Regina moved through the hallways of the royal castle with a stride in her steps.
The castle breathed differently now. She felt it in the air. Everything felt… charged. Maids were rushing past her, clutching trays and bolts of cloth, bowing so quickly that they nearly dropped whatever they were carrying.
Their hands visibly shook, and their eyes darted up at her before snapping down again.
They feared her, yes, but not the small, passing fear of yesteryears . This was heavier. A fear that lingered, that acknowledged her as more than a queen—acknowledged her as the one who decided how the kingdom lived or broke.
The guards lining the hallways were the same. It was quite the sight to see, especially when whenever their gazes flicked toward her, they revealed the reverence and the uneasiness that made her almost smile. It had always been there in pieces, the uneasiness of knowing that they stood before one of the strongest people in the kingdom. But now, it was more evident; especially because they knew that soon, she would decide everything in the kingdom. Once she removed some parasites who thought they’re better than her.
At her side, Selwin spoke, garnering her attention. “According to our spies, Thalric has captured another fort. His soldiers are pushing further every day.”
Regina’s eyes stayed forward. She had expected this. “That brute was born to break walls,” she said.
“Aldrin has been seen meeting with foreign powers. He is trying to weave ties.”
“As if paper shields could stop our army.”
“Well, Arzan, your majesty. He stood before his city yesterday. Declared openly that he will claim the throne. The people cheered him over and there’s almost a festival in his territory.”
Regina gave a nod, and felt like the words were no surprise. She had seen them coming the day of the Assembly; where all of her horrible nightmares came true.
Now, they didn’t matter, not at all. What mattered now was what would happen in the near future—the coronation.
Full preparations were ongoing.
The dais was being raised, the banners prepared, the choir readied. She had walked past the courtyard earlier and seen it all, from carpenters to servants to seamstresses. All of it was for her son.
Her son, who would wear the crown. Her son, who would sit where his father once had.
And herself—she would be the one behind the throne, the hand that shaped the kingdom’s breath. The kingmaker.
She smiled at the scenario as Selwin continued his report, her attention only coming back to him when he reached the news about the coronation.
“As you instructed, Your Highness,” Selwin said in a low but careful voice, “the parade after the coronation will pass through every affluent quarter of the capital. The speech will be given just after the coronation. We will declare the other princes and Arzan traitors. Our men will be in every house and on every rooftop—watching for miscreants.
“We do not expect trouble,” he added. “Veridia fled the city. We don’t know where she is, but she is the only one I’d fear trying to harm the prince.”
Regina’s shoulders did not move. She only nodded once, small and sure. “And the attendees?” she asked.
“All the nobles who back us have agreed to send sons — first sons are called, but many will be sending second sons saying that the first is needed in the front,” Selwin answered. “Many claim they must stay to raise armies, but their families will come in their place.”
“Fools,” she said. “They believe their sons will return to their homes after the week is done. Make certain the heralds send this in ink and on seal: if any of those nobles disappoint me, or even think to harm my son’s reign, they will be sent their son’s head.”
Selwin nodded and rolled his papers back into order and moved onto the next sheet. “The choir master will rehearse at dawn. The eastern chapel’s draperies will be checked twice. The captains request positions for noble banners along the procession, and the steward asks if the feast should serve three courses or four.”
Regina listened to everything and gave replies where it was needed. Every small item was a stitch in a garment she was sewing for a single shape: her son on a throne. In another life, when she might have acted colder and quicker, the other princes would have been buried and Arzan crushed long before. That time had not come. But the crown would. Her son would sit beneath it, and she would stand where the world could not ignore her hand. She would make sure of that.
She had waited, patient as stone, to see how the others would move before she struck. Yet when their pieces slid across the board, they did so exactly as she had expected—so plain, so predictable, it was almost comical. Hilarious, even. Now the time for waiting was over. The next month would go according to her design, step by step, and she would not allow a single hand to shift the pattern.
Once her attendant had gone through everything, they walked on in silence, her stride steady, Selwin’s steps half a beat behind. The rhythm of their march carried them through corridor after corridor, until Regina stopped before the entrance of another hallway.
