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Limits. Part 4
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Limits. Part 4

I decide keeping my mouth shut is probably the best way to start this...date. Is this a date? I have no idea.

She's definitely dressed for a date. She's wearing that sexy little top, black with lime green ribbons that match those shoes, and a tight skirt. That's dressed up, right? Or it's Genevieve. She dresses like this all the time.

"Did you get a chance to look over the problems Eidelberg made for you?" I ask, and she flips a hot look my way.

Not hot like bedrooms and sexy: hot like she's attempting to blister through my skin with her eyeballs.

"Do you have any idea just how much food I stuffed into that picnic basket?" she asks, her voice sweet. Dangerously sweet. Too sweet. "Broccoli salad with feta dressing, cheddar cornmeal biscuits, poached spinach and walnut pesto chicken, and chocolate chip cookies. All homemade. And I had to run to the store for a few ingredients before I started cooking."

"Oh." I feel like an ass, but I was thinking the basket was filled with tuna fish sandwiches and sliced apples or something. So this is a date.

"It's not this huge deal," she rushes to explain. "I mean, I love cooking. It kind of relaxes me. You know, like when I'm about to fail calculus and stressed, it helps me calm down. So, it's not like...any big deal."

So...not a date?

"That's amazing. When I'm stressed, I play video games for hours on end. Your destressing is way more productive. And it sounds delicious. All of it," I insist.

Her smile puts me at ease. "Thank you. I'm sure it will be."

We drive the rest of the way talking about things that don't really matter: who won the latest singing talent show she watches, how things are going at her parents' furniture store, and then she asks about my yeast experiments. I'm just about to tell her the entire saga, but I don't want to ruin my appetite thinking about it, so instead I say it's all good and focus on finding a parking space along the dusty, curving road.

"I love this place," I tell her as I parallel park with a respectable amount of skill. "And we got a decent spot."

"Wait. Where's the observatory?" she asks, opening her car door slowly. I point. Those soft gray eyes follow the direction of my arm and turn back on me, so wide I'm afraid they'll pop out.

"I'm sorry," I say, grabbing the picnic basket. "Do you think you can make it? I could always drop you up there and come back to park."

She looks down at her green shoes and back up at me, her face determined. "I'm walking it. And I'll be fine. Lead the way."

Fifteen minutes later, she's pushing her sweat-damn hair back off her forehead and grabbing onto my arm. I'm trying not to let her see how my arms are shaking, especially because if she decides to let go of me, I have a bad feeling she's going to trip on those stupid heels and plummet into the ravine below. When we get to the first picnic table, I've never been so glad to see a surface to sit down on in my life. I drop the basket and brace my arms on the rough wood, trying to catch my breath.

I expect to see Genevieve at my side, but she's walking to the little clump of trees at the edge of the ravine. I get up and follow her, wishing I could slide my arm around her waist to make sure she keeps her balance, but she grabs onto my arm and squeezes before I go crazy worrying. Her voice is just this breathy whisper.

"Look at that, Adam. Look."

I do. The sun is setting, casting the entire sky above the ravine in a soft purple light streaked with orange and this glint of silver stars. The bright white letters of the Hollywood sign are offset by the dark trees, bending slightly as the wind picks up. It moves Genevieve's silky black hair, pressing it back from her face as she looks out. Below the ravine, all of LA winks in the night with thousands of milky twinkling lights.

"It's amazing," I say, my voice low in this moment that feels so private, even though there are people milling all over and a city of millions below us. "When I first moved here, I was so damn homesick. All the time. Funny, because the only thing I ever wanted to do growing up was leave Tel Aviv-leave Israel, actually-for good. I never expected to miss it. I have no idea why, but coming here made me miss it less."

"I've lived right by this place my whole life, but I hardly ever come here. Stupid. That's just stupid, right? It's like...it's like you take for granted what's right in front of you, like this place. That it'll always be here, just like this." She turns to look at me, brushing back stray pieces of hair that fly around her face.

