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The Beginning After The End Chapter 397
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The Beginning After The End Chapter 397

Published at 12th of August 2022 08:44:24 PM


Chapter 397
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Chapter 397: Preparations

 

The scalding metal sizzled against bare bone, charring it black as the flesh around it melted. Water hissed as it hit the black iron, sending up a cloud of steam. I cursed and pulled back.

Ellie slapped my hand away from the pan heating on the stove. “Just let me do it already! Who mixes water and hot grease, anyway? Have you ever even cooked before?”

I dipped my fingers into the saucer of water I’d cooled the pan with and flicked several drops into her face as she struggled to flip the slab of meat I’d burned. “This coming from the girl who's been eating nothing but fish, rats, and mushrooms for the last how many months?”

Regis was sitting in the middle of the table, watching with interest, his nose twitching with every waft of meat-scented air. “You know, that looks pretty much irreparable. Just toss it over to me.”

Ellie dropped a handful of cut-up mushrooms in with the meat and grease, humming with irritation. “I can do more with rat and mushrooms than you can with the whole royal pantry, I bet.”

“I’m not sure that’s something to brag about,” I pointed out, laughing.

“Hey, not fair!” she shouted, swinging her arms as she tried futilely to land a punch.

The whisper of soft turnshoes on stone tile drew my attention to the kitchen doorway.

“Good morning,” I said, waving with the hand suspending Ellie upside down so that my sister bobbed around like a ragdoll. “It’s not much, but Ellie and I tried making some breakfast.”

“I tried making breakfast,” she grumped, her arms crossed. “Arthur was mostly just in the—ow!” she yelped as I let her tumble to the floor.

“Oh,” Ellie mumbled quickly and quietly, “Mom, what’s wrong?” It was then I realized there were quiet tears running down Mom’s cheeks.

“Huh? What do you—oh.” She wiped at her cheeks with the back of her long sleeves. “Why am I crying?” she asked herself with a laugh.

“I guess it’s just…waking up to something like this…it’s been a long time.”

I pulled out a chair for her, and she eased into it with a grateful, tear-streaked smile. Her motions were still slightly sluggish, but her gaze was much more steady than it had been just the day before. Regis scooted back so that he was directly in front of her, and she began petting him behind the ears.

Ellie and I pushed and shoved at the stove, but in the end I let her claim victory, instead grabbing a handful of wooden plates and utensils to set the table. Ellie delivered stacks of slightly burned meat, eggs, mushrooms, steamed greens, red beans, and a coil of some kind of eel—caught from a nearby underground lake—that Ellie insisted was delicious, and together we filled up three plates.

Mom cut off a burned end from the slice of meat we’d given her and fed it to Regis, who took it right off her fork.

“He's going to keep asking for stuff like this if you spoil him, Mom,” I said around a mouthful.

She waved my words away. “Oh, it's fine. Don’t you think with everything he's done to help out around here, he's earned it?”

Regis’s oversized puppy eyes gleamed as he stared up at my mother like she’d just given him an award. “Would you believe this man never feeds me?”

“You get plenty of aether,” I mumbled as Mom held out half a mushroom.

Regis eyed it uncertainly, then said, “Maybe some more of that meat instead?”

Mom’s brows rose. “It’s important you eat a healthy, balanced diet, Regis,” she lightly scolded.

Regis blinked cartoonishly, then leaned forward and gingerly took the mushroom from her hand, chewing it with such clear dejection that Ellie took pity on him and tossed over a chunk of her eel, giggling when he pounced on it and swallowed it with a single bite.

Truly a magnificent sight to see from the very manifestation of Destruction, I thought.

“Anyway, how are you feeling this morning?” I asked Mom as I speared a chunk of my own eel, keeping my tone light, but watching her carefully.

“So much better,” she said. Her bloodshot, tired eyes squinted in appreciation. “Thank you, Arthur, but you don’t have to worry about me. You have so much on your mind already.”

Ellie scoffed and opened her mouth, but paused when Mom shot her a look. My sister took a moment to finish chewing and swallowing, then said, “He let us think he was dead for months, didn’t he? Let him worry.”