Months ago, this place had bristled with guards. No one had been able to pass through without having an official summon. Now the doorway stood open, unguarded, as though anyone could wander in.
Selwin paused beside her. “Do you want me to go inside with you, Your Highness?” he asked.
Regina shook her head.
“I want him to hear what is happening from me. A couple deserves their private time, don’t you think?”
“As you wish, Your highness,” Selwin bowed his head deep and low and took a single step behind.
Regina drew in a quiet breath and moved into the hallway.
The air felt different here, still, heavy with dust and memory. Taking the castle itself had been easier than she had once imagined after that Assembly. Her husband had seen it in her eyes—that she would burn everything to ash if it meant claiming power—and instead of fighting, he had retreated on his own. There were many flaws in Sullivan, countless weaknesses, but he had always known one thing: when to surrender. When a battle was already lost. It was a skill Regina despised in herself, but one she had come to appreciate in her enemies.
She walked slowly now, the click of her heels echoing in the lonely passage. These were halls she had known for years, chambers she had once entered with her head bent and her hands folded. The tapestries were still on the walls, the old rugs still dulled with the same stains, but everything seemed… drained. Bleaker. As if even the stones carried defeat.
A thought twisted in her mind: how would he be taking this? Hollowed and colorless? Would his eyes be as tired as the walls? Or would he be rageful?
But when she stepped into the open garden, the answer cut against her expectations.
There, crouched among the flowerbeds, was Sullivan. His hair caught the late light, his back was bent in simple focus. He held a clay pot in one hand, tipping it carefully so the water trickled down into the soil at the base of a plant. A small smile rested on his face, so gentle, so utterly out of place in the shadow of a crumbling kingdom. He even spoke with his Knight, Roderic who stood on his side.
Regina’s lips parted slightly, but no words came. This was not the sight she had prepared herself for.
Had he given up on everything? She thought of the Assembly, of the way he had folded when the room turned. She had known he feared loss. She had also known, once, that he would go down with the house he built rather than watch it burn. Now he seemed to have chosen something else—quiet, ease, the little mercies of a life that refused to be sharp. He had tried, once, to keep her from taking everything. Had he really accepted defeat?
Sullivan straightened suddenly, wiping his hands on his trousers, and turned toward her as if he had only just noticed the cold line of her shadow. “I thought I felt a gaze on me,” he said. “What brings you here? I thought you were too busy planning your son’s coronation.”
Regina curled her lips. “I’m always busy,” she said and paused, watching him as if testing the air. “So you’ve heard news from outside?”
“No. It’s just the most basic conclusion. When is it?” he asked.
“This week,” Regina said. She put the fact down flat, like a tile. “You need to be there, Sullivan. You must put the crown on him. He needs to be seen as the legitimate heir you have chosen.”
He blinked, and for a moment the garden seemed to lean in to listen. “But I haven’t chosen him,” Sullivan said quietly.
“Do you think your opinion matters?” She said, her voice sharp. “You will do what I say. It will be easiest for us all.”
For a few heartbeats he said nothing. Regina felt the familiar battle map unroll between them: her plans, her threats, the old, thin lines where things could break. She had prepared for his refusal. She had imagined arguing until her throat was dry, imagined calling men, imagined using threats that left no doubt whose hand held the blade.
Instead Sullivan exhaled a small breath and looked resigned. “Okay,” he said. “I will be there.”
Regina nearly lost her words and pressed for why, but she did not ask. Her face remained a flat mask. Inside, a quick, sharp satisfaction moved through her like light through a slit. Outside, nothing changed.
“Even if I don’t think Eldric is suited to be king,” he continued, “I’ll be there. I might even advise him.”
Regina’s mouth made a thin line “You won’t be talking to him,” she said. “Or to anyone.”
“That’s a shame. He would have done well with my advice.”
“You can’t give advice, when your choices have left you nothing more than a prisoner in your own house.”
Sullivan’s laugh was quieter this time, edged with something that might have been pity. “True,” he admitted. “But not all my choices are sealed. Some still hang in the air. Maybe they will save me.”