She's so gorgeous, it makes me a little dizzy. She has this face that's pretty much the perfect example of human beauty and symmetry-sharp, high cheekbones, full lips, wide, pretty eyes-but, even though the scientist in me knows that her beauty is based on years of evolution that trains me to see signs of health and vigor as attractive, the man in me knows it's something else that makes her so hard to look away from.

It's the way her eyes shine when she looks at something she's interested in. The way her smile seems to take over her entire face and flick it on like a light switch. The way her hair is always down, long and wild, like a kid's. But not like a kid's at all, because, for all the ways Genevieve can be so fun and even silly, she's still a woman. Completely a woman.

"Not stupid at all. There's this place in Tel Aviv, the Azrieli Observatory. It's the kind of thing I'd probably love. But I've never been there." I shrug and don't move away even when strands of her hair fly up and tickle my face. "I think, sometimes when you're not happy in a place, you'll look for any excuse to leave. Sometimes that means avoiding the things that might tie you closer to it."

She leans against my shoulder. "I know exactly what you mean."

When she turns her face, it's so close to mine, I feel like maybe she wants to kiss me. I've known I wanted to kiss her for weeks now.

But I don't know if she has a boyfriend. Or if I'm reading too much into this moment we're sharing.

"I've never felt less homesick than I do right now," I say, half to stop myself from kissing her before I can come up with a good enough reason not to, half because I want her to know how being around her for the last few months has felt more like 'home' than living in Israel for two decades ever did.

"I know exactly how you feel," she says, her voice soft, her lips close. I move toward her, and it feels like the air between us is crackling with the friction of everything we want and haven't said and are just beginning to understand when- "Hey! Excuse me? Are you sitting here?" A woman with a high, whiny voice who's pulling a bungee-corded cooler points to our picnic basket on the table. I wrestle the urge to push her into the ravine.

"Yes," I growl. "We are."

She marches away, muttering loudly about how some people have no manners anymore, and I look at Genevieve, bummed we lost our opportunity to kiss, but liking the way she's smiling.

"'Some people,' huh? Was that because we're Jewish?" She laughs, and it's contagious. We're both laughing as we head back to the table, and then, for a long time, I have nothing to say, because I'm too busy attacking every single thing she packed.

"This is freaking amazing," I say, reaching for another biscuit.

She shakes her head. "I definitely used too much cornmeal. You're just impressed because you've been eating canned pasta for weeks. So sad."

"I'm telling you, I was the fattest kid when I was little. After my mom died, all three of her sisters plus every lady looking to snag my dad would cook for us, all old school Jewish food, all the time. I swear, everything I put in my mouth when I was a kid was fried in duck fat. I'm surprised I didn't have a heart attack by the time I was thirteen. That said, if I'd been eating your cooking, I would have become obese. And probably died a young, happy death." I grab another biscuit and wish I'd kept my mouth shut about Mom when I see the familiar look of pity in her eyes.

"How old were you?" she asks her fingers reaching past the halfway point on the table, like she wants to hold my hand and comfort me.

I want her to want to touch me-but not like this.

"When I got fat?" I avoid eye contact. The last thing I need is to look into those big gray eyes and get all therapy-session weepy on her.

"When you lost your mother." She pulls back, folds her hands on the table, and looks at me, waiting.

How old was I?

When I lost my mother?

When my life as I knew it ended?

When everything good and fun and loving got muted, stomped on, suffocated and my father and I were left gutted and depressed, staring at each other like we had no idea what to do without her?

We never figured it out.

"I was three days away from my tenth birthday," I say, my voice a carefully controlled monotone. "It was breast cancer. Same thing her mother died from."

"Did she have any recipes you loved?" Her voice is reverential, but practical. I appreciate that.

I'm also kind of surprised at the question.

"You know what? Now that you mention it, she used to make this amazing French toast with challah bread. The best was with the circle loaf from Rosh Hashanah. I don't know why that would make it taste better. The shape, I mean."