My mother’s soft smile wavered, and I reached across the table to squeeze her hand. “I do have a lot on my mind. But you and Ellie are always at the top of that ever-growing pile.”

Mom’s eyes fell to her plate, but I still saw the moisture shining in them. Ellie watched her, a small frown on her mature features. I slid most of my burned meat over to Regis, who chewed loudly, oblivious to everything except the warm food in front of him, although I could feel the thrill he felt at sharing a family meal with us through our mental connection.

We ate in silence for a while after that, but it wasn’t the kind of quiet that was awkward or tense. Instead, it was comfortable. Easy. Easier than it had been in a very long time, since the attack on Xyrus.

The thought that it felt like another life flashed through my mind, but I knew that wasn’t really true. I had lived another life on Earth, and then, in Alacrya, I had pretended to be someone I wasn’t, reviving a part of me that had died when I’d been reincarnated in Dicathen. I had needed Grey to survive there, and as much as I wanted to just be Arthur, living as Grey again had reminded me why I’d become him in the first place.

Until this war was over, truly over, I couldn’t let Grey go. Not yet.

“—thur?”

“Sorry?” I asked, realizing my mother had said something.

“I was just saying that I really should go check in at the medical center now that I’m feeling a bit better.” She looked slightly embarrassed as she nudged her half-full plate toward Regis. “There are only a couple of emitters in the whole city, and they were relying on me to be there. Besides, I’m sure you have your own business to attend to.”

Before I could respond, there was a gasp from Ellie. “Oh! That reminds me! I told Saria Triscan that I’d help relocate the elven refugees today. Most of them were temporarily housed on the lower levels, which were pretty badly damaged in the attack. We’re going to start moving them to more permanent places to stay,” she added by way of explanation as she pushed herself away from the table.

At the same time, there was a faint pop and the sudden presence of a large furry body shoved the table aside, nearing knocking Regis to the floor.

“Boo!” Ellie said, exasperated. “I’m not freaking in danger! And I’ve said not to poof into the rooms!”

The guardian bear grumbled, and Ellie’s eyes narrowed. “Don’t blame me. You interrupted your own nap by being so overprotective.” The bear let out a humming grunt that shook the plates on the table, which were pressed against his side.

Mom had squeezed around Boo, who was taking up a large percentage of the kitchen, but stopped to lean against the doorway arch and look at us all, smiling brightly. “I’ll see you both back home for dinner tonight, okay? I’ll cook.” Her smile faltered slightly, her brows knitting as her expression became apologetic. “Something warm this time.”

“Sounds amazing,” I said, giving her the warmest smile I could muster.

She returned it, waved, then vanished behind Boo’s bulk. I heard the suite door open and shut, then turned to Ellie. “Do you think she’s okay?”

Ellie was scratching Boo between the big mana beast’s eyes. “I haven’t seen her smile like that since Dad died.”

Without looking at me, she put her shoulder into Boo’s side and shoved. “Come on you big goof, we need to figure out how to squeeze you through the front door.” She stopped and threw a tentative look over her shoulder at me. “Do you…want to come with us? The refugees…they’ve had a hard time. Seeing you might make them feel better.”

I gave her an apologetic smile before shaking my head. “I would, El, but I have duties of my own to see to.” Things that need to be taken care of before I can leave, I almost added.

She rolled her eyes, but her smile was both good-natured and understanding. “Yeah, yeah, I know, there is so much saving the world to do right now, and only one big brother. Well…see you, then.”

Ellie slipped around Boo, who turned to inspect me thoughtfully, his face scrunched between his shoulder and the wall before grunting and turning to follow her. He nearly overturned the table, and then had to squeeze to fit through first the kitchen doorway, then the front door into the Earthborn Institute’s sprawling series of interconnected tunnels.

My smile slipped away. I looked longingly around the suite, wishing I could stay longer. The time with my family had been a much-needed reprieve from my duties, but time was against me, and there was still too much to do.

