Bishop Maurice felt a headache blooming behind his eyes.
Count Arzan sat before him—young, powerful, and far too cunning for the bishop’s liking. It wasn’t that the man had done anything wrong, per se. He was just the type Maurice despised dealing with, ambitious, unshakable, and untouchable.
The kind of man who had climbed the noble ladder too quickly. A Count now, after besting a Duke in a fief war. A powerful Mage, no less.
Maurice had hoped the King would clip the boy’s wings after the whole brother-killing incident. But even that hadn’t been enough. The King might punish him. Might. But men like Arzan Kellius had a way of surviving such things—and worse, rising higher from them.
That made him dangerous.
And the bishop knew it. And he wasn’t ready to take any risk. In fact, offending this man was the furthest thing he wanted. All he knew, the man was going to find himself seated higher among the nobility, making right friends in the capital and even getting the Pope’s attention.
Still, Maurice really, really wanted to tell him to leave.
The bastard had interrupted his reading—right when the Dragon Rider and the Seeress were finally about to kiss. Maurice had been waiting six volumes for that moment.
Just then, this upstart Count had to barge into his hall with a straight face and asked for a small army. To enter Vanderfall. The cursed land. The plague lands. A country swallowed whole. It wasn’t brave. It was suicidal.
It was the kind of thing that earned you a heretic’s brand if you dragged paladins and priests into it. The kind of thing that got you excommunicated.
He opened his mouth to reject him. To say, “No, my lord, I don’t have the authority.” To explain that whatever half-baked solution Arzan had found, it wasn’t worth the lives it would cost.
But something about the Count’s gaze made the words catch in his throat. Unlike the Count, Bishop Maurice could run.
He could flee to the capital and let the Archine Tower or the royal family deal with the plague. That had been the plan ever since he’d first heard whispers of the corruption crawling toward the border. He hadn’t wanted to fight a plague—especially not one that turned people into those wretched demonic weavers.
So, he told himself he’d just hear the young Count out. Nod, smile, and find a polite way to decline. But then the bastard had said the words that had made his heart skip a beat.
“Just think about it. If you’re the one who helped lead the effort to stop the plague. If it’s your name that ends up etched into the sermons, spoken by survivors, praised in every other cathedral from here to the capital… how do you think that’ll affect your standing in the Church?”
And that—that—had made Maurice pause.
Because he did know.
A successful purge? Of Vanderfall? Saints above, that would be historic. It would mean promotion. A new title. Relocation to the capital, with real influence. Better quarters. Better wine. An easier life.
Even in The Dragon Rider’s Beloved, the main character had earned a title and the princess’s affection after rescuing plague victims. That whole chapter had made Maurice tear up—twice. And they had only just started— No. No, this wasn’t a storybook.
This was real. And agreeing with the Count would mean spending the Church’s strength. Paladins. Clerics. Lives. He wasn’t even sure the Church would allow it.
But… they should.
The rumors were clear—the Pope was tearing his hair out, what little remained of it, over the loss of holy sites and personnel in Vanderfall. The Church’s influence had taken a beating even in Lancephil. Something had to be done. This might actually fix it.
But then, of course, he’d be the one standing at the center of it. The one who either rose or burned with it. And Maurice wasn’t sure which was more likely. Not every kind of responsibility was a blessing. Some made you an Archbishop. Others got your head impaled on a weaver’s claw.
He stared at the Count again and finally spoke.
“Count Arzan,” he said, “you need to understand—the plague is too dangerous. From what I’ve been told, everyone who enters ends up corrupted. Even those who escape don’t last. It eats at them, until they—” he paused, grimacing, “until they turn. Or take their own lives.”
Arzan didn’t flinch.
“Then they don’t walk into it,” he said.
Maurice blinked. “They’re not birds, my lord. The goddess did not give us wings.”
“They don’t have to fly,” Arzan replied. “They just don’t have to go in as
clerics. Normal robes, boots, gloves—they’re useless. Dead mana seeps through anything untreated. You want to enter and survive? You need full-body armor. Enchanted. Layered. Sealed. There are materials it can’t corrupt as fast. That buys us time. And if corruption does occur…”
He hesitated—but only for a second.
“I’ll handle it. Personally. I give you my word.”
Maurice’s eyes widened. “How?”
“I can’t tell you that.”
The bishop stared at him.
