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The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 107. The Investigation
Three days passed before the church returned.
Owen spent that time cataloging the city’s defensive capabilities, mapping escape routes, and monitoring the political temperature through careful observation.
The common people didn’t care about one blacksmith’s heresy investigation. But the religious faithful were talking. Whispers in market squares. Knowing looks exchanged in cathedral shadows.
Celeste continued working. Her shop remained open. Customers came for repairs and new commissions. She treated everyone with the same professional courtesy, never mentioning the investigation or the book confiscation.
Vorthraxx barely left her side. He’d taken residence in the workshop’s back room, sleeping in dragon form because the space wasn’t built for humanoid comfort. His presence deterred casual harassment but attracted attention from city guard patrols who found reasons to walk past more frequently.
The church arrived at midday when the shop was busy with customers. Six guards this time. Two clerics. And Inquisitor Serr Vale wearing formal vestments that marked this as official business.
"Celeste Brennan," Vale announced from the doorway. "By order of the Church of the Radiant Arbiter, you are summoned to formal questioning regarding suspected heretical practice."
The customers scattered. Nobody wanted to be associated with an active heresy investigation. Celeste’s regular clients left coins on the counter for work already completed and walked out without meeting her eyes.
"When?" Celeste asked.
"Immediately."
"I have work to complete—"
"Which can wait." Vale gestured to the guards. "You will accompany us to the cathedral for questioning. Refusal constitutes contempt of ecclesiastical authority."
Vorthraxx emerged from the back room in humanoid form. His presence made the guards tense as their Hands moved toward their weapons.
"She’s entitled to representation," Vorthraxx said.
"Heresy investigations are internal church matters." Vale’s tone allowed no argument. "She will be questioned alone."
"Then I’m coming as witness."
"You have no standing in these proceedings, Dragon."
"I’m making myself available for questioning regarding the same incident." Vorthraxx moved to stand beside Celeste. "I was present at the warehouse. I participated in closing the rift. If you’re investigating demonic involvement, my testimony is relevant."
Vale considered this. His eyes moved between Vorthraxx and Celeste, calculating angles.
"Very well. Both of you will accompany us."
"I’ll come too," Owen said. He’d been standing in the workshop’s corner, deliberately unobtrusive. "Same reasoning. I was there. I’m a witness."
Serr Vale’s expression soured but he nodded. "All three then. Now."
They walked through the city streets in formation. Guards front and rear. The clerics flanking the prisoners—because that’s what they were now, prisoners escorted under armed guard. Citizens stopped to watch the procession. Some made religious gestures. Others simply stared.
The cathedral loomed larger the closer they got. Stone architecture designed to inspire awe and submission. Stained glass windows depicting scenes of divine judgment. Statues of saints whose expressions carried more condemnation than compassion.
They entered through a side door that led to administrative wings rather than the main worship hall. Corridors lined with offices and meeting rooms. The smell of incense and old paper. Footsteps echoing on stone floors.
Serr Vale led them to an interrogation chamber. Table and chairs. Walls bare except for a single holy symbol—the Radiant Arbiter’s sigil of balanced scales. One chair faced three others across the table.
"Miss Brennan, sit." Serr Vale gestured to the single chair.
Celeste sat. Her expression remained calm but Owen’s mana sense registered an elevated heart rate, increased adrenaline. Fear tightly controlled.
Vorthraxx and Owen were directed to chairs along the wall. Guards stood at the door.
The clerics flanked the interrogation table.
Vale took the center seat across from Celeste. He produced a ledger and opened it to a marked page.
"State your full name for the record."
"Celeste Brennan."
"Occupation?"
"Blacksmith. Independent craftsperson operating in the eastern district."
"And you acknowledge operating this business for approximately four years?"
"Yes."
Vale made a notation. "During that time, have you engaged in the study or practice of forbidden knowledge?"
"Define forbidden knowledge."
"Knowledge proscribed by church doctrine. Demonic texts. Occult practices. Languages designated as heretical."