I’d spent most of the evening studying the empowering artifacts while my family had slept. The interplay between aether and mana around them was unlike anything I’d seen before, but it reminded me of the soul realm within the aether orb, where I’d trained with Kordri for so long. The artifacts didn’t contain an extrdimensional space, but they weren’t simply containers for massive quantities of mana, either. It was almost like Kezess had drawn in and contained potential, and by using the artifacts, that potential was expended into a living being.

It was a difficult concept to wrap my head around, but I was only at the beginning stages of understanding. I needed to see the artifacts in use, but without activating whatever power Rinia had seen destroying the continent.

“So,” Regis said, interrupting my thoughts. I could sense his contentment with his belly full of home-cooked food. “Relictombs for a top-off, then back to being the Triple Ds?”

“I…” I sputtered, rubbing a hand down my face, then turned to scowl at my companion. “What?”

“Dicathen’s Dynamic Duo. You know, me and you, the Triple Ds.”

Deciding it was best not to engage Regis on this front, I instead said, “No time for the Relictombs yet. First, we need to make sure we can leave Vildorial without it immediately falling to Agrona’s forces.”

I gave Ellie a minute or two head start, then followed her out the door. Instead of heading toward the exit, I went deeper down into the Earthborn Institute.

As I’d expected, I found Gideon, Emily, and their team of dwarven mages already at work.

The old inventor barely spared me a glance as I walked into the lab, clearly unsurprised to see me. “I only saw you sixteen hours ago, at least four of which I spent sleeping. Nothing has changed in the meantime, Arthur.”

Emily, who was bent over the crystal-topped staff with a pair of wands, waved one at me. It gave a shrill, humming whistle. She jumped, grinned sheepishly, and moved it back into place.

“Gideon, I need you to gather whatever manoutput monitoring equipment you can scrounge up,” I said. “Meet me by the Three Lakes fishing outpost in an hour.”

Gideon slowly set down the notes he was perusing, stuck a finger in his ear and dug around for a bit, then shook his head and gave me a sickly-sweet smile. “Forgive me, Arthur, but I’d swear it seems like you just marched into my laboratory and started giving me orders without context or consideration for projects already underway—projects I have been repeatedly informed are of the highest priority by you yourself.”

Looking him dead in the eye, I continued. “Emily, I need you to track down Lances Mica, Varay, and Bairon, and bring them to meet us.”

She tapped the wands together twice, then laid them carefully next to the staff. “Sure, no problem.” As she moved quickly past Gideon, she reached out and closed his mouth for him, which had been hanging open as he continued to stare at me.

He glared at her back as she headed out the door, but his attention quickly returned to me.

“This is more time sensitive than our other projects,” I said consolingly. “One hour, Gideon.”

“Bah,” he said, grumbling, but he started bustling around the lab grabbing things and throwing them onto an empty table. “An hour it is then. But why are you making me drag these old bones all the way down to Three Lakes?”

“See you there,” was all I said in response before turning and leaving the lab myself.

My feet carried me quickly out of the Earthborn Institute, down the winding highway, past the crews rebuilding the many structures destroyed in the Alacryan assault, and out one of the tunnels that connected to the city’s bottommost level.

‘Are you sure this is all going to work?’ Regis asked. He’d been silently stewing on my refusal to even acknowledge his suggested “team name” for us, but his irritation has finally settled into a kind of resigned agreement to simply disagree.

It has to, I thought, although we both felt my lack of surety in the process itself. We can’t fight a war from under the desert. We need to get out there and push back against the Alacryan forces inhabiting Dicathen.

These thoughts brushed up against a wall of hesitancy in my mind. Because, as much as I needed to leave, I also needed to stay. Vildorial was now the epicenter of the fight to reclaim Dicathen, and all the people of Sapin and Darv needed us. But everything I had done to keep the people of this city safe would be for naught if Agrona sent another attack while I was gone.

I needed the lances here to protect the city in my absence, and in order for them to do that, they needed to break through their current restraints.

The tunnels between Vildorial and the Three Lakes area were cool and lightly traveled, meaning I was left in peace to mull through what I hoped to accomplish.

Mostly, I organized my thoughts, trying to remember everything I had heard about both sets of asuran artifacts: those given to Dicathen’s kings to make Lances, and these new ones that, apparently, could make a mage strong enough to fight back against even the Scythes.

