The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 115. Declaration of War
Vorthraxx returned to Drak’thar without speaking. He flew straight to his father’s throne room and entered without announcement.
Dominus sat in consultation with the Greater Dragons. They stopped talking when Vorthraxx appeared.
"She’s dead." He said flatly.
"I know." Dominus’s voice was quiet. "We observed remotely. The harvesting was visible across dimensional barriers."
"The Arbiter consumed her. Used her body as fuel." Vorthraxx moved closer to the throne. "Everything you feared, it happened anyway. Despite our research. Despite our efforts. Heaven got exactly what it wanted."
"I’m sorry. I know you loved her."
"Loved her?. That love changed nothing. Made no difference. Delayed the inevitable by weeks at most." Vorthraxx stopped at the base of the throne. "You were right. We should have handed her over immediately. Avoided escalation. Preserved political stability."
Dominus’s expression shifted. "Vorthraxx—"
"Except that’s exactly what heaven wanted too. Human authorities executing her on schedule. No dragon interference. Clean harvest." Vorthraxx’s eyes blazed. "Whether we fought or submitted, the outcome was predetermined. She was always going to die. The Arbiter made sure of it."
"Yes." Dominus acknowledged it.
Vorthraxx’s voice hardened. "I’m declaring war. Against the Church of the Radiant Arbiter. Against the celestial authority that marked Celeste. Against the divine tyranny that treats mortals as expendable resources."
Silence filled the throne room.
Zephron’s lightning crackled involuntarily. Verida’s hand moved toward her blade. Ice formed unconsciously beneath Glacius.
Dominus remained still. "You understand what you’re proposing."
"Complete understanding, Father. War against heaven. Probably catastrophic. Definitely unwinnable in conventional terms." Vorthraxx’s voice gained edge. "I don’t care. They took everything. I’m taking something back."
"This isn’t grief talking?"
"Grief is talking, Father. But so is strategy." Vorthraxx pulled documents from his pack. Intelligence he’d gathered across weeks. "The church uses the Arbiter’s authority to maintain political power. Human kingdoms submit because they fear divine correction. But what if that correction becomes too costly? What if heaven’s presence becomes too much of a liability instead of asset?"
"You’d attack holy sites." Understanding dawned on Dominus’s face.
"Systematically. Cathedrals. Sacred grounds. Anywhere celestial resonance is strong. Remove the infrastructure that lets the Arbiter maintain mortal influence." Vorthraxx spread documents across the floor. "Start with isolated sites. Work toward population centers. Force the church to choose between protecting sacred spaces or civilians."
"Thousands will die," Zephron said.
"Thousands died building those temples. More die every year under church doctrine. More will die when the Arbiter’s next correction targets different victims." Vorthraxx met his eyes. "I’m not creating new casualties. I’m just redirecting existing violence toward those who profit from it."
"That’s rationalization," Verida said.
"Yes. But it’s also accurate." Vorthraxx looked back at Dominus. "You forbid intervention to save her. You won’t forbid retaliation for her murder. Not when that retaliation serves dragon interests."
"Explain how destroying human religious infrastructure serves us."
"The Arbiter justified correction by claiming dragon supremacy threatened cosmic balance. Our power, our influence, our expansion—all framed as existential threat." Vorthraxx gestured at the documents. "But if heaven’s presence becomes equally threatening, balance demands different calculation. We force the Arbiter to defend its own position instead of attacking ours."
Dominus processed this. "You’re creating counter-pressure. Making celestial intervention cost more than our expansion does."
"Exactly. Heaven operates on equilibrium principles. If removing us costs more than tolerating us, balance shifts in our favor."
"Or we all die in holy war."
"Possibly. But we’re dying anyway. The Arbiter won’t stop with Celeste. There will be more corrections. More harvests. More marks placed on innocents." Vorthraxx’s hands clenched. "I’d rather die fighting than watch heaven slowly dismantle everything we’ve built."
The Greater Dragons exchanged glances.
