The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 120. The Whisperer’s web

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 120: 120. The Whisperer’s web

They returned to their quarters but No one slept.

Owen stood at the window, replaying the encounter. Malachar’s smile. The casual confidence. He had known they were watching and hadn’t cared. That level of certainty meant something, either he was protected, or he had contingencies, or he simply didn’t believe they could stop him.

"The councilor," Yuki said from behind him. "The woman. We need to identify her."

"Already working on it." Odessa had her communication device out, scrolling through information. "Elven council records aren’t public, but I have contacts. Give me an hour."

An hour passed.

Odessa looked up. "Lyraen. Councilor Lyraen. Serves on the Diplomatic Relations committee. Has for sixty years. Known for moderation, cooperation, building bridges with other races." She paused. "She’s also the primary voice opposing High Lady Sylnara’s isolationist faction."

"The isolationists want to seal the borders," Leah said. "Keep everyone out."

"Yes. And Lyraen’s been fighting them for decades. Arguing for engagement, for alliances, for preparing for the war she sees coming." Odessa set the device down. "If she breaks, if she suddenly changes her position, the isolationists win. Elven borders close. We’re locked out. The dungeon becomes inaccessible."

"That’s Malachar’s goal..." Owen said. "Keep us from the fragment. Keep the elves isolated and weak when Vorthraxx returns."

"But he’s not making her isolationist." Yuki said. "We watched him. He was comforting her. Strengthening her resolve to keep fighting."

"For now." Alfred set his cup down. "The most effective manipulation isn’t forcing someone to change their mind. It’s making them so dependent on you that when you finally suggest a change, they accept it without question."

"I estimate forty-three years..." Leah breathed. "He’s been building this for forty-three years. Lyraen’s entire political career. Every victory she’s won, every battle she’s fought, he’s been there, supporting her, making himself essential. When he finally tells her to give up, she will."

"Because she’ll trust him completely." Odessa’s voice was grim. "Because he’s been her only consistent ally through decades of political warfare."

Owen turned from the window. "Then we don’t let him get to that point. We expose him now. Show Lyraen what he really is."

"With what proof?" Leah asked. "We have nothing. A few hours of observation. A single touch we claim was manipulation. Against forty-three years of trusted friendship."

"She’s right," Yuki said. "If we accuse him without evidence, we push her closer to him. He becomes the persecuted ally. We become the outsiders trying to destroy her support system."

The room fell silent.

Uru pulsed on Yuki’s shoulder. Slow. Thoughtful.

"You have something?" Yuki asked.

The slime extended a pseudopod and touched her temple. Images flashed through their bond, not clear pictures, but impressions. Patterns. Connections.

"Uru can feel corruption," Yuki said slowly. "When Malachar touched Lyraen, Uru registered the influence. If we could get close to him again, close enough for Uru to sense his presence, it might identify him definitively."

"That’s still not proof," Alfred said. "Uru’s senses aren’t admissible in elven council."

"No. But they might guide us to something that is." Owen paced. "Malachar’s been here forty-three years. He has to have a base. A place where he operates, where he’s vulnerable. If we find that, we find evidence."

"The city’s too large to search randomly," Odessa said.

"Then we don’t search randomly. We search strategically." Leah stood. "He targeted Lyraen because she’s politically important. Who else on the council matters? Who else might he be cultivating?"

Odessa pulled up more information. "The isolationist faction leader, Councilor Vaelin. He’s been pushing for border closure for decades. If Malachar wanted to ensure the isolationists win, he’d need Vaelin in place."

"Or he’d need Lyraen to switch sides," Yuki said. "Either way, those are his key targets."

"We watch them both," Owen decided. "Split into teams. Leah and I take Lyraen. Yuki, Odessa, Alfred, you take Vaelin. Uru goes with Yuki. If Malachar contacts either one, we’ll know."

"And if he contacts both simultaneously?" Alfred asked.

"Then we choose. But I don’t think he will. He’s too careful for that." Owen moved toward the door. "We have eleven days until the dungeon manifests. Malachar’s our priority. Find him, expose him, and we remove the biggest obstacle between us and the fragment."

---

They split at the council district.

Lythandar’s administrative heart was a cluster of living buildings surrounding an open plaza. Councilors’ residences ringed the perimeter, each connected by root-paths that allowed private movement.

Leah and Owen positioned themselves near Lyraen’s home. The same building they had watched the night before. In daylight, it looked ordinary, modest by elven standards, almost humble.