“Arzan won’t be able to do anything this time,” she said. “He might be a strong Mage and had loyal subordinates, but it takes far more to win a civil war, and I will make sure he dies a cold death.”
Sullivan looked at her then. For the first time, something sparked in his eyes. “You have always underestimated your opponents,” he said as if it was a fact. “It has worked for you—strength, schemes, the slow turning of people’s loyalties. But you have grown used to winning because others were weaker. Now you meet someone who is not easily broken, and you call their success luck or the incompetence of your subordinates. Don’t rely on that habit. I want nothing more than to see you dead, Regina. Still, take that one piece of advice.”
She snapped instantly and frowned. “I don’t take advice from men who are going to be dead soon.”
Sullivan’s mouth twitched. “Then enjoy your certainty while you can,” he said softly. “Enjoy your last days of being sure.”
Regina turned back, knowing the conversation had come to an end.
Sullivan’s words rang inside of her. The sound of it made an off-key note in the corner of her mind. She felt it, then brushed it away the way one shakes water from a sleeve.
But it came back. She walked while her head was filled with thoughts of just one thing; that she might be wrong. She could have turned, asked for the why of his warning, stripped his words to the bone. She did not. Doubt was dangerous when nursed in public. Better to bury it under action.
By the time she reached the corridor where Selwin waited, the garden conversation had already faded from her mind. She was capable. She had always been capable of handling everything.
And she would do the same this time.
***
Kai moved through Balen’s workshop, the heat pressing against his face like a second skin. The forges roared on both sides of him, belching smoke and fire, while men darted back and forth with armfuls of metal, wood, and glowing crystals. Everywhere he looked, something was being shaped for war—swords stacked like grain, shields piled high, spears bristling from racks. Cannons lined one wall, half-assembled, their barrels glinting red with fresh polish. Drones buzzed overhead in their testing frames, while in a corner, smaller golems stomped in rigid, awkward steps under the eyes of tired workers.
It was chaos, but it was the kind of chaos born of purpose. The kind that thrummed with urgency. No one stopped to greet him, no one even noticed him as he moved deeper inside. That was perfect. Kai didn’t want to interrupt the rhythm. Since his announcement, the entire city—and the castle above it—had shifted into a different pace with everyone working harder to prepare for war.
But weapons were as equally important as people. Destructive artifacts even more so. But what had brought Kai here today mattered more than swords or cannons. He was here to check if Balen had succeeded with what they had discussed. If he had, it could decide not just the outcome of one battle, but the whole war.
He passed through heavy doors, into narrower passages where the noise didn’t fade but deepened, echoing. The shouting grew clearer the closer he came, one voice rising above all the rest—Balen’s. The blacksmith’s tone was sharp, commanding, yet layered with a strange enthusiasm that could cut through the exhaustion of men.
Kai finally reached the gate of the main chamber. Even before his hand touched the door, the hammering rattled through it. He pushed it open and froze.
The sight inside was more impressive than he had imagined.
In the center of the chamber stood three massive figures—metallic giants towering above the workers that swarmed around their feet. Blacksmiths hammered at plates the size of wagon doors, sparks spilling down like fiery rain. Chains rattled from the ceiling as cranes hoisted heavy parts into place, slotting them into frames that groaned under their own weight.
The golems loomed over everything. If Sentinel had been imposing, these would dwarf it. Their frames shouldered upward like towers of steel, each fitted with monstrous arms ending in siege weapons—hammers thick enough to splinter walls, drills meant to bore through stone, claws that could drag down gates. Their eyes—still empty sockets for now—glared hollowly at the chamber, as if waiting for the spark of life to turn them from iron statues into war machines.
The room shook with every strike of the hammers. And even the air reek of metal.
Kai’s lips parted slightly. For the first time in weeks, something cut through his carefully kept calm. These weren’t weapons. These were moving fortresses.
And if they worked as Balen promised, they would change everything.
He kept staring until Balen’s voice cut through the hammering.
“Impressive, isn’t it, Lord Arzan. I call them siege breakers. You’ll take forts easier with them. I guarantee that.”
The room quieted for a breath. Heads lifted; hammers hung in midair. A few men dared a look his way, but Balen’s glare snapped the noise back into motion. “Back to work!” the minotaur barked, and the rhythm resumed as if someone had struck a drum.