“You understand secrecy,” Arzan said. “Some things are better left unspoken.”
Maurice nodded. Reluctantly. He did understand, but he still felt like he was staring at a noose, one that was slowly being lowered around his neck. But the Count… looked so damn confident. And more importantly—he’d delivered results before.
Maurice wasn’t a fool. He didn’t trust people easily. Hell, he didn’t like people. But he respected competence. And if things started to go wrong… well, the Church could always pull back. Arzan wasn’t their superior. He could only ask for aid.
That gave him just enough space to breathe. Just enough space to consider saying yes. The bishop eyed the Count carefully.
“How long,” he asked, “until you can deal with the plague?”
Arzan didn’t miss a beat. “Roughly two weeks,” he said. “That’s to reach the core and neutralize the root of the corruption. We’ll be moving constantly. Minimal rest. Even at night, we’ll take short shifts but stay mobile. I don’t plan on letting us linger anywhere too long.”
Maurice nodded. That made sense. He couldn’t imagine anyone willingly sleeping in the same spot inside Vanderfall more than once.
“And how confident are you?” he asked, this time watching the Count’s expression more closely. He expected a flicker of hesitation. Even the slightest doubt. But Arzan simply answered, calm as ever.
“I’m fairly confident,” he said. “We won’t be able to cleanse all of Vanderfall, but we can halt its spread. That’s our true goal.”
Maurice leaned back slightly, fingers steepling. That was enough. The Church wasn’t looking for miracles—just containment. And so far, the Count was checking all the right boxes. Still, he asked more questions.
The army’s composition. The threats expected within the plague lands. Methods to counter the corruption, shield the clerics, and treat those exposed.
And with each answer, the bishop felt the same nagging truth sink deeper, Arzan had done his homework. Thoroughly. This wasn’t a desperate gamble—this was a calculated move. Maurice didn’t like it. He didn’t like being outmaneuvered. But he liked being left behind even less.
The Church would be satisfied with this much. Maurice might even earn his long-desired promotion. But… he wondered if he could squeeze a little more out of this. People, in his eyes, were like a brimming coin pouch—if you were clever, you could always take just a bit more before they noticed. After hearing everything, he leaned forward, offering a generous smile.
“I think your preparations are quite solid,” he said, voice pleasant. “I believe the Church would be more than willing to send aid. Some of our clerics and paladins would be honored to assist in such a mission.”
Arzan’s lips curved into a faint smile.
But Maurice wasn’t finished.
“Of course,” he continued, tone tightening just a fraction, “I’m not sure how many we’ll be able to provide. Not right away, anyway. This is still a developing plan, not yet an official doctrine. It would take considerable… effort on my part to gather the right support, you understand.”
He waited. Expecting the usual reaction. Tension, a bribe offer, perhaps a veiled threat masked in courtesy. Instead, Arzan smiled wider.
“It’s alright,” he said with a subtle sigh in his tone. “I wouldn’t want to trouble you too much.”
Maurice blinked.
“Before coming here, I sent a letter to Bishop Carridan in Veyrin,” the Count added. “If you’re unable to provide assistance, I’m fairly certain he can pull together a sizeable force from the Church there.”
This content has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
The bishop’s smile vanished.
Carridan.
Of course it was him. That silver-tongued bastard.
The goddess’s temple in Veyrin had flourished under Carridan’s leadership—and now that Veyrin was practically under Arzan’s thumb, it made perfect sense. Carridan could do it.
But had the letter really been sent? Or was this just a bluff?
Maurice stared at the Count, trying to read beneath the words. But Arzan’s expression didn’t flicker. He looked calm, he looked polish—the type of demeanor a politician had. And worse, the type to remember slights.
If Maurice refused now and the purge succeeded under Carridan’s banner, all credit would go to him. And Bishop Maurice would be left with nothing but regret and the ruins of a missed opportunity.
No, he thought bitterly. I’m not letting that bastard take the glory. Not this time.
“Actually…” Bishop Maurice straightened suddenly, offering a warm smile that didn’t reach his eyes. “Now that I think about it, I might be able to gather a decent number of people. It’ll take calling in a few personal favors, of course, but if it’s to stand against the plague that’s taken so many lives…” He gave a gracious nod, folding his hands as if burdened by virtue. “Then I’ll do my utmost.”
