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Chapter 82: 82. LandFall

The Auric Savanna announced itself before the ship reached the shore.

Owen slled it first, from the bow where he had been standing in humanoid form since dawn, watching the horizon.

Sothing warm and alive ca off the approaching landmass, a layered richness of the sll of of dry grass and mineral soil and the particular mana-saturated air of a continent that had developed its own relationship with ambient energy over millennia without human interference and industrial population.

Different from the human continent’s density. Older sohow, less shaped. Like the difference between a managed forest and sothing that had been growing according to its own logic since before anyone thought to manage it.

"Land," Leah said, appearing at his shoulder.

She had been doing this over the nine-day crossing, materializing beside him at the rail without preamble, standing in comfortable silence, occasionally offering information.

He had co to find it companionable in the specific way that two people who shared a certain quality of attention found each other’s presence restful.

"It’s been a long ti since you’ve been ho" Owen said.

"Fourteen months and nine days." No hesitation. She had been counting. "The coast looks different from the water. The sll is the sa though."

She inhaled slowly, her lion ears angled forward, her eyes slightly closed. Sothing in her face that had been held carefully in place since the dungeon released, just for a mont, into sothing simpler.

Owen did not comnt on it. So things deserved to happen without comntary.

Behind them, the deck had accumulated the group’s full complent. Odessa was at the stern rail taking photographs with a device that seed to have approximately forty settings she was cycling through with a focused determination to figure it out.

Alfred had produced a thermos again and was drinking tea with his usual serene patience.

Yuki stood midship, Uru on her shoulder, watching the coastline resolve from haze into detail with a bewildered expression.

Uru pulsed excitedly. It had been doing this since the sll hit.

The Aureline moved into the approach channel toward the port of Vashari, the largest coastal settlent on the Auric Savanna’s western shore, the primary point of entry for diplomatic traffic between the continents. Owen had read the briefing materials Helena’s team had provided. He had ford expectations.

The reality exceeded them considerably.

Vashari was built upward and outward simultaneously, structures of pale stone and dark wood rising in configurations that suggested the architects had been working with a different set of assumptions about what buildings were for.

So structures incorporated living trees as load-bearing elents, the trunks grown through purpose-designed channels in the stonework. Others had what appeared to be garden environnts on their upper surfaces, actual soil and vegetation maintained stories above the street level.

The whole city had a quality of having grown rather than been constructed, as though the distinction between built and natural had been negotiated rather than enforced.

"It’s beautiful," Yuki said, appearing beside him.

"It’s old," Leah said, from his other side. "The central district has been continuously inhabited for a thousand years. But the port is newer by about six hundred."

"Only six hundred," Odessa said. "How refreshingly young."

Leah glanced at her. "The Wayne family is how old?"

"One hundred and twelve years, give or take a founder." Odessa lowered her cara device. "Point taken."

---

The docking procedure was formal. The Aureline’s diplomatic credentials were reviewed by a beastfolk Port Authority team, a mixed group of lion-folk, wolf-folk, and a single enormous bear-folk woman who appeared to be in charge and communicated primarily through controlled expressions and very precise questions.

The survivors were processed first, with care that Owen noted was genuinely careful rather than performatively so. The Port Authority team had clearly done this before—the infrastructure for receiving returned captives was practiced and efficient, with dical staff, translators, and what appeared to be clan liaison representatives waiting on the dock.

Several of the survivors, erging into the Vashari air and seeing faces of their own kind, did not maintain composure. Owen found he did not particularly bla them.

Leah stood at the top of the gangway and watched them go down. Owen stood beside her.

"This is the easy part," she said quietly.

"Getting them here. What cos after, finding their clans, reconstructing what was lost, figuring out who they are now, that takes longer."

"You would know," Owen said

.

"I would know." Her tail moved. "Though my situation is different. I have sowhere to go back to. Not all of them do."

The bear-folk Port Authority officer, her na badge read Commander Ossa, made her way to Owen’s position with the movent of soone who had decided that the unusual presence of a being with visible draconic features required direct engagent.

She stopped in front of him and looked him over with the unhurried assessnt of soone who was very good at her job and saw no reason to pretend otherwise.

"Lizardfolk..." she said. Not a question.

"Dragon." Owen said.

Commander Ossa was quiet for a mont.

"There haven’t been dragons on this continent since the extinction."

"I’m aware."

"The Continental Council will want to know you’re here."

"I assud they would." Owen t her gaze steadily. "I’m not here to cause problems. I’m here to return these people to their hos and to.... conduct so personal business. I’m happy to speak with the Council."

Ossa looked at him for another long mont. Then, in a gesture that he suspected was significant though he didn’t know all the cultural weight it carried, she placed her right fist against her chest and inclined her head.

"The continent acknowledges your arrival," she said formally. "Vashari extends hospitality."

Owen returned the gesture as closely as he could approximate it. "This dragon acknowledges the courtesy."

Beside him, he felt Leah’s quiet approval without her saying a word.

---

They were given quarters in the diplomatic district, a compound of connected buildings that the Association maintained for exactly this kind of visit. Comfortable, well-appointed, clearly designed with the understanding that diplomatic guests ca in a variety of sizes and configurations.

Owen had a room with a ceiling height that accommodated his wings. He chose to take this as a good sign.

That evening, Leah ca to find him in the compound’s open courtyard, a walled garden space with mature trees and that characteristic Vashari quality of green things growing where they had decided to grow rather than where soone had decided to put them.

"My mother has been inford," she said. "She’s sending a delegation."

"How long?"

"Three days. The Auric Pride’s central territory is two days’ travel from Vashari."

She paused. "She’ll co herself. I know her."

Owen looked at the courtyard trees. "What is she like?"

Leah considered the question with the seriousness it apparently deserved.

"Eh, she’s powerful...but She is also—" Another pause, with sothing complicated in it. "....Herself. In ways that sotis ...require adjustnt."

"That’s not particularly specific, leah."

"No," Leah agreed. "It isn’t. Look, You’ll understand when you et her."

She left him with that, which was precisely as helpful as it sounded.

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