Kai still clearly remembered the first time he had read Hendricks Klandel’s diary.
He had found it inside the larvae nest, back when he was still new to being Arzan, when everything around him felt uncertain and dangerous. That diary had been the first place where he had encountered a written reference to the prophecy of the cycle of life and death. At the time, he had found the words unsettling.
Hendricks had been trying to cultivate beasts capable of absorbing dead mana without losing their minds, experimenting with selective breeding, controlled exposure, and magical conditioning. Even the larvae queen, Sonia, had once been his tamed beast.
That diary, however, had ended abruptly.
There had been no conclusion, no final words of failure or success. He had assumed that Hendricks had simply failed. After all, surviving dead mana without fundamental corruption was impossible for any normal being. Amyra was the sole exception, and her survival had nothing to do with biology or adaptation. It was her soul inscription that allowed it.
Later, while studying in the Archine Tower, he had come across Hendricks’ other works. And had found that the man was a renowned Mage, respected for his extensive research into magical beasts—their habitats, temperaments, and the feasibility of taming them. Those texts were thorough and academic, stripped of personal emotion. They read like research notes meant for posterity, not confessions meant only for oneself.
But nowhere—not once—had Kai found another diary.
Until now.
The registry clearly listed it as being housed in Valkyrie’s grand library.
Curiosity tugged at him immediately.
Without hesitation, Kai rose from his seat and followed the directions listed in the registry, weaving through towering shelves and long aisles until he reached the far western section of the library.
He scanned spines one by one, dismissing treatises and bestiaries until his gaze finally caught on something different.
A thin, weathered book sat wedged between two thicker volumes.
The leather of the cover had darkened in age, the edges torn and cracked, corners worn down as if it had been handled countless times. The spine was faded almost to nothing, its stitching barely holding. When Kai pulled it free, a faint cloud of dust rose into the air.
There was no title on the cover.
He opened it immediately.
The very first line made him freeze.
If you are reading this diary and I am not, then I am dead.
Kai’s eyes narrowed as he read on.
Either old age or one of my numerous enemies has finally hunted me down—though it is probably the former. No Mage in this realm is immortal, after all. But if this diary has reached your hands, then you now possess what I consider the most precious body of magical knowledge in existence. I only hope your talent is at least sufficient to understand it.
Kai closed the diary at once.
For a long moment, he simply stared at the worn leather cover.
He hadn’t expected this. Not truly. But finding this diary shifted his priorities entirely. In that instant, every other book stacked on the table felt secondary. He wanted to read more about his experiments and see if he would find more mentions of the prophecy in the diary.
So, without hesitation, he carried the diary back to his table and set it down carefully, as if it might crumble under careless handling. With how the pages were barely held together, it, in fact, might crumble.
It didn’t take much effort for Kai to piece together the intent behind Hendricks’ work. After learning of the prophecy, the man must have tried to create something capable of enduring dead mana without being fundamentally corrupted. A living proof that the cycle could be resisted.
The same path Kai himself was now walking, with Amyra.
Taking a breath, he opened the diary again.
The opening chapter was exactly what he had expected from a famous Mage: half introduction, half shameless boasting. Hendricks wrote about his reputation, his accomplishments, and how fortunate the reader was to have obtained his personal writings. Kai skimmed through it without much interest.
Then the tone changed.
The second chapter abandoned ego entirely.
The very first page made his fingers tighten around the parchment.
I created this diary not as another research compendium for apprentices, but as a private record. A place to gather every experiment I conduct in one location, untainted by academic restraint or political interference.
And all of it is in service of a single purpose.
To oppose the prophecy of the cycle of life and death.
The prophecy that states our world is destined to rot, collapse, and end beneath the weight of dead mana. Sooner or later.
I was never one to trust in prophecies.
Kai turned a page.
But after some time spent among the elves, I could no longer pretend the prophecy was coincidence.
From that point onward, Hendricks described the prophecy in detail: the cycle of life and death, the slow saturation of the world with dead mana, and the eventual rise of the mythical dragon Malefic—an existence not meant to rule, but to erase. A being whose very presence would drown the world in death until nothing remained.
Everything Kai already knew.
He turned a few pages, his expression darkening as the writing shifted in tone to grow more serious.
As a Mage, no matter how strong I became, Dead mana has always been my nemesis.
One so absolute that I never truly believed I could alter my own Mana heart enough to accept it—though that would have been the cleanest solution. If a Mage could take it in without corruption, the prophecy would lose its teeth.
I tried.
I worked with other Mages. I borrowed their research. I stole from those who despised me. In the end, every path led to the same conclusion.
Humans were unsuitable.
That was when I turned to beasts.
As a tamer, it was a betrayal of everything I believed in. My code exists to protect them, not reduce them to tools. But the world was at stake, and I told myself that intent mattered more than purity.
