The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 142. The calm before the Storm
Five months passes.
The seals held barely. The generals were dead. The world, for the first time in years, breathed in unity with all the races united with one goal, Preparation.
Owen spent the first month in Drak’thar, recovering. His scales grew back where he’d torn them out for Uru. The three fragments of Dominus’s power had settled into his core, no longer feeling foreign. He was whole. Complete. A Dragon King in truth, not just inheritance.
The second month, he started training.
The Tower of Royals had been offline since Dominus’s death, its systems dormant, its trials waiting. When Owen approached it, the doors opened. The tower recognized its king. The trials or rather, training, began again.
He climbed alone.
Each floor tested something different. Speed. Strength. Endurance. Will.
Each floor being recalibrated to suit his current strength and sometimes beyond. Owen failed. Learned. Climbed higher. By the end of the third month, he had reached the ninetieth floor. By the end of the fourth, the ninety-ninth.
He has mastered the Sovereignty of Space-time Up to 80% now and had learned various usage of this ability. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
-Slowing down time around his immediate vicinity, a casual application of the ability
-Teleporting an attack to a set point in the past(5 seconds) to affect their current state, a complex application of the ability that merges both the time and space aspect.
-Spatial teleportation through short distances, this was a new application from the space aspect that he hadn’t explored before.
-And finally, Spacial rifts. This application seemed similar to a distorted dimension like the prison realm, thought for now he can just tear space apart, he hoped that by 100% mastery. He might be able to create an idependent prison realm of his own making.
---
Yuki entered the Tower of Royals on the same day Owen left it.
She climbed differently than he had. Where Owen pushed through, she adapted. Her Battle Intuition sharpened with each floor, reading traps before they triggered, predicting enemies before they appeared. Her swordsmanship evolved. Her mana control refined.
She emerged at the end of the fourth month with new skills etched into her system:
[Phantom Step (SS-Grade)] – Short-range teleportation through shadows.
And
[Battle Precognition (SS-Grade) an Upgrade of Battle Intuition] – Milliseconds of future sight in combat.
---
Leah entered the tower next. Her transformation had grown since the warlord’s death, but the tower demanded more. She spent three weeks inside, emerging with her mane streaked with dark gold, her eyes burning with something that hadn’t been there before. New skills manifested in her system:
[Pride’s Roar (SS-Grade)] – A sonic attack that shattered demonic constructs and froze lesser enemies in their tracks.
[Unbroken Will (SS-Grade)] – Immunity to fear, charm, and mental domination effects.
[Pack Leader (S-Grade)] – Enhanced strength and speed when fighting alongside allies.
---
Odessa and Alfred climbed together. The tower allowed it. They emerged with coordinated skills that made them nearly unstoppable as a unit: [Shield Partner (SS-Grade)] for Alfred, allowing him to extend his defenses to an ally, and [Dragon’s Grace (S-Grade)] for Odessa, an ability that boosts the power of her Azure Sky dragon by double or triple.
---
Uru didn’t need the tower. She grew on her own, her slime form shifting between the child who laughed in Yuki’s arms and the monster who had swum through leviathan depths. Her Dragon Scale Armor hardened until it could turn aside blows that would have killed a lesser dragon. Her Dragon-King Blood Resonance stabilized into something that hummed constantly, a low vibration that would make weaker demons shy away.
---
While they trained, Solhart worked.
The Hunter Association had been skeptical at first after learning the truth. Him being a thousand-year-old human and claiming demon generals had infiltrated their ranks, claiming the a demonic dragon called the Desecrator was returning, claiming the Will might wake again. But They listened because Solhart was Solhart, the Greatest human Hunter ever, Guild master of Glory Road. And They believed because the evidence was undeniable.
By the third month, they were mobilizing.
Every hunter above C-rank was notified. Every dungeon was mapped. Every border was reinforced. The human continent was preparing for war. New training regimens were implemented. Old alliances were revisited. The Hunter Association, which had spent centuries as a reactive force, was becoming more of An army now as it felt like every guild and hunter was being drafted under their banner as soldiers.
Solhart stood before the Assembly of Guild Masters in the fourth month, his sword across his knees, his voice carrying the weight of a thousand years.
"The Desecrator is coming," he told them. "Not in decades. Not in years. In months. Maybe less. When he comes, he will not negotiate. He will not offer terms. He will burn everything we have built, everything we are, everything we hope to become. And if we are not ready, he will succeed."
The Guild Masters listened. They had questions. Concerns. Objections. Solhart answered them all, patiently, tirelessly, until the last objection was withdrawn and the last concern was addressed.
The human continent was ready.
---
The grand council convened in the fifth month.
Drak’thar’s central plaza had been cleared for the occasion. The same plaza where Dominus had once addressed his people, where the celestials had celebrated their victory, where the Will had begun its erasure. Now it held representatives from every race that had survived.
Solhart stood for humanity. His presence alone was enough, the SSS-rank hunter, the living legend, the man who had waited a thousand years for this moment. Behind him, representatives from the Hunter Association, the major Guilds.
Sael stood for the beastfolk. The Pride-Mother had rebuilt Vashari from ash and rubble. Her people were strong again. Her daughter stood at her side, her mane streaked with gold, her eyes carrying the weight of everything she had survived. Behind them, the Ironmane and Dusk Claw clans stood united for the first time in generations.
Sylnara stood for the elves. The High Lady had aged in the months since the Corrupter’s death, but her eyes were sharper, her purpose clearer. The old isolation was gone. The elven armies had emerged from their forests, their bows strung, their blades sharpened, their ancient magic awakened.
