"Wise." Elder Moss was quiet. "The void erosion residue—the marks she left before you stopped her. They’ll affect the dungeon’s internal structure."

"How?"

"The Remembering manifests historical memory as navigable space. Void erosion applied to a forming structure introduces doubt. Things that should be solid may not be."

"She sabotaged the dungeon’s structure."

"Not deliberately—she was forcing the manifestation timeline when you arrived. But the side effect is that whatever you find inside will have been touched by it."

Owen filed this. "What else about what to expect?"

"This specific Remembering?" Elder Moss shook his head. "The texts describe the location but not the content. Rememberings show what the land witnessed. This territory has witnessed a great deal across four thousand years. What crystallizes depends on what the land considers significant."

"The dragon extinction..." Owen said.

"Almost certainly. This was Ironmane territory during the final days of the war. The shamans’ oldest records suggest a dragon was present in this region."

Owen looked at the formation.

"What happened to it?"

"The records don’t say," Elder Moss said. "Only that it was here. And then it wasn’t."

---

Marak found Owen at midday.

No escort. No formal posture. He crossed the open ground with the walk of someone following through before he could reverse the decision.

He stopped beside Owen and looked at the formation.

"Vorak wants to speak with you before you leave," he said.

"Send him over."

"He’s working up to it. Been arguing with himself since yesterday. Whether to apologize for the Ashplain and the narrows or pretend it was legitimate clan business."

"It was legitimate clan business," Owen said. "Misguided, but he was following your orders. I don’t have a grievance with Vorak."

Marak was quiet. "He threw eighteen warriors at you in the Ashplain."

"And None died. He chose good warriors I didn’t have to kill. That was him making a judgment call inside his orders." Owen looked at him. "Tell him I said that."

Marak nodded slowly. "You’re not what I expected a dragon to be."

"You’re not the first person to say that."

"I mean it as positive." He paused. "The miasma aside—I wasn’t entirely wrong about the inter-clan imbalance. The Ironmane have carried more of the continental defense burden for two centuries while the agreement terms haven’t shifted."

"Raise it at the next meeting with the clan heads then" Owen said."I’m sure sael will be reasonable about it"

Marak looked at him. "You know her well for someone who was in Vashari three days."

"She’s not complicated to read. She’s just very good at what she does." Owen said with a small grin, remembering what had happened between them the night they met.

"Yes," Marak said. "She is."

Then He left.

Twenty minutes later Vorak appeared. He crossed the ground at a deliberately moderated pace and stopped two meters away.

"Second Fang," Owen said.

"Dragon." Vorak looked past Owen’s left shoulder. "I am sorry" he said

"All is well, Vorak" Owen said.

"Because you chose not to kill anyone."

"Yes, and you chose to retreat back then."

Vorak’s jaw worked. "Thank you," he said.

"That was good leadership under bad orders," Owen said. "You found the line between following a command and getting people killed for nothing. That’s not nothing."

Vorak finally looked at him directly. "You’re trying to make this easier for me, huh."

"I’m just telling you what I observed," Owen said. "What you do with it is your business."

Vorak held his gaze for a moment. Then he made the same gesture Commander Ossa had done in Vashari port—fist to chest, head inclined. Formal and Genuine.

Owen returned it.

Vorak turned and walked back toward the settlement.

Alfred materialized with tea.

"You’re very good at that," he said.

"At what?"

"Giving people the version of events that allows them to remain functional." Alfred handed him the cup. "It’s a leadership quality. Not an obvious one."

Owen drank.

---

Tomorrow morning.

The formation’s pulse was accelerating. Every hour the shimmer at the horizon grew more distinct, the wrong-colored sky above it deepening. The boundary between the manifested space and the natural territory was becoming sharper. More real.

Elder Moss had said the texts didn’t describe the content. Only that something significant lived there once. And then didn’t.

A dragon had walked this territory a thousand years ago during the final days of the war between the races. A dragon Owen had no name for. No records of. Nothing except the knowledge that it had existed and then it hadn’t and that the land remembered.

What the land remembered, the Remembering would show.

He finished the tea and Alfred settled beside him with his own cup.

"You’ll sleep tonight?" Alfred asked.

"I’ll try, Alfred."

"Leah is already asleep. Has been for two hours." 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎

"She needed it."

"So do you."

Owen didn’t argue. Alfred was right. He would sleep after he finished recovering. Would rest the way a dragon rested—deeply, efficiently, pulling mana through passive Mana absorption even in unconsciousness. He Would wake fully ready.

Tomorrow morning he would walk into whatever the land had preserved from four thousand years ago. Would navigate spaces touched by void erosion, made unstable by doubt. Would find whatever fragment of Dominus’s power waited inside.

And would return or wouldn’t.

The continent would continue either way. Marak would call his session. The shamans would finish their cleansing. The three clans would rebuild what the contamination had damaged.

But if he didn’t return, they would have to face the six remaining demons without him.

They would have to face Vorthraxx without the fragment.

Owen looked at the formation and felt the weight of tomorrow pressing down, and beneath it felt the weight of everything that came after—the thousand-year plan Vorthraxx had been building, the generals moving on their separate fronts, the seals degrading one fraction of a millimeter at a time.