"I think shape has a lot to do with how things taste. I love Hershey kisses, but I don't like Hershey bars." Genevieve shrugs, her shoulders delicate and kissable.

Is it because of the kiss that was interrupted? Her mention of the candy? Is my mind just going crazy? Because I definitely never thought a girl's shoulders were kissable before, but now I can't think of anything other than kissing her shoulders. And so much more.

"I guess I get that," I say, looking at the chicken on my plate so I don't gawk at her shoulders or any other body part. "I like ziti, but I don't like rotini."

"Yes!" She nibbles on a chocolate chip cookie. "I'll have to try making you the challah French toast for breakfast sometime. My abuela makes the most delicious challah, and she only taught me the secret family recipe. You'll fall in love."

I swallow hard. "I bet I will."

She bites her lip and fiddles with the picnic basket handle. I think we both know I wasn't referring to bread. I reach over to help put things back in the basket, brushing a hand against hers or leaning close enough to smell the sweet scent of her shampoo. "I'll walk this back to the car," I offer, and she just nods and attempts a smile that doesn't quite make it across her entire face.

I walk fast. The basket is way less heavy now that we've devoured most of the food in it, and I have time to think. About this date or non-date. About how I could take her, so fragile and strong all at once, and kiss her the way she deserves to be kissed. Not half-hearted, like some beach bum who doesn't want to commit. Not like she's some flake in a tight outfit and high heels. I want to kiss her like she's mine. I want to kiss her to show her that I see through the facade she throws up for everyone else. I want to kiss her so she'll never forget it. So she won't forget me.

Because I'm as good as gone.

I don't want to ruin this night, because it's going to be one of the last memories I have of being here. I don't want to think about the university board's decision, which was pretty damn gracious. They're allowing me to finish my thesis work based on what I have now and send it through correspondence after I get home. I have the option to fly back for an appointed in-person thesis defense or do it before the board through Skype. Which is really nice of them, considering they could have just demanded I rush through and have it ready in the next few weeks, then booted my ass back to Israel.

It sucks that things have started to work out with Genevieve the same time everything else is falling apart, but that tends to be how things pan out for me. I'm just thankful for the fact that it didn't come down to the two of us exchanging an awkward hug in the labs before it was goodbye forever.

I walk back and see her, sitting on the picnic table, her feet propped on the bench, her arms stretched behind her, her head tilted back.

If her shoulders made me want to kiss her before, now I can't pick a body part that doesn't make me want to do something, everything. I want to lick the line of her lips until she opens for me. I want my hands on her hips, pulling her close. I want to lay her back and rub my face against her stomach, run my fingers down her arms, suck on her neck, and press my body tight against hers.

I want Genevieve, even though I know wanting her is the last thing I should be thinking about right now.

"Do you want to go see the observatory?" I ask.

She jumps, like my voice startled her. "Yes." She slips off the table and holds a hand out for mine.

I'm way past wondering whether or not this is a date. If it is, it's the one that I'll never forget, the one I'll use to compare all future dates to. If it's not, I'm never going to admit it to myself. I can't have her the way I'd really like to, so I have to suck up and take what I can get. And I will.

Her hand in mine is pretty damn amazing, all things considered. I hold it tight and walk slowly because I know her feet must be killing her. We head to the huge white building and her heels click on the marble floor when we make our way inside.

Astronomy isn't my area of expertise, but I know enough to explain the questions she has when we pass the shadow-box exhibits. And it's not just Genevieve asking questions. She tells me about meteor showers that made the sky burst into a choreographed explosion of streaking light in a valley she camped in in high school. She tells me about sitting up until dawn on the sloped roof outside her bedroom window to see Venus clearly. She tells me about the mnemonic devices she used to make up to remember facts about the planets when she was a little girl.

"So you were always a closet scientist?" I ask as she leans over to get a better look at a replica model of Saturn, turning on an improvised axis.

"Me?" She flicks a glance my way and snorts. "Not even remotely. I was destined to sell ottomans and bedroom sets in the illustrious Rodriguez Furniture Warehouse. This degree? It's pretty much my parents humoring me. It's going to be in finance and business. So I might one day graduate from selling sectionals to balancing the books. If I'm lucky."