Ellie had told me everything she could about the conversations between Virion and Windsom, and then later Rinia and Virion. And of course, the old elf himself had explained the Lance artifacts to me when he made me a Lance, but there was still much I didn’t understand about how the asura had created them.

These and many other thoughts occupied my mind until the air grew heavy with moisture and the smell of the underground lakes filled the tunnels. Brine, algae, and the heady odor of giant mushrooms combined to create an otherworldly scent, like I was stepping out of Dicathen into a place older and more wild. The distant rumble of tumbling water could be felt through the floor soon after.

The tunnel was capped by a rough granite wall, but the gate through was open. Just inside it, several buildings huddled together around the edge of the first of the three lakes that gave this place its name. A stone pier ran along the edge, and a couple of square, flat-bottomed boats floated against it. But the outpost was empty today, as I had expected; most of Vildorial’s population was being kept in the city in case of another attack.

The cavern was enormous, even larger than the sanctuary. Although not as tall as the spiraling city of Vildorial, it stretched on and on, the first huge lake spilling into a second in a series of wide waterfalls, which in turn drained into the third almost a mile along the cavern.

As I walked between the empty buildings, I took it all in. Although the smell was something that would take some getting used to, there was an awe-inspiring sort of beauty to the place.

Regis jumped free of my body and strolled next to me. “Y’know, this almost reminds me of the Relictombs.”

“Maybe the djinn took inspiration from places like this,” I mused absently. “Or even created them.”

Along one edge of the lake, a forest of giant mushrooms sprouted up from mossy ground, and across from that, the cavern wall was patterned with striations of orange and white. Water drained across these salt deposits constantly, spilling into the lake and giving off the smell of brine I’d noticed before.

Deep in the dark water, bioluminescent creatures could be seen slowly trolling, like dim stars crossing the night sky.

It was, at least for a short time, a pleasant distraction.

But it wasn’t long before footsteps announced the arrival of the others, and the spell was broken.

The Lances arrived first, moving with purpose. Mica led them. Her one remaining eye locked onto me the moment she crossed the threshold into the cave, just as hard as the black stone that inhabited the scarred socket of the eye Taci had ruined. Although at ease in the tunnels of her home, there was something missing from Mica; she had lost more than an eye when Aya died.

Varay was just behind her, towering over the dwarf, as stoic and unreadable as always. Her short white hair seemed to glow in the diffused light of the underground world, giving her a mystical air. Her conjured arm of magical ice was fixed and unmoving, but her flesh-and-blood hand fidgeted with a constant nervous energy, subtly undermining her otherwise indomitable presence.

Finally, Bairon entered a few yards behind them. His gaze trailed behind his companions’ heels, unseeing, or rather, seeing something other than uneven ground. I wondered where his thoughts were, what invisible scene was playing out before his unfocused eyes that made him frown so deeply.

I stood on the pier, Regis sitting on his haunches beside me, and waited for them to come to us.

Varay spoke first. “I hope you haven’t brought us all the way down here just to take us fishing,” she said, focusing on one of the boats floating behind me.

I gave a quiet laugh, drawing uncertain looks from the other Lances. “I actually learned to hone my reflexes and adjust my perception by catching fish with my bare hands when I was just a boy in…” I caught myself and let the thought trail off. “Anyway, no, I think you’re all well past that point in your training.”

“We are here for you to train us then?” Mica asked, raising a brow and crossing her arms. “The Watsken girl was a little light on the details when she delivered your summons.”

“Not a summons,” I corrected gently, “an invitation. I think you all understand what is happening, what is at stake. When Agrona sent his Wraiths after me, he must have thought they were more than enough to capture or kill me, and likewise that two Scythes and a retainer would be able to regain control of Vildorial and mop up the rest of the resistance against him.”

“And it would have been,” Mica added, scowling. “Despite giving everything we had, all we could do was hold them off for a time. Without Bairon’s new weapon, we wouldn’t have lasted even as long as we did.”

“You think he’ll escalate again?” Varay asked, her fingers tapping constantly against her thigh.

