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The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 54. The Outer-Divinity Descends I
The torchlight in the underground chamber flickered and danced across the First Seat’s face as he studied the ancient Grimoire spread before him on the stone table. The text was written in a language that seemed to predate human civilization.
Beside him, seven candles burned in ornate holders, each one representing a life force, a connection to the Seats under his command.
The Second Seat stood near the chamber entrance, a human woman in her late thirties with sharp features and sharper eyes. Her dark hair was pulled back severely, and her cultist robes were immaculate despite the dust and grime of their underground hideout.
She was watching the candles.
And she did not like what she was seeing.
"First Seat," she said, her voice cutting through the chamber’s oppressive silence. "We have a problem."
The First Seat didn’t look up from his Grimoire. "Speak."
"The life force candles." The Second Seat gestured toward the ornate holders. "Fourth through Seventh. They’ve all... flickered out."
That got his attention.
The First Seat’s head snapped up, his long black hair falling across his gaunt features as his eyes, dark and fevered with fanatical devotion, fixed on the candle holders.
Four of the seven flames had indeed extinguished, wisps of smoke still curling upward from their wicks.
"All four?" His voice was dangerously quiet.
"Within minutes of each other," the Second Seat confirmed. "Fourth Seat’s candle went out first. Then Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh."
The First Seat’s jaw clenched. His hands, which had been gently turning pages of forbidden knowledge, now gripped the table’s edge hard enough to make the wood creak.
"Damned intruders," he hissed. "They’re more capable than we thought"
"Significantly more capable," the Second Seat agreed. Her mind was already working through implications. "To eliminate four Blessed cultists in such a short timeframe requires either overwhelming force or exceptional skill. Possibly both. The situation is urgent, First Seat. We need to—"
"We speed up the ritual," the First Seat interrupted, his decision made in an instant. His eyes blazed with a crazed intensity as he slammed the Grimoire shut, dust billowing from its ancient pages.
Then he stood abruptly, "I will proceed directly to the Ritual chamber. The preparations are almost complete—close enough. The Great One will forgive minor imperfections in the ritual if it means securing His vessel before these insects can interfere."
The Second Seat nodded sharply, "And the intruders?"
"You and Third Seat will stop them." The First Seat’s voice carried absolute authority. "They cannot be allowed to advance further into our sanctum. Use whatever force is necessary. Kill them all if you must. Just keep them away from the ritual chamber until the ritual is complete. They will be the first lot to witness the Presence of the great one if they are lucky "
He turned toward the chamber’s deeper passage, the one that led to the heart of their underground complex where the Dragon King’s egg waited in its corrupted cradle.
But before he could take a step, something in his coat pocket pulsed.
The sensation was subtle, a gentle thrumming against his chest, rhythmic and persistent like a second heartbeat. The First Seat froze, his hand moving to the pocket and withdrawing a small object.
The cube was perhaps three inches on each side, constructed from a crystalline material. Its surface was covered in intricate runic patterns that looked like eyes and glowed with a sickly purple light, and within its depths, something moved. A shadow. A presence. A consciousness trapped in a space smaller than a coffin.
As the First Seat held it, a voice emanated from the cube, not through sound, but directly into the minds of everyone in the chamber. It was a voice of absolute authority, ancient and powerful, layered with rage and something that might have been dark amusement.
"Your end draws near, cultist."
The voice resonated through their skulls like the tolling of a great bell, each word vibrating in their bones. The Second Seat actually flinched, her hand moving instinctively toward the sword at her hip before she recognized the source.
The Dragon King. Dominus.
Trapped within the Prison Realm, an SSS-grade magical artifact of sealing—one of perhaps three such items in existence, each capable of containing even god-level entities(Allegedly) in a pocket dimension of eternal isolation.
"I can feel it," Dominus continued, his voice carrying a weight that made the chamber itself seem to press inward. "The threads of fate shifting. Your probabilities collapsing. Whatever plan you’ve woven is unraveling even as we speak. The Adventurers you dismissed as insects are tearing through your forces like dragons through paper."
The First Seat’s face twisted with fury. His grip on the cube tightened until his knuckles went white.
"Shut up, you damned reptile!" he snarled, his composed demeanor cracking to reveal the fanaticism beneath. "You are nothing now. A king within a box in my grasp, a dragon trapped within my fingers. Your words are meaningless!"
He brought the cube closer to his face, his eyes reflecting in its crystalline surface.
"I will succeed," the First Seat hissed with absolute conviction. "I will summon the Great One into your egg. I will facilitate His descent into this realm. And when He remakes this world in His image, when the old order burns and a new age of entropy and chaos rises from the ashes, you will still be trapped in this prison, forced to watch everything you once protected crumble to dust!"
The chamber fell silent. Even the flickering torches seemed to dim, as if the First Seat’s declaration had sucked the light from the air.
Dominus did not respond. Whether he had nothing more to say or simply chose not to dignify the rant with a reply, the Dragon King’s presence within the cube went still and quiet.
The First Seat stood there for a long moment, breathing hard, his chest heaving with barely controlled rage and excitement. Then, he returned the Prison Realm cube to his coat pocket.
"Second Seat," he said, his voice once again cold and controlled. "Third Seat. Go. Stop the intruders. I will complete the ritual."
The Second Seat bowed slightly and turned toward the passage that led to the outer cave systems. Behind her, in the chamber’s darkest corner where the torchlight barely reached, another figure stirred.
The Third Seat.