Kai let the sound wash over him. “They are impressive. Are these the only three you can deliver?”
Balen’s brow folded. “Yes.” He spat the word, then added, as if counting in his head, “If Tharnok helps, maybe a fourth. But he’s tied up overseeing the new designs—those new guard drones you asked for.” He glanced at the ceiling where a small swarm of testers buzzed. “Those are easier to make than these hulks.”
Kai’s mouth tightened. He had expected this. “Three are more than enough,” he said. “We have other means to break walls.”
He let the sentence hang and then shifted his weight so their eyes met. The noise of the workshop blurred; only Balen’s face stayed sharp. “I’m not here for the golems.”
Balen’s grin spread. “Are they ready?” Kai asked.
“They are. Drones that explode—those are child’s work compared to this. You really gave me a great design with great seal work, Lord Arzan. You will be happy to see them.”
“Where are they?”
“In my office.” Balen said, then turned and fixed the workers with one last glare. “Make sure at least one of them is done before I come back. Understood?”
A chorus of murmured “Yes, master” followed. Balen hooked an elbow under Kai’s arm like a man guiding a guest. They moved through a long passage that smelled of oil and hot iron—corridors lined with half-made shields, racks of spears, a wall where hundreds of blueprints were pinned like a city map. Kai let his hands brush the cool metal as they passed. He remembered when this place had been a small forge and two rooms. Now it swallowed whole workshops and still grew.
That was a change he welcomed.
The steps changed pitch as they walked: nearer to the office the shouting thinned and the air turned cleaner, carrying faint aromas of ink and cooled steel. Balen pushed open a heavy door with a shoulder and stepped into a room lit by a single window. On the desk, sitting like a bird atop a pile of papers, was the thing Kai had come for.
Balen’s smile widened until the corners of his eyes crinkled. “That’s the messenger drone,” he said, as if introducing an old friend.
***
A/N – You can read 30 chapters (15 Magus Reborn and 15 Dao of money) on my patreon. Annual subscription is now on too.
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Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- 372. Right time to attack
- 370. Always a plan
- 369. Vast plane
- 368. Showing off strength
- 367. Magus Reborn
- 366. A trek through the plane.
- 365. Earth plane
- 364. Space between realms
- 363. Ritual
- 362. Moving pieces
- 361. Coming to an agreement
- 360. Old enemies
- 359. A letter to help
- 358. Finding an old enemy (2)
- 357. Finding an old enemy (1)
- 356. The last two cores
- 355. Better than Mages (3)
- 354. Better than Mages (2)
- 353. Better than Mages (1)
- 352. Hunting the elementals (3)
- 351. Hunting the elementals (2)
- 350. Hunting elementals (1)
- 349. Requirements for the ritual
- 348. Earth plane
- 347. Death ritual
- 346. Burning ashes
- 345. Burning Sylvastra (1)
- 344. Research and planes
- 343. Journey to Veralt
- 342. High humans
- 341. Diary
- 340. Return to Valkyrie Tower
- Dao of Money is Out!
- 339. Long live the king (3)
- 338. Long live the king (2)
- 337. Long live the king (1)
- 336. Do you want to marry her?
- 335. Graveyard of grief
- 334. One meeting to change (2)
- hi guys
- 333. One meeting to change (1)
- 332. Aftermath of civil war
- 331. Soulspace
- 330. End of the princes
- 329. The queen’s end
- 328. Purging dead mana
- 327. A knight’s duty
- 326. To end it all (3)
- 325. To end it all (2)
- 324. To end it all (1)
- 323. A king’s final move
- 322. Bad parenting
- 321. Final bits of ember
- 320. Retreat
- 319. Winning the west
- 318. Victory is Never Clean
- 317. Exploding castle
- 316. Breaking walls
- 315. How about getting a wife?