"Is that what you want?" I ask, keeping my hand just at the small of her back while she walks to the next exhibit.

We both watch the Earth, moon, and sun replicas spin around slowly, sometimes eclipsing, sometimes spread apart like they're on paths that will never connect.

"What I want?" She takes a deep breath and moves closer to me. "I want to be free."

"What would happen if you stopped working at your parents' business?" I ask, and she spins around suddenly, narrowing her eyes at me.

"I don't want to be a scientist." She crosses her arms over her chest.

I hold my hands up, surrender style. "I'm not a recruiter for the program, if that's what you think."

"You're giving off the vibe." She drops her arms and pokes one finger into my chest.

"Sorry." I take her hand, watch her eyes go dark, and hold back a groan when her tongue darts out, quick and pink, and wets her bottom lip. "The thing I remember most about my mother?" Genevieve leans closer, so close I can see the patterns of grays and lighter blues that make up her irises. "She lived every second like she was exactly where she wanted to be, doing exactly what she wanted to do. I'm sure she had regrets, but I think she just loved...everything. And when she died, I hated everything. I thought it was a shitty testament to who she'd been."

"It's normal to hate everything when you lose someone you love," she says, threading her fingers through mine.

"Yeah, it is." I brush her hair back from her face and let my palm linger on her cheek. She closes her eyes and breathes deep. "But it starts to become a habit. I fight it every day. Because, sometimes, I have beauty and happiness staring me right in the face, and I never even notice. Until it's too late. I don't want to keep making that mistake."

"It's not too late," she says, her words a soft dare. Or a plea.

I pull her close, wishing she was right. Why didn't I face my problems when they were staring me in the face? Why did I let her slip through my fingers?

Her body is warm and soft in all the right places. I haven't slept with a girl since I left Israel, so some of what I'm feeling is pure, pent-up need. But that's not how this is going to go. I'm not going to use Genevieve, because what I feel for her extends way beyond animal urges. I respect her. I love the way she makes me feel, the way she makes me want to change.

"Do you want to go to the roof?" I ask, and the words vibrate with my glaring frustration, which makes her eyes startle wide open.

"Sure."

I spin her body from mine in one neat movement and we rush up the stairs, coming out onto the wide roof and into the cool night air. Night took over while we were inside, and the deep blue of the sky cools every temper that flared in me.

"It feels...so wide open up here," she says, twirling around, head tilted back. "Free."

"You could tell your parents you're not working for them anymore. Don't you have brothers and sisters who could help out?" She's talking about the celestial beauty of freedom, I'm talking practical applications of it.

"My brother, Cohen, does work there, and so does his fiance, at least until she graduates and gets a teaching job. Lydia is this crazy successful lawyer. Enzo has always done whatever the hell he wanted to, even when we were just kids. Cece will probably get a job as a professor." She looks at me and raises her eyebrows. "Maybe you know her? She's in comparative feminist lit?"

I think back to the way Cody and I made fun of the comparative lit losers and feel a surge of panic. Not like Genevieve could possibly know that. Mocking her sister, even inadvertently, is not something I want to do. Or want her to know I do, anyway.

"Uh, no. They're so, um, different. Just, yeah, different. Plus, you know, the liberal arts department is kind of segregated from ours." By a big, fat line of real knowledge and usefulness.

"Do you have a problem with the liberal arts?" she asks, and I can hear the laugh behind her words. "Holy crap! I can see it in your face! You do. What a science snob you are, Adam. So how much do you hate them? Is it like a separate water fountains and bathrooms kind of thing?"

"I don't hate them," I object. "And if we have separate bathrooms, it's just because those douches from philosophy are always wandering into the bathroom and forgetting to ever leave. Or that's what I hear from the math department. Those poor guys have to share bathrooms with some outlier liberal artists who snuck into their territory."