Glacius spoke first. "I support this. Conditionally. Civilian casualties must be minimized. Targets must have military or political significance. This remains war, not slaughter."
"Agreed," Verida said. "But I support it. The Arbiter has grown complacent. A reminder of mortality serves everyone."
Zephron was last. "I abstain. This will end badly regardless of execution. But if we’re committed, I’ll participate fully."
Three Greater Dragons supporting or neutral. None opposed.
Dominus looked at his son. "If I forbid this, will you obey?"
"No." Vorthraxx didn’t hesitate. "I’ll act independently. Renounce my claim to succession if necessary. But I’m doing this regardless of your approval."
"Then I won’t forbid it. But I will limit it." Dominus stood. "You have six months. Selective targeting only. The moment civilian casualties exceed military value, you stop. Understood?"
"Understood."
"And when the Arbiter responds, you will face it alone. I won’t commit the realm to full celestial war over revenge."
"I’m not asking you to. This is my war. My responsibility."
Dominus descended from the throne. Stood before his son. "You understand this is the moment you become something different. The heir I raised dies today. Something colder takes his place."
"I understand."
"And you’re choosing it anyway."
"Yes."
Dominus embraced him. Brief. Formal. The gesture of a leader acknowledging a subordinate’s autonomy.
"Then go. Make heaven remember why dragons are feared."
Vorthraxx bowed. Turned. Left the throne room with the Greater Dragons following.
---
Owen waited in the corridor outside. He had listened through the doors.
"You heard?" Vorthraxx asked.
"Most of it."
"And?"
"I’m coming with you."
Vorthraxx stopped walking. "This isn’t your fight."
"Celeste was my friend too. I helped her research. Failed to save her. I’m as responsible as anyone." Owen met his eyes. "And someone needs to witness what happens next. Make sure the full story survives."
"It’s going to get dark. The methods I’ll use—they’re not heroic."
"I know. I’m coming anyway."
Vorthraxx studied him. Then nodded. "Welcome to the war."
---
The first target was a cathedral in a borderland region. Small population. Significant religious importance. The kind of strike that made a statement without immediate massive casualties.
They flew at night. Six dragons. Vorthraxx leading. The Greater Dragons providing support and Owen too.
The cathedral was beautiful in moonlight. Stained glass. Gothic architecture. Centuries of craftsmanship.
Vorthraxx burned it to the ground in ten minutes.
Dragon’s Breath. The building collapsed into glowing embers.
The clergy inside had time to evacuate. Mostly. A few died in the flames. Vorthraxx showed no reaction.
They left before reinforcements arrived.
---
The church’s response came within a day. Condemnation. Promises of retaliation. Declarations of holy war.
Vorthraxx’s response was a second cathedral. This one larger. More casualties.
The pattern established quickly. Strike sacred sites. Force the church to defend divine infrastructure. Create pressure that exceeded the cost of tolerating dragon expansion.
Human kingdoms began withdrawing church support. Not out of sympathy for dragons but out of survival. Cities couldn’t afford to become battlegrounds between dragon fire and celestial intervention.
The Arbiter responded after the fifth cathedral fell. Celestial constructs manifested. Beings of hardened light. Winged and faceless. They attacked dragon positions with divine authority.
The first real battle happened at the sixth target. A grand cathedral in a major city. The church had fortified it. Gathered constructs. Prepared for dragon assault.
Vorthraxx attacked anyway.
---
The battle lasted six hours.
Dragon fire against holy light. Sovereignty of Replication creating an army of Vorthraxx copies. Celestial constructs rewriting local reality to disadvantage mortal combatants.
Owen used his Sovereignty of Space-Time to counter reality manipulation. Froze constructs in temporal loops. Created openings for dragon strikes.
The Greater Dragons coordinated perfectly. Zephron’s lightning disrupting construct cohesion. Verida’s poison corroding divine matter. Glacius’s ice providing battlefield control.
They won.
The cathedral fell. The constructs were destroyed. The city was evacuated.