Borin Ironfoot stood for the dwarves. He’d lost his mountain, his city, his people’s ancient home. But Khazad-Vorn would rise again. Stronger. Better. Behind him, dwarven engineers displayed schematics for fortifications that would make the old mountain holds look like children’s toys.
Caelen stood for the druids. Elder Mosswood had passed in the fourth month, his work complete, his faith in the world restored. Caelen carried his staff, his voice steady as he pledged the Deepwood’s defenders. The druids would fight. They would heal. They would make sure the land survived whatever was coming.
Asteria stood for the fairies. She was barely visible at the table’s edge, but her presence was undeniable. The fairies would fight. They always fought, when it mattered. And this time, they would not wait until the last moment to choose a side.
And Owen stood for the dragons.
He was alone at the table’s head. No elders. No Greater Dragons. No council of ancients. Just him, his bloodline, and the kingdom he was building from nothing.
The representatives spoke. Pledges were made. Alliances were sealed. When they finished, Owen rose.
"The last time the races stood together," he said, "we did not win. We lost everything after. The celestials were erased. The demons were sealed. The dragons died. The Will decided we were too dangerous to exist, and it was right. We were too dangerous. After that tragedy, We fought each other when we should have kept fighting together. We waited until till now, when it was almost too late. We made the same mistakes we always make."
He looked at each of them. The humans who had burned Celeste. The beastfolk who had hidden behind their borders. The elves who had sealed themselves away. The dwarves who had dug deeper and deeper until they couldn’t hear the world screaming.
"But This time," he said, "I promise you, we will win."
He let the silence stretch.
"We have time. We have warning. We have each other. And we have something worth fighting for." He gestured at the Hatchery behind him, at the light pulsing within it. "A future. A world where our children don’t have to inherit our wars. A world where dragons fly again, where humans don’t burn witches, where beastfolk don’t hide, where elves don’t seal themselves away. A world that is worth saving."
Then He sat.
The council did not applaud. This was not a celebration. It was a promise. A vow. A line drawn in the sand.
---
The fifth month passed into memory.
Owen trained. He climbed the Tower of Royals until his bones ached and his scales cracked. He sparred with Yuki in the gardens, her blades singing against his claws, their bond pulsing with every exchange. He flew across Drak’thar’s skies, learning the currents, the patterns, the way his wings caught the dimensional wind.
Unlike the past Drak’thar that was a space within the world divided by barriers, his was an independent dimension.
He went on moonlight dates with Yuki.
They were small things. Walks through the gardens when the flowers were blooming. Meals on the palace balcony, watching the Hatchery’s light pulse in the distance. Nights spent in each other’s arms, not talking, just being.
Uru came with them sometimes, a child between them, her hand in Yuki’s, her laughter echoing across the empty spaces. She was learning to be human, to be dragon, to be something that had never existed before. Owen watched her grow and wondered if the three of them looked like a family at that moment.
The world outside Drak’thar was preparing for war. But here, in the spaces between training and council and endless preparation, there was peace.
---
On the last night of the fifth month, Owen stood on the palace balcony, watching the Hatchery pulse.
Yuki joined him. Uru was a child in her arms, sleeping.
"Solhart says the Association is ready," she said. "The elves are patrolling their borders. The dwarves are fortifying the passes. The beastfolk are rebuilding their armies."
"And Drak’thar?"
Owen looked at the Hatchery. Its light had been pulsing all week, faster now, brighter. Something was happening inside.
"Something’s changing," he said.
They walked to the Hatchery together.
The doors opened for them. Inside, the chamber that had been empty for a thousand years was no longer empty. Light swirled at its center, drawn from the air, from the earth, from the dimension itself. Mana flowed into the Hatchery like water into a vessel, gathering, condensing, changing.
Owen had read Dominus’s notes. He had walked through his memories. He knew what this was.
Life creation.
The Hatchery wasn’t just for storing eggs. It was making them. Pulling mana from Drak’thar’s core, reshaping it, giving it form.
The first egg formed at the chamber’s center.
It was small. Smaller than Owen’s egg had been. Its shell was pale, translucent, pulsing with light that matched the Hatchery’s rhythm. Then another. Then three more. Five eggs, floating in the chamber’s heart, waiting to become dragons.
This was the power that had made Drak’thar terrifying to the Will. Not just the armies it could raise, not just the warriors it could train, not just the sovereignty its kings could wield. This. The ability to create life where there had been none. To pull mana from the void and shape it into something that would one day fly, hunt, love, die. The potential to be a God, in the oldest sense of the word.
Owen stood at the threshold, watching.
"Whoa" Yuki exclaimed as Uru stirred in her arms. Her eyes opened, deep green, still faintly translucent, still her. She looked at the eggs, then at Owen, then back at the eggs.
"Dragon babies," she said.
Yuki laughed. The sound broke the stillness and filled the Hatchery with something that wasn’t awe or grief or hope. Something simpler. Something human.
"Yes," Owen said. "Dragon babies."
He watched the eggs pulse. Watched the light build. Watched the future being born. Five eggs, each a promise. Each a life that would one day soar through Drak’thar’s skies, would one day carry the legacy of a race that had been erased and was now, slowly, impossibly, returning.
Behind him, Drak’thar settled into night. The Tower of Royals gleamed. The gardens waited for what could be spring. And in the Hatchery, five eggs drifted in their cradles, dreaming of skies they had never seen, of flights they would one day take.

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