She's laughing hard and loud now, and the sound gets caught in the winds that pick up and toss it around on the roof. "Here I was thinking you were all open-minded. So what if I told you I wanted to major in philosophy instead of working at my parents' place?"

"You'd be the one and only person who could bring me over to the dark side and make a liberal arts lover out of me. Never repeat that in front of Cody," I warn, loving the easy way she bumps my hip with hers and puts a hand on my arm.

"Your secret is safe with me. And I don't want to be in philosophy. I guess this is going to sound so damn bratty, but I don't know what I want. I just know it's not what I have." She puts her hands over her face. "Ugh. That sounds so like some pathetic first world problem. You don't have to tell me it doesn't."

I tug her hands down. "Hey, I've worked in some pretty desperate places. Refugee camps, ghettos. What you feel? That's an everyone problem. I'm not saying you aren't lucky to have political freedoms and clean water and vaccinations. All good stuff. But you have a right to ask for more out of your life and not feel like a bad person for it."

"So it's not just science and math that you're all brilliant at, is it?" she asks.

"I guess not." I sit on the low ledge over a sharp drop and Genevieve backs up a step.

"Get off of there." She clutches a hand over her heart.

"Are you afraid of heights? It's okay," I say, jumping onto the ledge to show her. "I grew up balcony hopping across apartments. I've got an amazing sense of balance." I back up a few inches, just enough so I can feel the wind tug and swirl at my back.

She puts her other hand over her mouth, then rips it away and whisper screams, "Get. Down. Now! Right now!"

