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The Milf's Dragon-Chapter 76. Outside the gate II
Vonn had not moved.
He stood at the back of the canyon formation, watching the fight unfold with an expression that moved through several stages, surprise, anger, the recalibration of someone who had expected a different scene, before settling on something colder and more personal.
His eyes were on Yuki.
She felt it before she saw it. Battle Intuition didn’t only read incoming physical attacks; it had expanded over days of use into something closer to full situational awareness, a constant low-level processing of everything in her environment that surfaced critical information before her conscious mind could request it.
Vonn was going to come for her specifically.
Not for strategic reasons. Not because engaging the tamer while the dragon was absent was tactically sound, though it was. Because Vonn had never once in their relationship made a decision that wasn’t fundamentally personal.
He drew his sword and the fire enchantments along its length ignited.
"Just you and me," he said. "Like it should have been from the start. Before you decided to run."
Yuki turned to face him fully, leaving Alfred and Odessa to manage Rogers and the guards. The canyon narrowed here, enough space for two people to fight, not enough for others to comfortably intervene.
"I didn’t run," Yuki said. "I left. There’s a difference."
"You left because you were weak," Vonn said, advancing. "Because you couldn’t handle someone who actually had standards. Who expected you to be better than you were."
He was using the voice. She recognized it immediately, the specific cadence he had deployed for years to make her question whether the problem was her, whether his anger was a reasonable response to her failures, whether the bruises were something she had brought on herself. It was automatic. So practiced it probably wasn’t even conscious anymore.
The thing was, it didn’t land.
She waited for the familiar flinch response, the cold drop in her chest, the impulse to apologize, to make herself smaller, to find the fastest path to his calm. She waited for it the way you wait for a pain you know is coming.
It didn’t come.
"Hm," Yuki said, and brought both katanas up.
Vonn’s first strike was his Mountain Splitting Slash, a telegraphed, high-power downward cleave that she had never seen him use in their marriage. Genuinely dangerous if it landed.
Battle Intuition had the trajectory before he committed.
She sidestepped left and let it carve through the air beside her, the heat of the fire enchantment warming her cheek. Then she closed immediately, inside his recovery arc, and her normal katana hit his sword hand flat, not a cut, a strike, knocking his grip orientation off. He adjusted fast. B-rank reflexes. But the half-second she bought was enough.
She activated Gust.
The C-grade wind burst was small, low rank, limited power. But in a canyon, aimed at a man who was already slightly off-balance from the missed strike, the focused push hit him like a shove and sent him into the rock wall.
He came off it fast, angrier.
"You used to freeze when I raised my voice," Vonn said. His composure was cracking. This was the thing she had learned about him, slowly, over the years and then all at once, Vonn’s confidence had never been real confidence. It was dominance. It only functioned when the other person was smaller. When she stopped being smaller, he had nothing left underneath.
"I remember," Yuki said. "I’m trying to figure out why I did."
He slashed, a horizontal sweep, Slash skill activated, the blade leaving a burning arc. She crossed her katanas and caught it, Mana Reinforcement flooding into her arms, and the impact drove her back two steps. She let it drive her, redirecting the force rather than absorbing it, and came back with Verida’s katana in a quick thrust that he deflected by a margin.
"Because you knew your place!" Vonn snapped.
"I knew my place," Yuki agreed, her voice even, "because you spent seven years making sure I forgot I had any other option. That’s not the same thing."
She felt Uru pulse on her head, warm, steady, the primordial slime reading her emotional state and broadcasting something back that felt like reinforcement. She activated Beast Shift on Uru again.
Vonn’s next slash came in low. The blade caught her thigh, and passed through it. The flesh became momentarily fluid, gelatinous, the steel moving through tissue that reformed behind it without damage. Vonn’s forward momentum carried him past her and he stumbled, his brain insisting the strike had landed and his eyes telling him otherwise.
She was behind him in the moment of his confusion.
Mana Reinforcement concentrated into both arms. Beast Sync pulled Uru’s sheer physical mass through the bond. Her hands locked around Vonn’s sword arm and she leveraged, not a strike, a controlled takedown, using his own momentum and the enhanced strength to fold him down into the canyon floor face-first.
His sword scraped across stone and stopped.
Yuki put her knee in his back and held.
He struggled. B-rank strength, significant. But she had the geometry and the weight distribution and she had spent the last month fighting things that made Vonn look like a warm-up exercise. She held.
