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The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 124. The DeepWood’s choice
The Deepwood rose before them like a wall of green.
Unlike Lythandar’s cultivated beauty, this forest was wild, ancient, and actively hostile. Trees grew so close their branches intertwined into impenetrable canopies. Roots created natural barriers that shifted when approached. The very air felt heavy with attention — as if the forest was watching, judging, waiting.
Hilda stopped at the tree line. "I’ll wait here. The Deepwood doesn’t welcome dwarves."
"Any particular reason?" Odessa asked.
"We mine. They grow. Philosophical differences that go back a few thousand years." Hilda found a comfortable rock and sat there, tinkering on her orb. "Take your time. I’ll be calibrating."
The party stepped into the forest.
The change was immediate as the Sound around them dampened and light filtered to green dimness. The path behind them seemed to close as roots shifted to block their retreat.
"How comforting," Leah muttered.
But Uru pulsed nervously on Yuki’s shoulder.
They walked for an hour, watching The forest rearranged itself around them, creating paths that led nowhere, then new paths that appeared when they turned back. Nothing attacked. Nothing threatened. Just... a persistent redirection.
"We’re being herded through this maze" Owen said finally.
"Toward what?" Yuki asked.
As if in answer, the trees ahead parted.
A clearing opened — circular, ancient, marked by standing stones carved with symbols that predated elven civilization. At its center, a figure waited.
Elder Mosswood was ancient in ways that made Sylnara look young. His skin was bark-like, his hair moss, his eyes the deep green of forest canopy. He leaned on a staff that might have been a living branch or might have been something older.
"You’ve come far," he said. His voice rustled like leaves. "Far enough to die here, if that’s your choice."
"We’re here for the dungeon" Owen said. "The third piece of—"
"I know what you’re here for." Mosswood’s eyes moved across the group. "I also know what that fragment represents. Power enough to restart a dead species. Power enough to challenge the Will. Power enough to destroy everything we’ve built."
"We don’t want destruction."
"You don’t. But power doesn’t care what you want. It cares what it is." Mosswood tapped his staff. The ground trembled. "Dominus’s power was too great for one being. That’s why he scattered it. That’s why the world survived his passing. If you gather all three fragments—"
"The world needs dragons again."
"The world needed dragons thousands of years ago. But Now? it needs balance. The Will sleeps. The demon continent is sealed. The celestials have withdrawn. We have peace."
"For how long?" Leah stepped forward. "Vorthraxx’s seal is failing. The demon generals are active. The Will won’t sleep forever. You call this peace? I call it a pause between disasters."
Mosswood studied her. "The young lioness speaks with conviction."
"This young lioness spent fourteen months in a trafficker’s dungeon while the world did nothing. I know what happens when powerful people decide t sit back and do nothing."
A long silence.
Then a younger voice cut through. "She’s right, Elder."
Another druid emerged from the forest. Younger than Mosswood by millennia, probably — human-looking except for the faint green glow in his eyes. He moved with easy confidence.
"Caelen..." Mosswood said. "You were not invited."
"You never invite me, but I come anyway." Caelen stopped beside the party. "I’ve been watching them since they entered the Deepwood. They’re not conquerors. They’re not seeking power for its own sake."
"You don’t know that."
"I know the dragon carries Dominus’s bloodline. I know the human woman beside him has a bond so deep it resonates in the forest’s awareness. I know the lioness carries recent trauma and still chooses to fight." Caelen faced his elder. "If we destroy the fragment, we destroy any chance of dragons returning. If we seal it, someone else will find it eventually — probably Vorthraxx’s forces. If we let them take it—"
"We risk everything."
"We risk what’s already at risk." Caelen gestured at the party. "Look at them, Elder. Really look. They’re not asking for power. They’re asking for help. There’s a difference."
Mosswood’s ancient eyes moved across the group again. This time, his assessment felt different. Deeper.
"The bond..." he said finally. "..Between dragon and tamer. It’s genuine."
"Yes, it is" Yuki said.
"And you would use the fragment to rebuild Drak’thar. To create more bonds like yours."
"If possible."
Mosswood was quiet for a long moment. The forest held its breath.
"Dominus was my friend," he said finally. "Before the war. Before Vorthraxx. Before everything went wrong. We walked these woods together, discussing philosophy and power and the nature of existence." His voice cracked slightly. "I watched him destroy himself trying to save what he loved. I watched his son become a monster. I watched dragons die."
No one spoke.
"If I help you, I betray everything I’ve done since then. Every choice to withdraw, to protect, to let the world sort itself out." Mosswood looked at Owen. "If I don’t help you, I betray his memory. His hope that someone would finish what he started."
Owen met his gaze. "I’m not him. I’m not Vorthraxx. I’m just someone who got pulled into this and decided to see it through."
"I know." Mosswood sighed. "That’s what makes this hard."
He tapped his staff again. The ground opened—a root-lined tunnel descending into darkness.
"The fragment’s location. The dungeon’s entrance. You’ll find it at the end of this path." He looked at Caelen. "You’ll guide them. Make sure the forest doesn’t eat them."
Caelen grinned. "Finally, something interesting."
"And you?" Owen asked Mosswood.
"I’ll speak to the other elders. Prepare them for what’s coming." He paused. "When you have the fragment—when Drak’thar wakes—remember that power isn’t the point. Connection is. Love is. The bonds you build matter more than any sovereignty."
He faded into the forest, leaving only the rustle of leaves behind.
Caelen turned to the party. "Well. That went better than expected." He gestured to the tunnel. "Shall we? The dungeon’s waiting, and I have a feeling we’re on a clock."
They descended into darkness.