Chapter end

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Catalogue
Limits 471 This is Farewell
Limits 469 Tread Your Own Path
Limits 468 Sometimes, a man has to...
Limits 467 Belagor, The Ice Dragon
Limits 466 True Face of Hatmandor
Limits 465 This War Ends Here Part 4
Limits 464 This War Ends Here Part 3
Limits 463 This War Ends Here Part 2
Limits 462 This War Ends Here Part 1
Limits 461 Extraordinary Weapon
Limits 460 New Moon Blade Part 2
Limits 459 New Moon Blade Part 1
Limits 458 Elemental Armour
Limits 457 Training from Hell Part 2
Limits 456 Training from Hell Part 1
Limits 455 Aura Domain
Limits 454 Dealing with Formations
Limits 453 They Exis
Limits 452 Equipment for Sedon
Limits 451 Not What We Looked For
Limits 450 Alicia's Knowledge
Limits 449 Silence is Worrisome
Limits 448 Possibility
Limits 447 The Barrier
Limits 446 Hydra
Limits 445 Agreemen
Limits 444 Accepting Myself
Limits 443 Faint Memories
Limits 442 Release Me
Limits 441 Lurker Beneath the Ground
Limits 440 Elemental Patterns
Limits 439 Formation's Energy Source
Limits 438 Others can Judge
Limits 437 Lizards' Records
Limits 436 Golden Iris
Limits 435 Approximate Area
Limits 434 Ruins of Ravan
Limits 433 Skin Walker
Limits 432 Aura and Medicine Part 2
Limits 431 Aura and Medicine Part 1
Limits 430 Northern History Part 2
Limits 429 Northern History Part 1
Limits 428 Poisonous Flowers
Limits 427 Powerless
Limits 426 Strong Poison
Limits 425 The Plague
Limits 424 Back in Shape
Limits 423 Battle Aftermath
Limits 422 He Who doesn't Yield
Limits 421 Wake up!
Limits 420 They are Here
Limits 419 Battle Preparations
Limits 418 Pleasant Surprise
Limits 417 More than Simple Aura
Limits 416 Weapons of War Part 6
Limits 415 Weapons of War Part 5
Limits 414 Weapons of War Part 4
Limits 413 Weapons of War Part 3
Limits 412 Weapons of War Part 2
Limits 411 Weapons of War Part 1
Limits 410 Impossible Enemy Part 2
Limits 409 Impossible Enemy Part 1
Limits 408 Regrets
Limits 407 How Ironic
Limits 406 New Powers
Limits 405 A Set Worthy of a Warrior
Limits 404 Page Not Found
Limits 403 Change of Plans
Limits 402 Sedon's Reinforcements
Limits 401 A Way Ou
Limits 400 Battle Analysis
Limits 399 Choose Your Words Carefully
Limits 398 Apium's Law
Limits 397 Back in Apium
Limits 396 The Forbidden Form
Limits 395 It's a Trap
Limits 394 Your Incompetence
Limits 393 Mordars Part 2
Limits 392 Mordars Part 1
Limits 391 The Power of Ice
Limits 390 Changes in Obsidian Mountains
Limits 389 They are Digging, Alrigh
Limits 388 Underneath the Surface
Limits 387 Bad News
Limits 386 Transforming Sedon
Limits 385 Can you Help?
Limits 384 Current Situation
Limits 383 Testing Allies
Limits 382 Disastrous Situation
Limits 381 Impressive Armour
Limits 380 Flash Blurite Steel
Limits 379 We are Friends
Limits 378 Battle at the Obsidian Mountains
Limits 377 New Design
Limits 376 The North Changed
Limits 375 Beast Slayers
Limits 374 Treat and Protec
Limits 373 Back to Savala Village
Limits 372 Our Decisions
Limits 371 Rightfully Mine
Limits 370 Trustworthy People
Limits 369 Return to the Imperial City
Limits 368 Few Years Passed
Limits 367 Leaving in a Hurry
Limits 366 Lovers' Fores
Limits 365 Ancient Elder Trees
Limits 364 Ancient Mountain Sightseeing
Limits 363 Elysian Plants Part 2
Limits 362 Elysian Plants Part 1
Limits 361 Weird Rules
Limits 360 Going on a Trip
Limits 359 Warlike Style
Limits 358 Stringed Hidden Weapons: Defensive Forms
Limits 357 Stringed Hidden Weapons Evolution
Limits 356 The Real Endros' Story
Limits 355 The Art of War Story
Limits 354 They're Here Part 2
Limits 353 They're Here Part 1
Limits 352 Epiphany
Limits 351 The Real use of the Black Orbs