"She doesn’t live like a politician," Leah observed.

"No. She lives like someone who hasn’t forgotten where she came from." Owen’s Mana Sense spread wide, reading energy signatures. Nothing demonic. Nothing unusual. Just the quiet rhythm of elven life.

Hours passed.

Lyraen emerged at midday. She moved differently than the night before, shoulders back, head high, the bearing of someone preparing for battle. Whatever comfort Malachar had given her, it had worked. She was ready to fight another day in council.

She walked toward the plaza. Owen and Leah followed at distance.

The council chamber was open to observers. Elves crowded the galleries, watching as councilors took their positions. Lyraen sat among them, her expression calm.

Vaelin sat across the chamber. Older than Lyraen, harder. His face carried the permanent disapproval of someone who had long ago decided the world was disappointing and was rarely proven wrong.

The session began. Routine matters: trade agreements, resource allocation, border patrol reports. Nothing dramatic.

Then Vaelin rose.

"High Lady Sylnara. I wish to raise a matter of urgency."

Sylnara’s expression didn’t change. "Speak."

"The outsiders who arrived yesterday. A young Dragon and his companions. They walk freely in our city, observe our council, interfere in matters that do not concern them." Vaelin’s voice carried through the chamber. "I move that they be restricted to the guest quarter until such time as their business is concluded and they depart."

Lyraen was on her feet immediately. "I object. They came at our invitation. They’ve done nothing to warrant suspicion."

"It’s a dragon!" Vaelin spat the word. "Every dragon who’s set foot on this continent has brought death. The first war proved that."

"The first war was a thousand years ago. This dragon wasn’t even alive then."

"Bloodline doesn’t forget. Ask the families who still carry the scars."

The chamber erupted. Councilors shouting over each other. Sylnara’s gavel, a living branch, struck her podium repeatedly.

In the chaos, Owen caught a movement.

A figure at the chamber’s edge. Male. Tall. The same elf who had comforted Lyraen the night before. He wasn’t speaking, wasn’t participating. Just watching.

Watching Lyraen.

And smiling.

Owen’s Dragon’s Eye activated. Beneath the elf’s surface, mana moved. The same subtle threads he had seen the night before. Not controlling. Just... present. Waiting.

Malachar wasn’t hiding.

He was in plain sight. Had been for decades. Living among them, working among them, trusted among them.

Owen grabbed Leah’s arm. "There. The elf at the edge. That’s him."

Leah’s amber eyes tracked his gaze. "Are you sure?"

"Certain."

They moved through the crowd. Slowly. Carefully. Not alerting him.

But Malachar had survived forty-three years by being alert. His head turned. His eyes met Owen’s.

And he smiled again.

Then he melted into the crowd and was gone.

---

They searched for hours. Found nothing.

By evening, they regrouped at the quarters. Yuki’s team had no better luck, Vaelin had spent the day in council, then retired to his residence alone. No visitors. No unusual contacts.

"He knows we’re looking," Leah said. "He’s going to ground."

"Or he’s already done what he needed to do." Owen looked at the others. "The council session today. Vaelin’s motion. That was coordinated."

"You think Malachar told him to do it?" Odessa asked.

"I think Malachar created the conditions where Vaelin wanted to do it. Years of whispering. Years of reinforcing his beliefs. Making him feel justified, righteous, correct." Owen’s jaw tightened. "Lyraen defended us. Publicly. That puts a target on her back."

"She was already a target," Yuki said. "Now Malachar has more ammunition. He can tell her, ’See? They’re causing division. They’re making everything harder. Without them, we could focus on real problems.’"

"He’s going to push her toward isolationism," Leah agreed. "Not directly. Just enough doubt. Just enough fatigue. Until one day she stops fighting."

The weight of it pressed down on them.

Forty-three years of manipulation. Not through force, not through magic, but through simple, patient presence. Being there. Being helpful. Becoming essential.

How do you fight someone who’s already won before you arrived?

Uru pulsed. A single, sharp beat.

Then another.

Then a pattern, rhythmic, insistent, pointing toward the door.

"Something’s coming," Yuki said.

A knock.

Owen opened the door.

Lyraen stood outside. Her eyes were red again, but her expression was different. Harder. More focused.

"I know who you’re looking for," she said. "I’ve known for years. I just couldn’t admit it to myself."

She stepped inside.

"I’m going to help you kill him."