I began with older, stronger specimens—Grade five beasts whose bodies were made in a way to live in the harshest regions in the world. I dissected their physiology, altered their cores, and introduced dead mana in controlled amounts.
Nothing worked.
Within a year, every single one of them died.
I reduced the dosage. I experimented with alternative cores. One species—famous for storing any aspect of mana—survived longer than the rest.
Twenty-one days. It was a record.
He lived normally during that time—ate, slept and responded to commands.
Then the corruption took him.
I ended him myself. The weight of that decision has not left me. For a time, I wondered if my goal was simply impossible—if the world was doomed no matter how much blood I spilled trying to prevent it.
But giving up has never been something I knew how to do.
Still… It took me months to crawl out of that grief.
Months before I could look at another beast without remembering that I had killed one of them.
Kai turned a few more pages, watching the handwriting grow uneven as Hendricks wrote about the aftermath of his failures. Page after page was filled with mourning, not only for the beasts that had died, but for the hope he had placed in each of them. He documented long stretches of time spent doing nothing but rereading his notes, searching for flaws that were not there, and chasing alternatives that led nowhere.
In the end, desperation drove him toward one final idea.
Rather than using ancient, powerful beasts, Hendricks began experimenting on newborns.
His reasoning was simple, if flawed: if a creature was exposed to dead mana from birth, perhaps its body would adapt naturally, the same way living beings adapted to hostile environments over generations. He raised them carefully, introduced infinitesimal traces of dead mana, and monitored their growth for years.
Kai already knew the outcome.
From his own memories of the dying world, he understood the truth Hendricks had hoped to disprove. Even human infants born in regions saturated with dead mana did not adapt. They became weavers. Left unchecked, they grew powerful, yes, but only as monsters.
Hendricks eventually reached the same conclusion. Every creature he raised beyond a certain point became unstable and their minds became fractured. Aggression replaced instinct. What began as adaptation always ended in corruption.
I tried until the very end, Hendricks wrote. And in the end, I killed them all with my own hands.
The words were heavier here, pressed into the page as if the quill itself resisted the motion. He described the final days of those experiments with brutal honesty. The violence was not born of cruelty, but of mercy. Leaving them alive would have meant unleashing abominations upon the world.
Unable to bear adding more blood to his hands, Hendricks finally abandoned the idea of breeding beasts adapted to dead mana.
Instead, he released the remaining subjects into the wild.
This was the first time the diary mentioned specific names.
Among all the beasts I left to grow on their own, Sonia, John, Rhelis, and Kaemar were the closest to me.
Kai’s eyes narrowed at the mention of the larvae queen.
Hendricks mentioned that he only released them because staying around his lab might get them corrupted accidentally. And If they were to die one day, he wanted it to be by the natural course of the world, not by his interference.
I promised them I would return, It was a promise I barely managed to keep.
The next entry shifted abruptly in tone.
For the following three years, I abandoned experimentation entirely and devoted myself to studying the prophecy itself.
Kai leaned back slightly, fingers resting against the page.
This was the point where Hendricks had stopped trying to fight the prophecy with force, and began trying to understand it instead.
And that, Kai knew, was where the most important knowledge would begin. This was the part that truly caught his attention.
Hendricks wrote that after abandoning the idea of creating a beast capable of enduring dead mana, he shifted his focus entirely. Instead of pondering on the question of how to survive it, he pondered a far more dangerous question.
What survives when the prophecy comes true?
He poured years into studying the future described by the cycle of life and death, tracing every fragment of myth, every elven record, every forgotten account that hinted at the world’s end. He searched for even a single species that would endure the calamity.
What he found was devastating.
None of them survive, Not humans. Not dwarves. Not even the elves.
The words were stark, without embellishment.
According to everything he uncovered, only one kind of being remained when the world drowned in dead mana.
Dragons.
At first, Hendricks dismissed the conclusion. Dragons, aside from Malefic itself, were creatures of legend. He had never seen one with his own eyes. He doubted anyone truly had.
That doubt ended after a conversation with the Elder Tree. The tree confirmed their existence.
Dragons were real, but they were not bound to any single world.
They were beings capable of moving freely between realms, even between entirely different worlds, using magic so vast and intrinsic that it defied conventional understanding. They rarely remained in one place for long, and only the oldest among them could endure a world fully consumed by dead mana.
That revelation reshaped Hendricks’ path.
If no beast or race in this world can be made to survive the end, then I must seek those who can.
Finding a dragon and persuading one to listen to him—those goals felt far more achievable to him than rewriting a being’s biology. He abandoned breeding and experimentation entirely and turned his efforts toward locating dragons, hoping to secure their aid against the coming calamity.
Like everything else, it failed.
Kai read that section slowly, his focus sharpening as he had never heard of someone trying to look for dragons.