Limits 350 The Meaning of Life
Limits 349 Elemental Orbs
Limits 348 Remote Area
Limits 347 The Arts Part 2
Limits 346 The Arts Part 1
Limits 345 Fate's Gift Part 2
Limits 344 Fate's Gift Part 1
Limits 343 Tough Battle
Limits 342 Don't Dragging People Down With You!
Limits 341 It's Him!
Limits 340 Elysian Empire
Limits 339 A Surprise
Limits 338 Roland the Prince Part 2
Limits 337 Roland the Prince Part 1
Limits 336 The Main Battle
Limits 335 You Be
Limits 334 Fox's New Hobby
Limits 333 I Know Someone
Limits 332 Wealthy Fox
Limits 331 Explanation
Limits 330 I'm not Happy Either
Limits 329 Grand Library
Limits 328 Endros Imperial City
Limits 327 One Crafty Fox
Limits 326 Are You Alright?
Limits Chapter 325
Limits Chapter 324
Limits 323 Fox's Father
Limits 322 The Academy
Limits 321 The Trail Ends
Limits 320 A Lead
Limits 319 Farewell
Limits 318 Solution Part 2
Limits 317 Solution Part 1
Limits 316 Expected Outcome
Limits 315 Village Youngsters
Limits 314 Purity and Pain
Limits 313 Working Non-stop
Limits 312 Family Cha
Limits 311 Try to Understand
Limits 310 Be Yourself
Limits 309 Haily's Games
Limits 308 Younger Generation Returns
Limits 307 First Lesson
Limits 306 The Tes
Limits 305 Curious Kara
Limits 304 Passionate Kara
Limits 303 Birthday
Limits 302 Sword Basics Part 2
Limits 301 Sword Basics Part 1
Limits 300 Archery
Limits 299 Little Nade Part 2
Limits 298 Little Nade Part 1
Limits 297 Private Conversation
Limits 296 Welcoming Feas
Limits 295 Family Visit Part 3
Limits 294 Family Visit Part 2
Limits 293 Family Visit Part 1
Limits 292 Royal Competition
Limits 291 Crow's Rapier
Limits 290 Floating Orbs
Limits 289 Hatmandor
Limits 288 Harlin's and Lazar's Goals
Limits 287 Spending Money
Limits 286 Crow's Future
Limits 285 Crow's New Eyes
Limits 284 Energy or Aura
Limits 283 A Clue
Limits 282 Crow's Senses
Limits 281 This is the End
Limits 280 Perival Continen
Limits 279 Meeting with Fox
Limits 278 Crow's Story
Limits 277 Grown Up Suly
Limits 276 Escaping Sedon
Limits 275 Overseers
Limits 274 Crow
Limits 273 Condensed Aura
Limits 272 Auction
Limits 271 Little Conversation Part 2
Limits 270 Little Conversation Part 1
Limits 269 Vatras Auction Hall
Limits 268 City Boltier
Limits 267 Inner Limits
Limits 266 Serelis' Lifespan
Limits 265 Second Blood Purification
Limits 264 Pond in the Wilderness
Limits Chapter 263
Limits Chapter 262
Limits Chapter 261
Limits Chapter 260
Limits Chapter 259
Limits Chapter 258
Limits Chapter 257
Limits 256 Light Exercise
Limits 255 Apium Fractions
Limits 254 Let's See if I Move
Limits 253 Field Full of Sections
Limits 252 Blood Yarn
Limits 251 Learning in Apium
Limits 250 Testing Waters
Limits 249 Farming
Limits 248 Superior Medicine Knowledge
Limits 247 Ophilis Reeds & Aliris Plants
Limits 246 Apium Exploration
Limits 245 Apium
Limits 244 A Long Journey Part 2
Limits 243 A Long Journey Part 1
Limits 242 Till We Meet Again
Limits 241 Crow's Limits
Limits 240 Back in the Dead Fores
Limits 239 Destroy I
Limits 238 Memories
Limits 237 Lazar's Daughter Suly
Limits 236 ENOUGH!
Limits 235 Dark Traveller vs Razor
Limits 234 Complete Defea
Limits 233 Difficult Enemy
Limits 232 Roland's Struggle
Limits 231 Shady Business
Limits 230 Battle Against Voltar
Limits 229 Exploring the Arena
Limits 228 The Masked Fox
Limits 227 Falanks Arena
Limits 226 Formation Exper
Limits 225 Achieving Something
Limits 224 Sick Slate
Limits 223 Collecting Lears
Limits 222 Unexpected Turnaround
Limits Chapter 221
Limits 220 Mercenary Guild
Limits 219 A Note
Limits 218 Golems
Limits 217 Frosty & Language
Limits Chapter 216
Limits Chapter 215
Limits Chapter 214
Limits Chapter 213
Limits Chapter 212
Limits Chapter 211
Limits Chapter 210