“He will.” I began to pace back and forth in front of the three Lances, their eyes following me warily. “My defeat of the Wraiths and subsequent attack on Alacryan soil might give him pause, but not for long.” I stopped pacing suddenly, forcefully containing my nervous energy. “Although I stopped any of the Wraiths from returning to him with information, the fact that I was even able to kill them has given him a better understanding of my power.”

I took a moment to collect my thoughts, then said, “The truth is, you three just aren’t strong enough to protect this city without me.”

Varay went stiff as an ice statue. Her face didn’t betray her emotions, but the others were less capable of masking their surprise and frustration.

Mica ground her teeth and inadvertently made herself so heavy that the smooth, slightly slick stones of the pier cracked beneath her.

Bairon slammed the butt of his spear against the ground and stood tall, looking at me defiantly and reminding me firmly of his old self. “We can be, Arthur. And I assume you know that, otherwise you wouldn’t have brought us here.”

“I hope you’re right, Bairon,” I said, softening my tone. “Because, if you aren’t, then I don’t know how we can reclaim our homeland, defeat Agrona, and prevent any further assaults by Kezess Indrath.”

“Then let’s not waste any more time,” Bairon said, his chin turning up as his pride struggled against my words. “I will fight until my core cracks and my muscles give out if it will offer a chance at breaking past the barriers placed on us as Lances. Just tell us what you want us to do, Arthur.”

Not long ago, I would have marveled at the idea that the noble Bairon Wykes was so willing and open to following my lead, but even in my short time back, I could see just how much he had matured. The war had forged him into a true leader in a way neither of us could have expected, especially after his near-death at Cadell’s hands.

“Thank you, Bairon, but this won’t be that kind of training,” I said.

Before they could ask questions, we all heard the grumbling approach of Gideon as he came through the open gate with Emily tottering along beside him underneath a pile of equipment. He wrinkled up his nose, presumably at the smell, and radiated pure irritation. “What in all the worlds you think we need to be down in this abyss for, I’ll never know.”

“Now that we’re all here, let’s get started,” I said, gesturing for everyone to follow me.

We circled around the edge of the lake until we were under the broad purple, green, and blue caps of the giant mushrooms. Varay and I—and, to a lesser extent, Regis, who insisted on dragging a single leather satchel—helped Emily carry the equipment, then set it out on a series of flat boulders after Emily made a fuss of clearing the dirt and moss off. I directed the three Lances to take seats in the thick moss next to the still water of the lake.

While Gideon and Emily set about the task of readying their equipment, I addressed the Lances. “If we hope to break through the artificial barriers placed on you, we need to better understand them. The blood oaths you made don’t inherently limit your ability to grow stronger, that is something Kezess Indrath did when he originally gave Dicathen the Lance artifacts, and I can tell you exactly why, because I’ve seen Agrona do the same thing to his people.

“They’ve seen what lessers are capable of. They know we can reach far beyond them, given the chance.” I told them about the djinn, how they had gained insight into aether and mana beyond even what the dragons could do, and how, when Kezess couldn’t force them to share that insight, he had destroyed them.

Mica cursed. Bairon frowned thoughtfully down at his knees. Varay’s eyes were glued to me as she hung on every word I said.

“The asura expect—demand—control above all else. The Vritra Clan breeds people like mana beasts, while Indrath just plays god from afar, poking and prodding our societies into the shape he desires, then, like a rageful toddler, knocking all his toys down if he gets upset.

“In giving Dicathen the Lance artifacts, Kezess assured that certain family lineages were kept safe and politically powerful while actively declining in magical strength—the true power of this world. He did this by giving them you. Powerful protectors that were bound by blood oath from betraying them. And yet still, to keep any one person or nation from growing too strong magically, he prevented you from getting powerful enough to be a threat to the asura clans.

“Agrona had a finer line to walk. He needed soldiers who could fight asura, whether that be the other clans still in Epheotus or his own people if they thought to turn against him. But he had to be certain they couldn’t ever grow strong enough to challenge him, and so he became the ultimate arbiter of who gets magic in Alacrya.