Vorthraxx stood in the ruins, covered in ash and blood, completely calm.
"This is just the beginning," he said. "The Arbiter will send more. Stronger manifestations. Eventually it will come itself."
"Are you ready for that?" Owen asked.
"No. But I’m doing it anyway." Vorthraxx looked at the sky. "Celeste asked me not to start a war. I tried. For three weeks I tried to honor that request. But heaven didn’t stop. Won’t stop. So I’m making them stop."
"By destroying everything they built."
"By making their presence cost more than it’s worth." Vorthraxx’s smile was sharp. "Balance. That’s what the Arbiter claims to maintain. Let’s see how it balances when its own intervention becomes the destabilizing factor."
---
Three months into the campaign, they had destroyed seventeen sacred sites. Killed hundreds. Forced thousands to flee their homes.
The cost was enormous. Dragon casualties mounted. Vorthraxx’s reputation shifted from heir to warlord. Political pressure on Dominus increased exponentially.
But they were winning. The church’s influence weakened. Kingdoms reconsidered their dependence on divine authority. The cost-benefit analysis was shifting exactly as Vorthraxx predicted.
Then the Arbiter escalated.
A High Inquisitor merged with a fragment of divine essence. Became a radiant abomination capable of rewriting physical law within a limited radius and he Challenged Vorthraxx directly.
The battle was catastrophic. The Inquisitor’s reality manipulation neutralized conventional dragon advantages. Owen’s sovereignties were barely sufficient to counter.
They killed it eventually. But the cost was severe. Glacius fell in the fighting. Verida was critically injured. Zephron barely survived.
Vorthraxx stood over Glacius’s body. "The Celestial Spire. That’s where the Arbiter anchors itself to the mortal realm. We need to breach it."
"That’s suicide!" Zephron said weakly. "The Spire exists in a metaphysical space. Physical approach is impossible."
"Nothing is impossible." Vorthraxx looked at Owen. "Your Sovereignty of Space-Time. Can it create a dimensional bridge?"
"Maybe. If I had coordinates. If I knew the Spire’s exact location in reality-adjacent space." Owen activated his Dragon’s Eye. "But yes. Theoretically possible. You’ve made me has a alot of theroies about my power" 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
"Then we’re doing it." Vorthraxx began walking. "I’m done attacking symptoms. Time to strike the source."
---
They spent a week gathering intelligence. The Spire’s metaphysical coordinates. The protective mechanisms. The path through reality-adjacent dimensions.
Dominus tried to stop them. "This is beyond what I authorized. You’re not ready to face the Arbiter directly."
"I’ll never be ready. I’m doing it anyway." Vorthraxx prepared his equipment. "You can disown me if that helps politically. Tell everyone I went rogue. I don’t care."
"If you die—"
"Then you’ll have a martyred son instead of a living disappointment. Better for public relations either way."
Dominus said nothing. Just watched his son prepare for probable death.
Owen created the dimensional bridge. It required his full concentration. The Spire existed in space that mortal minds rejected. Seeing it clearly enough to establish connection nearly broke his sanity.
But he managed.
The portal opened. A tear in reality leading to a floating celestial court suspended above fractured clouds.
Vorthraxx stepped through first. Owen followed.
The Arbiter waited.
---
It manifested as a multi-winged entity of blinding luminosity. Its form layered in rotating halos inscribed with cosmic script. Its presence made existence feel temporary.
"Vorthraxx, heir to the dragon throne." Its voice was a majestic choir. "Your actions have been noted. Your grief understood. Your rage acknowledged. But None of it matters. Balance will be restored."
"You killed her." Vorthraxx’s voice was steady. "Marked an innocent woman. Engineered her death. Harvested her body. For what? Balance? Equilibrium? Your cosmic calculus?"
"She was a necessary variable, Dragon. Her sacrifice served greater purpose."
"She was a person. With dreams. Talents. The capacity to love and be loved. She wasn’t a variable. She was real." Vorthraxx’s power surged. "And you treated her like fuel."