Celeste’s pause was calculated. "I studied dragon language. That’s documented in the book you confiscated."
"For what purpose?"
"Intellectual curiosity. Cultural understanding."
"You’re aware that dragon language study violates church law?"
"I’m aware the church discourages it. I wasn’t aware secular study constituted criminal activity."
Serr Vale’s expression didn’t change but his next question came sharper. "Do you acknowledge maintaining personal relationships with non-human entities?"
"Yes."
"Specifically with dragon-kind?"
"Yes."
"And these relationships involved what nature of interaction?"
Celeste met his eyes steadily. "Friendship. Intellectual exchange. Commercial transactions. The same interactions I maintain with human clients."
"Nothing of a... compromising nature?"
"Define compromising."
"Romantic entanglement. Physical intimacy. Binding agreements of loyalty that supersede allegiance to human authority."
Vorthraxx’s growl rumbled from the wall. But Serr Vale ignored him.
Celeste’s voice remained level. "My personal relationships are of only my concern."
"Not when those relationships constitute potential security threats." Serr Vale leaned forward. "You’ve been observed in the company of Vorthraxx, heir to the Dragon King’s throne. A foreign power’s prince. What information have you shared with him regarding human kingdom defenses, political structures, or military capabilities?"
"I’m a blacksmith, not a general. I don’t have access to military intelligence."
"You have access to guard captains who commission weapons. Soldiers who speak freely in your shop. Nobles who trust you with private commissions." Vale’s finger tapped the table. "You’re positioned perfectly for intelligence gathering."
"Are you accusing me of espionage?"
"I’m establishing your connections to foreign interests." Another notation in the ledger.
"Now. The sigil. Show me."
There was silence in the hall for a moment.
"That’s not relevant to—" Celeste started.
"Show me the mark, Miss Brennan. Or I’ll have the guards compel you."
Celeste’s jaw clenched. Slowly, she unbuttoned the top of her work shirt, revealing the sternum area where the sigil marked her skin.
Serr Vale stood and moved around the table.
He examined the mark without touching her, his eyes tracing the geometric patterns. His expression shifted from clinical assessment to something else. Recognition? Fear?
"When did this appear?"
"Six years ago."
"Spontaneously?"
"I woke with it one morning. No prior warning and No contact with anything that might cause marking."
"And it glows?"
"Sometimes. When I’m emotional. Stressed. Angry."
"When you engage in combat with demons?" 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
"Yes."
Vale returned to his seat. He made extensive notations, his hand moving rapidly across the page.
"Do you know what this sigil represents?"
"No."
"Have you attempted to research its origin?"
"Yes. No cleric I’ve consulted could identify it. Or if they could, they refused to say."
"Did it occur to you that their refusal might indicate something dangerous? Something best left alone?"
Celeste’s laugh held no humor. "I’ve had this mark for six years. It’s part of me. I can’t leave it alone any more than I can ignore my own heartbeat."
Serr Vale closed the ledger. "Miss Brennan, I’m going to be direct with you. This mark is not demonic in origin."
The statement hung in the air.
"Then what is it?" Celeste asked.
"Celestial."
The word landed like a physical blow. Owen saw Celeste’s expression shift from confusion to shock. Vorthraxx stood from his chair. Guards moved to intercept but he ignored them, his focus locked on Serr Vale.
"Explain yourself!" Vorthraxx demanded.
"The sigil is a celestial binding mark. Created by divine entities to mark vessels for specific purposes." Serr Vale’s tone carried the weight of delivering a death sentence. "Miss Brennan is not demon-touched. She’s heaven-marked. Which, in many ways, is far more dangerous."
"Dangerous to whom?" Owen asked from his position against the wall.
"To herself. To those around her. To the balance between mortal realm and divine authority." Vale stood. "Celestial marks activate under specific conditions. They respond to emotional peaks, life-threatening situations, proximity to dimensional tears. Each activation draws the attention of the entity that placed it."
"What entity?" Celeste’s voice came out strained.