Dragons never stay still. They all belong to a vast clan, scattered across the realms. The more I searched for them, the more I realised how large this world truly is.
Hendricks described worlds layered atop worlds, regions of mana so dense that even his own circles could not sustain him for more than a few heartbeats. Entire realms where existence itself bent beneath the weight of magic.
I could not survive in those worlds, I could not even send a message.
The final line of the passage was pressed deeply into the page.
At that moment, I understood the truth. I—Hendricks Klandel, the legendary beast tamer—was no more than a speck in a far greater universe.
Several pages after that were nothing but madness.
The writing spiralled across the parchment in uneven lines, ink smeared and blotched as if the quill had slipped again and again. Some words overlapped each other. Others were scratched out so violently that the page itself had torn.
Kai frowned as he read through them.
It felt less like research and more like a man drowning in his own thoughts.
Had he been drunk while writing this? Kai wondered.
Still, he forced himself to read every page. If there was even a fragment of meaning hidden inside the chaos, he needed to find it.
There was nothing.
Just repetition. Fractured thoughts. Half-written equations that went nowhere. Angry denials followed by despair. In the end, Kai kept turning pages.
Until the writing finally steadied.
A year passed, a year of grief.
The grief of losing the beasts was something I learned to endure. What nearly broke me was something else entirely.
It was the realisation that no matter how much effort I poured into my work, I was insignificant in the wider scope of the universe. Even if I devoted every waking moment to refining my circles, I knew my limits. I would never be strong enough to seek out the mythical dragons. Not truly. Not without dying the moment I stepped into the regions they inhabited.
That truth took a year to accept.
A full year of anger, denial, and hollow ambition before it finally settled into something quieter and far more dangerous—resignation.
I asked myself what remained.
Should I abandon the work and live what time I had left in peace? I would likely be dead long before the world reached its end. Ignorance would be a mercy.
But I could not sleep with that answer.
So I continued.
Not because I believed I would succeed, but because failure felt less shameful than surrender. I returned, again and again, to the same question that had haunted me from the beginning.
How can a living being take in dead mana without losing its mind?
Every conclusion I had reached told me the same thing. Human bodies could not withstand it. Elves fared no better. Beasts broke just as surely.
Dead mana was not an element to be mastered.
It was a disease.
A rot with no cure.
That led me to another line of thought—if dead mana could not be endured, could it be avoided? Could I hide life from it?
I considered sealed civilizations. Entire populations hidden away from the world. I considered abandoning flesh altogether, placing souls into artificial bodies of metal and stone.
None of it worked.
Dead mana poisoned the atmosphere itself. There was nowhere to run. No barrier that would last. No metal that could endure the rot indefinitely.
And so I failed.
Again. And again. And again.
Until the day I did not. I FINALLY found a solution to the problem.
Kai’s fingers tightened around the page as he flipped it, rereading it just to make sure that he hadn’t read it wrong. He had found a solution?
It was an accident, Hendricks wrote. But then again, most breakthroughs in magic are.
I had begun rereading my old research.
Not with hope… only habit. I promise. When one has exhausted every path forward, the past becomes the only place left to walk. I revisited my notes on beast cores, on failed adaptations, on realms I had once dismissed as theoretical distractions.
That was when the thought struck me.
A simple one. Almost insulting in its simplicity.
If we can summon creatures from other realms… if we can even borrow mana from them… then why can we not send mana back?
That single question did more for me than years of disciplined research.
For the first time in a very long while, I felt alive.
I threw myself into the problem with a fervor I had not known since my youth. Days blurred into nights as I traced summoning circles backward, inverted mana flows, and studied dimensional bleed-through. It took months, but I found the answer.
It was possible.
Mana could be expelled from this realm and returned to another. Even dead mana was not exempt from this law.
The revelation should have been enough.
It was not.
Because knowing that it could be done did not answer the real question.
How could this be applied to humans?
A spell, no matter how refined, was temporary. It could divert dead mana, yes, but only after the damage had begun. Corruption would still seep into flesh and mind before the spell could act.
Dead mana does not ask for permission.
So I thought and thought and thought. For half a year, I thought of nothing else.
If the solution was not a spell cast upon the body… then it had to be something deeper. Something fundamental. Something that acted before corruption could even take hold.
It had to be etched into the soul itself.
But a soul alone was not enough. No existing body—human, elven, or otherwise—could withstand such an inscription without tearing itself apart. The vessel would fail even if the soul endured.
And so I reached a conclusion that frightened even me.
If no existing species could survive what was coming, then one would have to be made.
Not modified. Not adapted.
Created.
A species with a soul capable of bearing an imprint tied to other realms, and a body strong enough to endure it without collapse.
I have decided to call them “High Humans.”
Whether this makes me a savior or a monster is not for me to decide. But for the first time since learning of the prophecy, I no longer feel powerless.
***
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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