"Get off me!" His voice had gone from commanding to something rawer. "You think this means anything? You think—"
"I think," Yuki said quietly, "that you’re going to stop talking now."
He didn’t stop. He kept going, the words coming faster, more desperate, the old patterns running on empty because they had nothing left to run on. She listened to them and felt something she hadn’t expected.
Pity. Clean and uncomplicated and without any of the guilt that had always contaminated it before.
"You needed me to be afraid of you," she said, when he paused for breath. "Because without that, there was nothing holding us together. There was never anything holding us together."
Vonn went still beneath her.
Not because he agreed. She doubted he would ever agree. But because he had run out of angle, and he knew it, and for a single moment the performance stopped and what was left was just a man face-down in a mountain canyon who had lost.
Across the canyon, the situation had resolved.
Alfred had three guards subdued with a methodical precision that suggested he’d done this kind of work for a very long time and had very specific opinions about efficiency. The other three had stopped fighting independently, two when the mana draining from Rogers’s buffing support became noticeable, one when the Azure Sky Dragon had put a compressed water stream close enough to his feet to clarify the available options.
Rogers stood with his hands visible, green light extinguished, his expression carrying the resignation of someone who had run the numbers and found them unsatisfactory. Odessa’s dragon hovered overhead, patient and enormous.
"I want it noted," Rogers said to no one in particular, "that I advised against the direct approach from the beginning."
"Noted," Alfred said, producing restraint cuffs from his inventory with the air of someone who made a habit of carrying them. "Wrists, please."
---
They heard the helicopters before they saw them.
Three of them, coming in low over the mountain ridge, Hunter Association markings visible on the fuselage. Behind them, on the canyon’s approach road, two heavy vehicles were raising a dust trail, Association agents and police, responding to the District Five massacre report that Yuki had filed hours ago and the GPS coordinates she had attached to it.
Yuki eased her knee off Vonn’s back and stepped away.
He sat up slowly, his sword still on the ground two feet from his hand. He looked at it. Then at her. Then at the helicopters dropping toward the canyon’s wider sections.
"It wasn’t meant to go this way," he said. Quiet now. The performance fully gone.
"and yet it It did," Yuki said.
She picked up his sword and moved it further away, then stepped back.
The first Association agents came around the canyon bend at a run, weapons drawn, taking in the scene with trained eyes, downed guards, restrained professionals, two women and an elderly man with a tower shield standing over a collection of subdued B-rank hunters.
The lead agent looked at the scene. Then at Yuki.
"Goldberg?" she asked. yuki recognized her from her first rank evaluation. it was Agent Helena Ridge with the bald Agent Mason behind her.
"long time no see, Agent Ridge" Yuki said. "Those six are mercenaries of the Dark Reaper Guild That one", she nodded at Rogers, "is Rogers Trump, Dark Reapers Vice guild master And that’s Vonn Goldberg. My ex-husband. ", she paused, thinking about the dungeon behind the portal gate, about Leah opening cell doors owen had telepathically told her about, "and I think you’re going to want to go through that portal gate very carefully. There’s a facility inside that you need to see."
The agent looked at the portal gate shimmer visible around the canyon bend.
Then she started talking into his radio.
Odessa appeared at Yuki’s shoulder, her Azure Sky Dragon circling lazily overhead. She looked at Vonn being guided toward the Association agents with his wrists restrained, and then at Yuki, and her expression was something between satisfied and quietly moved.
"You, okay?" she asked.
Yuki considered the question seriously.
The canyon was cold and smelled of rock and the faint residue of fire enchantments. Her arms ached where Mana Reinforcement had been working overtime. Uru pulsed gently on her head.
"Yeah," she said. "Actually yes."
Odessa bumped her shoulder gently. "Good. Because I have a feeling the paperwork for this is going to be absolutely enormous and I’m going to need someone to complain about it with."
Despite everything, Yuki laughed.
Through the bond, Owen’s presence pressed against her mind, close, tired, still burning in places, but steady. Alive. She sent back warmth and the simple fact of her own aliveness, and felt his relief answer it.
They would debrief later. Process the implications of three demons in the human continent, of Vorthraxx’s voice through an amulet, of whatever Owen had found underneath that villa.
For now, the helicopters were landing, Vonn was in restraints, and somewhere inside the dungeon, a lion-girl named Leah was leading people out of the dark toward whatever came next.
Yuki sheathed both katanas and went to meet the Association agents.
There was a lot of explaining to do.