"We don’t know. The specific signature isn’t in church records. But the pattern is consistent with Arbiter binding—marks placed by the Radiant Arbiter to designate conduits for divine will."
"Conduit for what?"
"Whatever purpose the Arbiter requires." Serr Vale moved toward the door. "You are being detained pending further investigation. The Guards will escort you to holding chambers while we research the mark’s specific function."
"You can’t just imprison her without charges!" Vorthraxx stepped forward. Two guards blocked him with crossed spears.
"The church has authority over all matters celestial. This falls under our jurisdiction." Vale paused at the door. "She’s not being imprisoned. She’s being protected. From herself. From whatever she’s been marked to become."
"Protected in a cell," Owen said.
"Protected from triggering whatever mechanism the Arbiter embedded in her flesh." Vale’s expression was almost sympathetic. Almost. "If we’re correct about the binding’s purpose, continued emotional activation could complete the conduit. Make her fully accessible to divine intervention. That serves no one’s interest."
"Except the Arbiter’s," Celeste said quietly.
"Exactly."
Guards moved to either side of her chair. She stood without being prompted, her dignity intact despite the circumstances.
"What happens now?" she asked.
"We research. We consult historical texts. We attempt to determine what the Arbiter wants from you." Serr Vale gestured to the guards. "Take her to the east wing holding rooms. Treat her well. She’s not a criminal. Yet."
They led her toward the door. Vorthraxx moved to follow. Spears lowered to block him.
"You’re free to leave," Serr Vale said. "Both of you. This investigation no longer concerns you."
"Like hell it doesn’t—"
"You have no authority here." Serr Vale’s voice hardened. "Leave now or join Miss Brennan in detention. Your choice."
Owen grabbed Vorthraxx’s arm before he could escalate. "Come on."
"I’m not leaving her—"
"You’re not helping her by getting arrested." Owen pulled harder. "We leave. We plan. We come back with leverage."
Vorthraxx’s whole body vibrated with an restrained fury. But he let Owen guide him toward the exit.
They walked through cathedral corridors in silence. Guards watched them every step. Making sure they actually left.
Outside, the afternoon sun felt wrong. Too bright. Too normal. The city continued around them—merchants selling, children playing, life proceeding as if nothing had changed.
"They’re going to kill her," Vorthraxx said.
"Maybe."
"Not maybe. Definitely." His hands clenched into fists. "They’ll research. Find whatever they need to find. Declare her an existential threat and Execute her publicly to demonstrate divine authority."
"You don’t know that"
"I know the church. I know how they operate." He turned to face Owen. "And I know my father will forbid intervention. He’ll cite the same logic he always does—don’t provoke celestial war, don’t escalate, sacrifice one for the many."
"Would he be wrong?"
The question stopped Vorthraxx cold.
"What?"
"Is one life worth war with heaven? Is Celeste worth the deaths that would follow from dragon-celestial conflict?"
Vorthraxx stared at him. "Brother...You’re asking if I’d let her die."
"I’m asking if you’d destroy the world to save her."
Silence followed as Citizens flowed around them. Nobody paid attention to two hooded figures arguing on a cathedral step.
"Yes," Vorthraxx said finally. "If it came to that choice. Yes. I’d let the world burn"
"Then you need to think very carefully about your next move." Owen met his golden eyes. "Because whatever you do now determines everything that comes after."
Vorthraxx turned away. His wings pressed tight against his back beneath the robe. His tail wrapped around his leg.
"I need to contact my father and request intervention."
"He’ll refuse."
"I know. But I have to ask. Give him the chance to do the right thing." Vorthraxx started walking. "And when he refuses, I’ll know where I stand."
"Where we stand."
"You’re helping?"
Owen thought about the future he knew was coming. The war. The corruption. The dragon who would become the Desecrator because he chose love over logic.
"Yeah, i’m helping," Owen said.
Because what else could he do?
The story was already written.
But maybe, just maybe, he could change how it was read and give this phantom a better ending.
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