“The truth is, the asura don’t want us to make progress because they see it as an existential threat to their own dominion.”

Something made a splash in the middle of the lake, the ripples slowly moving outward and disrupting the mirror-like surface.

Varay adjusted herself on the mossy ground. “You’ve spent more time with the asura than any of us, Arthur. We trust your judgment on this issue, but it does beg the question: what do we do about it?”

I held my hand out to her. She took it, and I pulled her to her feet. “I didn’t see it before, but the first dragon I ever met hinted at what was coming, and what the answer would be. She left a message embedded in the mana of my core, but told me I would only hear it when I had reached beyond white core. It was a temptation she knew I couldn’t resist, a way to push me to a level far beyond what most mages would ever achieve.”

“And did you?” Varay asked, her hand a frigid claw around mine. “Is that how you gained your aetheric powers?”

I shook my head. “My core shattered, releasing the message before its time, and my chance of passing beyond white core is gone. But”—I activated Realmheart, seeing the reflection of the glowing lavender runes on the surface of Varay’s eyes—“yours isn’t, and I believe Kezess himself has given us the key to unshackle your true potential.”

A/N: ICYMI: I wanted to leave a friendly reminder that there will be no chapter update next week!

I will be spending the next week preparing—both emotionally and physically—for Emerald City Comic Con, where I hope to meet some of my readers there. ^^