"Individuals are temporary. Patterns are eternal. Mortal attachment blinds you to larger truths."
"Then I’m blind. And I’m going to make you pay for what you did."
The battle began.
---
Vorthraxx’s Sovereignty of Replication created dozens of copies. All attacked simultaneously. The Arbiter swatted them aside.
Owen manipulated time. Slowed the Arbiter’s movements. Created openings in its defense.
Vorthraxx’s Dragon’s Breath, infused with sovereign authority, burned through metaphysical constructs. The Arbiter’s halos cracked under the sustained assault.
It fought back. Reality-erasing beams. Law-rewriting manifestations. Attacks that operated on conceptual rather than physical levels.
They adapted. Owen’s Space-Time manipulation countered reality shifts. Vorthraxx’s raw power overwhelmed divine precision.
The battle escalated beyond terrain destruction. Parts of the simulated sky fragmented. Reality itself became unstable.
Finally, Vorthraxx landed the decisive strike. Dragon’s Breath concentrated into a single point. Burned through the Arbiter’s central construct.
The entity’s form fractured. Halos shattered like broken suns.
But in its final act, it branded Vorthraxx.
The same sigil Celeste had borne appeared on Vorthraxx’s chest. Burned into his flesh with divine authority.
"Instruments of imbalance inevitably become instruments of correction," the Arbiter said as it dissolved. "You have drawn celestial law upon yourself. Balance will be served. Eventually."
The Spire began collapsing. The metaphysical structure destabilized without its anchor.
Owen grabbed Vorthraxx and pulled him through the dimensional bridge. They tumbled into normal reality seconds before the bridge collapsed.
---
They landed in Drak’thar. Wounded. Exhausted. Victorious.
Vorthraxx looked down at the mark on his chest. Its Geometric patterns identical to Celeste’s.
"It marked me." His voice was hollow. "Just like her."
"Can we remove it?" Owen asked.
"I don’t know. But I’ll find out." Vorthraxx stood slowly. "I killed it. The Arbiter is dead or diminished. Either way, Celeste’s death is avenged."
Dominus approached from the palace. His expression was unreadable.
"The realm is in chaos. Human kingdoms demand explanations. The church is splintering without Arbiter guidance. Political alliances are collapsing." He looked at his son. "You’ve destabilized the world."
"Good. It needed destabilizing."
"Was it worth it? Everything you’ve destroyed. Everyone who died. The mark you now bear." Dominus gestured at the brand. "Was revenge worth that price?"
Vorthraxx was silent for a long moment.
Then he looked at Owen.
"Tell me, brother. Does love justify the destruction of the world that opposes it?"
The question hung in the air.
Owen opened his mouth to answer.
And everything dissolved.
---
The story dungeon was ending.
Reality fragmented. The preserved memory released them back to present time.
Owen’s last image was Vorthraxx’s face. Waiting for an answer that would never come.
Then darkness consumed him.
---
Owen woke in the real Drak’thar. His pocket dimension. The empty version. No dragons. No Vorthraxx. No Dominus.
Just preserved memory of what had been.
He sat up slowly. His body was intact. The dungeon had returned him safely.
Yuki’s voice echoed through their bond. "Owen? Are you okay?"
"I’m fine. Where are you?"
"In marak’s area, We’re fine too. What happened?"
"I’ll explain when we meet."
Owen stood and looked around. The story dungeon had shown him everything. The mark. The execution. The war. Vorthraxx’s transformation from heir to Desecrator.
And the question that had no answer.
Does love justify destroying the world?
Owen didn’t know.
But he understood Vorthraxx better now. Understood the grief that became rage. The love that became a weapon. The dragon who chose vengeance over wisdom.
And he understood what was coming in the real world.
Vorthraxx was sealed somewhere. Preparing to reincarnate. Still carrying that same rage. That same determination.
Still waiting for an answer to his question.
Owen stood and prepared a portal to exit Drak’thar.
He had a war to prepare for.
And a question to answer.
Eventually.