She was tall, perhaps six feet, Her face was visible in the dim light, pale and beautiful in an unsettling way, with features that seemed almost too perfect, too symmetrical. But her most striking feature was her mouth and eyes.
They were stitched shut.
Thick black thread wove through her lips and eyes in a crisscross pattern, the stitches so tight they pulled her mouth into a perpetual slight frown. The skin around the stitches was raised and scarred, suggesting the sewing had been done long ago and never properly healed.
She made no sound, but nodded in acknowledgment of the First Seat’s command. Then she followed the Second Seat toward the outer passages.
The First Seat watched them go, then turned and walked deeper into the complex, toward the ritual chamber where destiny awaited.
---
The cave system was chaotic.
What had begun as a methodical infiltration by the various hunter parties who had escaped the Shadowgrave’s mist had devolved into a brutal running battle through twisting tunnels and cramped chambers. Hollow men poured from side passages in endless waves, their corrupted forms clogging corridors and forcing hunters to fight in tight formations where superior numbers could overwhelm skill.
In one particularly wide chamber, Odessa Wayne’s party had been pinned down.
Alfred stood at the forefront, his massive tower shield planted in the ground, creating a wall behind which the other tamers could operate. His face was set in grim determination, sweat running down his temples despite the cave’s cool temperature.
"Madam Odessa!" he called out, not taking his eyes off the advancing hollow men. "We need to reposition! This chamber offers no tactical advantage!"
Odessa, her silver hair pulled back in a battle-ready ponytail, stood atop her Azure Sky Dragon’s back as it coiled through the air above the melee.
"I know, Alfred! But there’s something ahead, I can feel it!" Her violet eyes were fixed on the passage at the chamber’s far end, the one the hollow men seemed most desperate to defend. "Whatever they’re protecting, it’s through there! We just need to break through!"
Garrick, the massive hunter with his Giant Komodo Earth-Dragon, brought his beast’s tail around in a sweeping strike that crushed three hollow men against the cavern wall. "Easier said than done! These bastards just keep coming!"
Seraphine’s Three-Headed Basilisk hissed from all three mouths simultaneously, its petrifying gaze turning hollow men to stone before they could close distance. "We’re running out of mana! My beast can’t maintain this output much longer!"
Then, from the passage behind them, the one they had originally used to enter the chamber, new sounds echoed. Footsteps. Multiple sets.
Alfred’s grip tightened on his shield. "More hollow men from behind! We’re surrounded!"
But the figures that emerged from the passage weren’t hollow men.
Owen stepped into the chamber first, his humanoid form glowing majestically. His golden eyes scanning the battlefield and cataloging threats in microseconds.
Behind him came Yuki, both katanas drawn and ready. Then Lyra, Isaac, and Felicity, all battle-worn but prepared to fight.
And on Yuki’s head, Uru jiggled with a barely contained excitement.
Odessa’s eyes went wide as she took in Owen’s appearance. The perfect proportions of his humanoid form. The way his black scales caught the light. The sharp, aristocratic features with just enough draconic characteristics to be exotic rather than monstrous. The powerful build that suggested both strength and speed. The golden eyes that burned with intelligence and power.
She actually felt her mouth go dry. A small trail of drool escaped the corner of her lips before she caught herself.
"Oh my," Odessa breathed, then shook her head violently to clear it. "I mean—Owen! Yuki! You’re here! Perfect timing!"
Owen gave her a slight nod, then immediately engaged the nearest group of hollow men. His claws tore through corrupted flesh, each strike lethal and precise.
Yuki moved to support Seraphine’s flank, her dual katanas creating a whirlwind of steel that left hollow men in pieces.
"What’s the situation?" Lyra called out to Alfred, her mind already assessing the picture.
"We’re pinned!" Alfred responded, his shield absorbing another wave of impacts as hollow men threw themselves against it mindlessly. "The passage ahead—" he gestured with his head toward the far tunnel, "—they’re defending it with everything they have! Whatever’s back there must be important!"
"The egg," Owen said with certainty, his tail whipping around to catch a hollow man trying to flank him. "Has to be. They wouldn’t defend random passages this hard."
Isaac had recovered his shield and now joined Alfred in creating a defensive wall. "So we push through?"
"Yes, We push through," Yuki confirmed.
But before they could coordinate their assault, the temperature in the chamber dropped.
Not gradually, instantly. One moment the air was the normal cool of underground caves, the next it was cold enough to make breath visible in clouds of vapor.
The hollow men stopped their assault. Simply froze in place, their terrible void-black eyes all turning toward the far passage in a eerie synchronization.
Then two figures emerged from that defended tunnel.
The Second Seat walked into the chamber, her boots clicking against the stone. Behind her, the Third Seat glided like a shadow, her stitched mouth and eyes giving her an appearance of a beautiful, silent doll.
The Second Seat’s eyes swept across the gathered hunters with the assessment of a general surveying an enemy force. When she spoke, her voice carried absolute authority.
"You foolish adventurers!"
She raised one hand, and the cave itself responded. The Second Seat’s affinity for earth magic manifested as the tunnel behind the hunters suddenly collapsed, tons of rock and dirt sealing off their escape route with a thunderous roar.
Dust billowed through the chamber and when it settled, the hunters found themselves trapped, hollow men ahead, collapsed tunnel behind, and two Blessed cultists blocking the only path forward.
Then the Second Seat’s lips curved into a cold smile.
"You will all die here."