- 314. Signs of Rebel
- 313. A little trap
- 312. Testing the wand
- 311. Wand creation
- 310. Being a spy
- 309. War reports
- 308. Fort runs
- 307. A drink
- 306. Rebellious
- 305. Ways of power
- 304. Kraels
- 303. King of the north
- 302. Elias and a favour
- 301. Killing a prince
- 300. Mage vs array (2)
- 299. Mage vs array (1)
- 298. Mage arrays
- 297. Vhailor
- 296. Selenia
- 295. Cousinly tensions
- 294. No place to run
- 293. Mage killer
- 292. Siege of Solmere
- 291. Watcher’s Worth
- 290. Tent tactics
- 289. Helpless
- 288. Cloudy
- 287. I’m sorry, son
- 286. The plan (2)
- 285. The plan (1)
- 284. Messengers
- 283. Coronation
- 282. Against tyranny
- 281. State of the kingdom
- 280. Desire of conquest
- 279. Merchant in War (Volume 5 starts)
- Magus Reborn – Volume 3 is Out Now!
- Volume 4 Epilogue 2
- Volume 4 Epilogue 1
- 278. Princes
- 277. Votes
- 276. Assembly (3)
- 275. Assembly (2)
- 274. Assembly (1)
- 273. Prelude to Assembly
- 272. Strongest Mage in the kingdom
- 271. Duel of the century (3)
- 270. Duel of the century (2)
- 269. Duel of the century (1)
- 268. Princely spectators
- 267. Prince meddling
- 266. Slave
- 265. Challenge in webs
- 264. Balcony talks
- 263. Handling nobles
- 262. Neither Ahead, Neither Behind
- 261. Carrot, stick and spells (1)
- 260. Long awaited
- 259. Thorny queen
- 258. Garden walk
- 257. Invitation of death
- 256. Mad King prelude
- 255. Opposite ends of same coin
- 254. The tale of a bard
- 253. Healing lands
- 252. Sand funerals
- 251. Library of artifacts
- 250. Not about present, but future
- 249. Blood brothers
- 248. Astral fight
- 247. Revenge
- 246. Valkyrie’s Tower (5)
- 245. Valkyrie’s Tower (4)
- 244. Valkyrie’s Tower (3)
- 243. Valkyrie’s Tower (2)
- 242. Valkyrie’s Tower (1)
- 241. Meeting of the tribes
- 240. Honour in death
- 239. Taking prisoners
- 238. Storm in the sand
- 237. Knocking at gates
- 236. One against five
- 235. A declaration
- 234. Information is vital
- 233. The desert city
- 232. Taking down orcs
- 231. Desert beasts
- 230. Champion of Belkhor
- 229. Tunneling
- 228. Briefing of assembly
- 227. Duneborns
- 226. Mana ball (almost 4k words chapter)
- 225. Back Home
- 224. Heroes returning
- 223. Saving a kingdom
- 222. Next circle
- 221. Taking down a tree
- 220. Treant (2)
- 219. Treant (1)
- 218. The Knight that Ascended
- 217. Facing hell
- 216. Merchant’s gift
- 215. Ally or foe
- 214. Elias
- 213. Blessings
- 212. Border town shenanigans
- 211. Plague lands (1)
- 210. March
- Chapter 209. Green triumphs caution
- Chapter 208. Faith
- Chapter 207. Treant
- Chapter 206. Fort Aegis
- Chapter 205. Astral discovery (2)
- Chapter 204. Astral discovery (1)
- Chapter 203. Plague on the door
- Chapter 202. A lesson in spells
- Chapter 201. Silvren
- Chapter 200. A Princess’ favour
- Chapter 199. Assassin Killer
- Chapter 198. Invaders
- Chapter 197. Circles and princess
- Chapter 196. Experiments with dead mana
- Magus Reborn Volume Chapter 1 is out on Amazon!
- Chapter 195. POV of a flaming knight
- Chapter 194. Berserkers
- Chapter 193. Targeting the youth
- Chapter 192. Assembly
- Stub Announcement
- Chapter 191. Caged birds
- Volume Chapter 4 Chapter 190.