Limits Chapter 209
Limits Chapter 208
Limits Chapter 207
Limits Chapter 206
Limits Chapter 205
Limits Chapter 204
Limits Chapter 203
Limits Chapter 202
Limits Chapter 201
Limits Chapter 200
Limits Chapter 199
Limits Chapter 198
Limits Chapter 197
Limits Chapter 196
Limits Chapter 195
Limits Chapter 194
Limits Chapter 193
Limits Chapter 192
Limits Chapter 191
Limits Chapter 190
Limits Chapter 189
Limits Chapter 188
Limits Chapter 187
Limits Chapter 186
Limits Chapter 185
Limits Chapter 184
Limits Chapter 183
Limits Chapter 182
Limits Chapter 181
Limits Chapter 180
Limits Chapter 179
Limits Chapter 178
Limits Chapter 177
Limits Chapter 176
Limits Chapter 175
Limits Chapter 174
Limits Chapter 173
Limits Chapter 172
Limits Chapter 171
Limits Chapter 170
Limits Chapter 169
Limits Chapter 168
Limits Chapter 167
Limits Chapter 166
Limits Chapter 165
Limits Chapter 164
Limits Chapter 163
Limits Chapter 162
Limits Chapter 161
Limits Chapter 160
Limits Chapter 159
Limits Chapter 158
Limits Chapter 157
Limits Chapter 156
Limits Chapter 155
Limits Chapter 154
Limits Chapter 153
Limits Chapter 152
Limits Chapter 151
Limits Chapter 150
Limits Chapter 149
Limits Chapter 148
Limits Chapter 147
Limits Chapter 146
Limits Chapter 145
Limits Chapter 144
Limits Chapter 143
Limits Chapter 142
Limits Chapter 141
Limits Chapter 140
Limits Chapter 139
Limits Chapter 138
Limits Chapter 137
Limits Chapter 136
Limits Chapter 135
Limits Chapter 134
Limits Chapter 133
Limits Chapter 132
Limits Chapter 131
Limits Chapter 130
Limits Chapter 129
Limits Chapter 128
Limits Chapter 127
Limits Chapter 126
Limits Chapter 125
Limits Chapter 124
Limits Chapter 123
Limits Chapter 122
Limits Chapter 121
Limits Chapter 120
Limits Chapter 119
Limits Chapter 118
Limits Chapter 117
Limits Chapter 116
Limits Chapter 115
Limits Chapter 114
Limits Chapter 113
Limits Chapter 112
Limits Chapter 111
Limits Chapter 110
Limits Chapter 109
Limits Chapter 108
Limits Chapter 107
Limits Chapter 106
Limits Chapter 105
Limits Chapter 104
Limits Chapter 103
Limits Chapter 102
Limits Chapter 101
Limits Chapter 100
Limits Chapter 99
Limits Chapter 98
Limits Chapter 97
Limits Chapter 96
Limits Chapter 95
Limits Chapter 94
Limits Chapter 93
Limits Chapter 92
Limits Chapter 91
Limits Chapter 90
Limits Chapter 89
Limits Chapter 88
Limits Chapter 87
Limits Chapter 86
Limits Chapter 85
Limits Chapter 84
Limits Chapter 83
Limits Chapter 82
Limits Chapter 81
Limits Chapter 80
Limits Chapter 79
Limits Chapter 78
Limits Chapter 77
Limits Chapter 76
Limits Chapter 75
Limits Chapter 74
Limits Chapter 73
Limits Chapter 72
Limits Chapter 71
Limits Chapter 70
Limits Chapter 69
Limits Chapter 68
Limits Chapter 67
Limits Chapter 66
Limits Chapter 65
Limits Chapter 64
Limits Chapter 63
Limits Chapter 62
Limits Chapter 61
Limits Chapter 60
Limits Chapter 59
Limits Chapter 58
Limits Chapter 57
Limits Chapter 56
Limits Chapter 55
Limits Chapter 54
Limits Chapter 53
Limits Chapter 52
Limits Chapter 51
Limits Chapter 50
Limits Chapter 49
Limits Chapter 48
Limits Chapter 47
Limits Chapter 46
Limits Chapter 45
Limits Chapter 44
Limits Chapter 43
Limits Chapter 42
Limits Chapter 41
Limits Chapter 40
Limits Chapter 39
Limits Chapter 38
Limits Chapter 37
Limits Chapter 36
Limits Chapter 35
Limits Chapter 34
Limits Chapter 33
Limits Chapter 32
Limits Chapter 31
Limits Chapter 30
Limits Chapter 29
Limits Chapter 28
Limits Chapter 27
Limits Chapter 26
Limits Chapter 25
Part 24
Part 23
Part 22
Part 21
Part 20
Part 19
Part 18
Part 17
Part 16
Part 15
Part 14
Part 13
Part 12
Part 11
Part 10
Part 9
Part 8
Part 7
Part 6
Part 5
Part 4
Part 3
Part 2
Part 1
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