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Catalogue
Chapter 459
Chapter 457
Chapter 453
Chapter 451
Chapter 450
Chapter 449
Chapter 447
Chapter 446
Chapter 445
Chapter 444
Chapter 443
Chapter 442
Chapter 441
Chapter 440
Chapter 437
Chapter 436
Chapter 435
Chapter 429
Chapter 428
Chapter 427
Chapter 426
Chapter 425
Chapter 424
Chapter 423
Chapter 422
Chapter 421
Chapter 420
Chapter 418
Chapter 404
Chapter 403
Chapter 399
Chapter 397
Chapter 395
Chapter 394
Chapter 393
Chapter 392
Chapter 391
Chapter 390
Chapter 389
Chapter 388
Chapter 387
Chapter 386
Chapter 385
Chapter 384
Chapter 383
Chapter 382
Chapter 381
Chapter 380
Chapter 378
Chapter 377
Chapter 375
Chapter 374.5
Chapter 374
Chapter 373
Chapter 372
Chapter 371
Chapter 370
Chapter 369
Chapter 368
Chapter 367
Chapter 366
Chapter 365
Chapter 364
Chapter 363
Chapter 261
Chapter 260
Chapter 259
Chapter 258
Chapter 257
Chapter 256
Chapter 255
Chapter 254
Chapter 253
Chapter 252
Chapter 251
Chapter 250
Chapter 249
Chapter 248
Chapter 247
Chapter 246
Chapter 245
Chapter 244
Chapter 243
Chapter 242
Chapter 241
Chapter 240
Chapter 239
Chapter 238
Chapter 237
Chapter 236
Chapter 235
Chapter 234
Chapter 233
Chapter 232
Chapter 231
Chapter 230
Chapter 229
Chapter 228
Chapter 227
Chapter 226
Chapter 225
Chapter 224
Chapter 223
Chapter 222
Chapter 221
Chapter 220
Chapter 219
Chapter 218
Chapter 217
Chapter 216
Chapter 215
Chapter 214
Chapter 213
Chapter 212
Chapter 211
Chapter 210
Chapter 209
Chapter 208
Chapter 207
Chapter 206
Chapter 205
Chapter 204
Chapter 203
Chapter 202
Chapter 201
Chapter 200
Chapter 199
Chapter 198
Chapter 197
Chapter 196
Chapter 195
Chapter 194
Chapter 193
Chapter 192
Chapter 191
Chapter 190
Chapter 189
Chapter 188
Chapter 187
Chapter 186
Chapter 185
Chapter 184
Chapter 183
Chapter 182
Chapter 181
Chapter 180
Chapter 179
Chapter 178
Chapter 177
Chapter 176
Chapter 175
Chapter 174
Chapter 173
Chapter 172
Chapter 171
Chapter 170
Chapter 169
Chapter 168
Chapter 167
Chapter 166
Chapter 165
Chapter 164
Chapter 163
Chapter 162
Chapter 161
Chapter 160
Chapter 159
Chapter 158
Chapter 157
Chapter 156
Chapter 155
Chapter 154
Chapter 153
Chapter 152
Chapter 151
Chapter 150
Chapter 149
Chapter 148
Chapter 147
Chapter 146
Chapter 145
Chapter 144
Chapter 143
Chapter 142
Chapter 141
Chapter 140
Chapter 139
Chapter 138
Chapter 137
Chapter 136
Chapter 135
Chapter 134
Chapter 133
Chapter 132
Chapter 131
Chapter 130
Chapter 129
Chapter 128
Chapter 127
Chapter 126
Chapter 125
Chapter 124
Chapter 123
Chapter 122
Chapter 121
Chapter 120
Chapter 119
Chapter 118
Chapter 117
Chapter 116
Chapter 115
Chapter 114
Chapter 113
Chapter 112 - Newfound Goal
Chapter 111 - Good Night
Chapter 110 - The Lost Art
Chapter 109 - Snail's Pace
Chapter 108 - Ones Closest To Gods
Chapter 107 - A Grudging Tolerance
Chapter 106 - Logic's Biggest Foe
Chapter 105 - When Ignorance Is Bliss
Chapter 104 - The Great Eight
Chapter 103 - Peculiar Congregation
Chapter 102 - Chess Pieces
Chapter 101 - Visitors
Chapter 100 - Intentions
Chapter 99 - Fellow Captive
Chapter 98 - Floating Castle
Chapter 97 - Outcome
Chapter 96 - The Storm
Chapter 95 - The Calm Before
Chapter 94 - Arrival
Chapter 93 - Chosen Ones
Chapter 92 - Bird's Cage
Chapter 91 - Collapse of Xyrus
Chapter 90 - The Start
Chapter 89 - A Cursed Blessing
Chapter 88 - A Stroll
Chapter 87 - A Will's Unwillingness
Chapter 86 - Winding Down
Chapter 85 - Elven Kingdom
Chapter 84 - Lineage
Chapter 83 - A Greater Scale
Chapter 82 - Benefactor
Chapter 81 - At Last
Chapter 80 - Meanwhile III
Chapter 79 - Meanwhile II
Chapter 78 - Meanwhile
Chapter 77 - Allies?
Chapter 76 - Good To See You
Chapter 75 - Manifest Destinies
Chapter 74 - Order Of Power
Chapter 73 - A Will's Last Breath
Chapter 72 - One Fallen
Chapter 71 - A Confusing Day
Chapter 70 - Course of Breakthrough
Chapter 69 - An Unfamiliar Burden
Chapter 68 - Widow's Crypt V
Chapter 67 - Widow's Crypt IV