- Volume Chapter 3 Epilogue 1
- Chapter 190 184. Vs Shakran
- Chapter 189 183. War speech
- Chapter 188 182. Prelude to the climax
- Chapter 187 181. Kraken's meal
- Chapter 186 180. Taking out nobles (2)
- Chapter 185 179. Taking out nobles (1)
- Chapter 184 178. Like a god of war
- Chapter 183 177. Battle of Dorn (2)
- Chapter 182 176. Battle of Dorn (1)
- Chapter 181 175. Rat trap
- Chapter 180 174. Rat
- Chapter 179 173. War Strategy
- Chapter 178 172. Battle of Verdis (2)
- Chapter 177 171. Battle of Verdis (1)
- Chapter 176 170. Girl of the White Woods
- Chapter 175 169. One in a crowd
- Chapter 174 168. Pawns and lord
- Chapter 173 167. A war approaches
- Chapter 172 166. Kraken
- Chapter 171 165. Underwater dungeon
- Chapter 170 164. Trees and planes
- Chapter 169 163. Binding
- Chapter 168 162. Storm Sovereign
- Chapter 167 161. Spirit Trainer
- Chapter 166 160. Drudic magic
- Chapter 165 159. Elder tree
- Chapter 164 158. End times
- Chapter 163 157. Sylvastra
- Chapter 162 156. Idrin
- Chapter 161 155. Decisiveness
- Chapter 160 154. Battleboard
- Chapter 159 153. A new territory
- Chapter 158 152. Blackwood
- Chapter 157 Annual Membership Patreon
- Chapter 156 151. A duel of blood
- Chapter 155 150. A Chieftain's duty
- Chapter 154 149. Blood drinker
- Chapter 153 148. Walk with me
- Chapter 152 147. POV of a Maid
- Chapter 151 146. Messenger
- Chapter 150 145. Mana guns
- Chapter 149 144. Fatebreaker
- Chapter 148 143. Claim to throne
- Chapter 147 142. Figurehead
- Chapter 146 141. Conquering fears
- Chapter 145 140. Facing fears
- Chapter 144 139. Fears of mind
- Chapter 143 138. Shadowed History
- Chapter 142 137. Council of Elders
- Chapter 141 136. Second meeting
- Chapter 140 135. Verdis (3)
- Chapter 139 134. Verdis (2)
- Chapter 138 133. Verdis (1)
- Chapter 137 132. Firepower sales
- Chapter 136 131. Guild
- Chapter 135 130. Factions
- Chapter 134 129. Count Arzan
- Chapter 133 128. Watchers
- Chapter 132 127. A change of heart
- Chapter 131 126. Goddess and her words
- Chapter 130 125. Failsafe
- Chapter 129 124. Future policies
- Chapter 128 123. Schemes of the coming end
- Chapter 127 122. Dungeon exploration
- Chapter 126 121. Dual path
- Chapter 125 120. Count Arzan
- Chapter 124 Volume 3 chapter 119
- Chapter 123 Volume 2 Epilogue 2
- Chapter 122 New novel announcement!!
- Chapter 121 Volume 2 Epilogue 1
- Chapter 120 118. The Maleficent Viper
- Chapter 119 117. Aftermath
- Chapter 118 116. Veralt lives!
- Chapter 117 115. Beast wave (5)
- Chapter 116 114. Beast wave (4)
- Chapter 115 113. Beast wave (3)
- Chapter 114 112. Beast wave (2)
- Chapter 113 111. Beast wave (1)
- Chapter 112 110. Dead mana spiders
- Chapter 111 109. Frays
- Chapter 110 108. Apprentice awakening
- Chapter 109 107. Hard Decisions
- Chapter 108 106. A shocking demonstration
- Chapter 107 105. Mana cannons (2)
- Chapter 106 104. Mana cannons (1)
- Chapter 105 103. A Refugee's POV
- Chapter 104 102. Powering up!
- Chapter 103 101. Training shoddy mages
- Chapter 102 100. Busy day
- Chapter 101 99. Speech to band together
- Chapter 100 98. A dire situation
- Chapter 99 97. Back to Veralt
- Chapter 98 96. Tales of Heroes and Vipers
- Chapter 97 95. Thorny queen
- Chapter 96 94. Fiery duel
- Chapter 95 93. A brotherly reunion
- Chapter 94 92. POV of a Knight
- Chapter 93 91. Salvation in ice
- Chapter 92 90. Surgery
- Chapter 91 89. Allies and enemies
- Chapter 90 88. The Ball
- Chapter 89 87. Alchemists
- Chapter 88 86. Balen
- Chapter 87 85. Power games
- Chapter 86 84. Ascension exam
- Chapter 85 83. Legacy of the past
- Chapter 84 82. Sardonic laugh
- Chapter 83 81. Secrets of Inheritance
- Chapter 82 80. Giving it back
- Chapter 81 79. Interrogation
- Chapter 80 78. The Extravagant Tower
- Chapter 79 77. The capital
- Chapter 78 76. POV of a sand guard
- Chapter 77 75. Geopolitics
- Chapter 76 74. A show of strength
- Chapter 75 73. Yafgar
- Chapter 74 72. A safe passage
- Chapter 73 71. Barbarians (2)
- Chapter 72 70. Barbarians (1)
- Chapter 71 69. Kingdom politics
- Chapter 70 68. Heir?
- Chapter 69 67. Instinctual technique
- Chapter 68 66. Warding
- Chapter 67 65. Preparations
- Chapter 66 64. Magus Veridia
- Chapter 65 63. Forest spirit
- Chapter 64 62. Primal urgency
- Chapter 63 61. Spiders
- Chapter 62 60. Farmlands
- Chapter 61 59. Rude guests
- Chapter 60 58. Start again (Volume 2 begins)
- Chapter 59 57 - Francis Side chapter
- Chapter 58 56. Volume 1 Epilogue
- Chapter 57 55. Explosion
- Chapter 56 54. Fiend
- Chapter 55 53. Elephant in the room
- Chapter 54 52. Sonia
- Chapter 53 51. Aftermath
- Chapter 52 50. Kai vs queen
- Chapter 51 49. Larvae nest (2)
- Chapter 50 48. Larvae nest (1)
- Chapter 49 47. The Black Sheep (2)
- Chapter 48 46. The Black Sheep (1)
- Chapter 47 45. A desert dweller
- Chapter 46 15 chapter patreon announcement!
- Chapter 45 44. Mercenaries
- Chapter 44 43. Potion making
- Chapter 43 42. Is that a dragon?
- Chapter 42 41. The queen's dilemma
- Chapter 41 40. Vermala
- Chapter 40 39. Down the slope
- Chapter 39 38. A beating
- Chapter 38 37. A long shot
- Chapter 37 36. Off to next problem
- Chapter 36 35. One debt paid, another to be settled (2)
- Chapter 35 34. One debt paid, another to be settled (1)
- Chapter 34 33. Recruits and Golems
- Chapter 33 32. A Miner's POV again
- Chapter 32 31. Awakening
- Chapter 31 30. Enforcers
- Chapter 30 29. Shapeshifter of Veralt
- Chapter 29 28. Strange History
- Chapter 28 27. Golems
- Chapter 27 26. Morning drill
- Chapter 26 25. Break the Trolls
- Chapter 25 24. An evening stroll
- Chapter 24 23. Funeral services
- Chapter 23 22. A long walk
- Chapter 22 21. Necromancer dwelling
- Chapter 21 20. Swirling Mists
- Chapter 20 19. Heavy heart
- Chapter 19 18. Dealing with White Stuff
- Chapter 18 17. Mana fiends (?)
- Chapter 17 16. Dirty goblins (Bonus chap)
- Chapter 16 15. Actra
- Chapter 15 14. Who doesn't like soup?
- Chapter 14 13. Vasper forest
- Chapter 13 Patreon Announcement!!!
- Chapter 12 12. Routine and corruption
- Chapter 11 11. Merchant of spice
- Chapter 10 10. A miner's POV
- Chapter 9 9. Laws and conversations
- Chapter 8 8. Syphon
- Chapter 7 7. "...A Mage, Lord Arzan?"
- Chapter 6 6. First Circle
- Chapter 5 5. Tradeheart Merchant Company?
- Chapter 4 4. Debts and Stuff
- Chapter 3 3. Uncovering past
- Chapter 2 2. A sudden attack
- 1. Things go wrong