Chapter 66 - Widow's Crypt III
Chapter 65 - Widow's Crypt II
Chapter 64 - Widow's Crypt
Chapter 63 - Field Trip
Chapter 62 - Baby Steps
Chapter 61 - My Team
Chapter 60 - Romantic Idiot
Chapter 59 - Confrontation
Chapter 58 - First Day At The Job
Chapter 57 - Feelings and Old Memories
Chapter 56 - Family Gathering
Chapter 55 - This Is Going To Hurt
Chapter 54 - Match Start
Chapter 53 - It's a Pleasure
Chapter 52 - Classes and Professors III
Chapter 51 - Classes and Professors II
Chapter 50 - Classes and Professors
Chapter 49 - Disciplinary Committee
Chapter 48 - Reminisce
Chapter 47 - Attention
Chapter 46 - Wiser Than The Wise
Chapter 45 - Not Quite As Planned
Chapter 44 - You Dare?
Chapter 43 - Xyrus Academy
Chapter 42 - A Ball II
Chapter 41 - A Ball
Chapter 40 - I'm Not That Nice
Chapter 39 - New Winds
Chapter 38 - Introspection
Chapter 37 - In the Meantime
Chapter 36 - A Son, Brother, and Friend
Chapter 35 - Precautions
Chapter 34 - Rash Actions and Limits
Chapter 33 - Dire Tombs III
Chapter 32 - Dire Tombs II
Chapter 31 - Dire Tombs
Chapter 30 - Last Leg
Chapter 29 - Sword and Body
Chapter 28 - Changes In Dicathen
Chapter 27 - Examination
Chapter 26 - Worth Fighting For
Chapter 25 - Partners In Crime
Chapter 24 - Aftermath
Chapter 23 - Auction
Chapter 22 - Royalty
Chapter 21 - For Them
Chapter 20 - Everybody Wins
Chapter 19 - Proclamation
Chapter 18 - Peaceful
Chapter 17 - Family
Chapter 16 - Companion
Chapter 15 - Next Step
Chapter 14 - What's to Come
Chapter 13 - Q & A
Chapter 12 - Meeting
Chapter 11 - To and Fro
Chapter 10 - Road Ahead
Chapter 9 - The Ones Held Dear
Chapter 8 - Questions
Chapter 7 - How I Wished
Chapter 6 - Up the Mountain
Chapter 5 - Let the Journey Begin
Chapter 4 - My Life Now
Chapter 3 - Head Start
Chapter 2 - The Encyclopedia of Mana Manipulation
Chapter 1 - The Light at the End of the Tunnel
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C478
C477
C476
C475
C474
C473
C472
C471
C470
C469
C468
C467
C466
C465
C464
C463
C462
C461
C460
C458
C456
C455
C454
C452
C448
C439 Holding Ground
C438 A Broken Path
C434 Fellowship Forged
C433 Respect and Regards
C432 Overdue
C431 Time
C430 Opposition
C419– One of Mine
C417
C416
C415
C414
C413
C412
C411
C410
C409
C408
C407
C406
C405
Chapter 402
Chapter 401
Chapter 400
Chapter 398
C396
Chapter 379
Chapter 376
Chapter 362
Chapter 361
Chapter 360
Chapter 359
Chapter 358
Chapter 357
Chapter 356
Chapter 355
Chapter 354
Chapter 353
Chapter 352
Chapter 351
Chapter 350
Chapter 349
Chapter 348
Chapter 347
Chapter 346 A Dim Spark
Chapter 345 Socialite
Chapter 344 Eyes Locked
Chapter 343 Professor Princess
Chapter 342 Duality
Chapter 341 Ashes and Dust
Chapter 340 Burden and Stakes
Chapter 339 The Central Dominion
Chapter 338 A Weapon Against Him
Chapter 337– Layers
Chapter 336– Protection
Chapter 335– Haunting Peace
Chapter 334– Last Mercy
Chapter 333– Attention
Chapter 332– Broken Chains
Chapter 331– The Trial
Chapter 330
Chapter 329– A Plea for Help
Chapter 328 Face to Face
Chapter 327 Enough For Now
Chapter 326 Backlash
Chapter 325 Painless
Chapter 324
Chapter 323
Chapter 322
Chapter 321
Chapter 320
Chapter 319
Chapter 318
Chapter 317
Chapter 316
Chapter 315
Chapter 314
Chapter 313
Chapter 312
Chapter 311
Chapter 310
Chapter 309
Chapter 308
Chapter 307
Chapter 306
Chapter 305
Chapter 304
Chapter 303
Chapter 302
Chapter 301
Chapter 300
Chapter 299
Chapter 298
Chapter 297
Chapter 296
Chapter 295
Chapter 294
Chapter 293
Chapter 292
Chapter 291
Chapter 290
Chapter 289
Chapter 288
Chapter 287
Chapter 286
Chapter 285
Chapter 284
Chapter 283
Chapter 282
Chapter 281
Chapter 280
Chapter 279
Chapter 278
Chapter 277
Chapter 276
Chapter 275
Chapter 274
Chapter 273
Chapter 272
Chapter 271
Chapter 270
Chapter 269
Chapter 268
Chapter 267
Chapter 266
Chapter 265
Chapter 264
Chapter 263
Chapter 262
Chapter 79.5
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