He gave a little chuckle, light and dismissive. “There’s no need to bother Bishop Carridan. I’ve heard he’s quite busy with the reconstruction efforts in Veyrin. Especially after your generous donations.”
Arzan inclined his head slightly.
“I’m glad to hear you’re offering such support to this cause,” he said. “Once you have a number on how many you can spare, send them to the estate. We’ll be departing soon.”
Then he paused. Just long enough to let the silence draw a thread of unease before he added,
“Thank you, Bishop. I can only rely on your thoughtfulness in difficult times like these.”
The words were pleasant. Even appreciative. But Maurice heard what wasn’t said just as clearly. He was being boxed in. The Count had laid the trap neatly—left him only one path that wouldn’t make him look weak or replaceable. Internally, he sighed. As if I had a choice.
Outwardly, he smiled, the very picture of a holy man eager to serve.
“Yes, yes… of course. May the Goddess guide our hands,” he said smoothly.
But as Arzan turned to leave, the bishop’s eyes lingered on his back. This better work, he thought. If not, I’ll be the one pushing good men to their deaths. And for the first time in a long while, Bishop Maurice felt the weight of a future that wasn’t entirely in his hands.
***
Wind stirred the air, rustling through brittle, blackened leaves that clung to the treant’s limbs. It felt each gust like a memory, brushing past the huge figure of rot and silence, standing unmoving upon a field of ash and dead soil. The land beneath its roots had once been green—alive—but that was before it had awakened, before its presence had sunk into the marrow of the earth and remade it in its own image.
Now the earth cracked and steamed with quiet corruption. And from that cracked earth, its roots spread like veins—feeding, expanding, claiming.
Small fiends skittered up and down its massive trunk, their clawed limbs scraping bark that pulsed faintly with unnatural energy. They were mindless things—born of pestilence and death—but they clung to the treant as if it were a god. To them, it was.
Around it, the air was thick with decay. Weavers, once-men twisted into impossible shapes, sat in reverence. Their hollow faces lifted toward the treant, blank eyes wide with worship. Bigger fiends—stronger beasts whose flesh had been warped by corruption—rested at its feet like hounds at the side of a master.
They were his children now. Once feral, once free, now made perfect.
Once cursed with limitation, now blessed with purpose.
They had been remade by the treant’s influence, touched by its roots, molded by the essence of death itself. Now they stood guard, silent and waiting, ready to tear apart anything that dared come close to the heart of the plague.
And they would not be the last.
Even now, deep below the surface, its roots continued to spread—a slow, implacable crawl of black tendrils that threaded through stone and clay, poisoning everything they touched. Grass died. Trees withered. Small animals that once burrowed now screamed in silence as their bodies were broken and reborn. The treant saw it all through those roots.
It felt everything. Every single thing.
In the north, it watched the humans run. Desperate. Weak. Their minds filled with panic as they tried to flee his spreading dominion. But they would not escape. No one ever did. They would fall. Sooner or later. And when they did, they would join the weavers.
In the west, his roots pressed through jagged mountain stone. There, fire licked the edges of his growth—natural heat, perhaps from deep fissures or long-slumbering volcanoes. It hurt. The fire hurt. But it did not stop it. Pain was temporary. Its will was not. Beasts roamed those slopes, and already some had been taken. Not by force—by inevitability.
In the east, its roots had stretched to the continent’s edge. Beyond them lay the ocean—vast, endless, unknowable. It stirred something inside, an unfamiliar curiosity. But it was not ready for the sea. Not yet. One day, perhaps, it would send his roots beneath those waves and claim even that domain. But today was not that day.
No.
Today, its attention turned south.
It saw something there. A great human settlement. Alive, bustling. Full of scared, fragile beings clinging to stone walls and firelight. A city. A prize.
A nest of future servants. its roots were already beneath its outskirts. Watching. Listening. Slowly bleeding poison into its foundations.
But then—Pain erupted.
A flash of it, hot and sudden, tore through his senses. One of his roots burned. Severed. Destroyed. Through it, he saw a man. A human Mage, casting flame. Fire rained down upon his tendrils—intentionally, not accidental. And when the roots regrew, the man burned them again. Over and over.
It hurt.
It angered.
Its branches quaked, limbs groaning like a dying forest. The fiends perched upon the massive treant shrieked and fled, terrified of the ancient fury awakening beneath them.
The man was gone now, already vanished into the safety of his stone walls. But others remained. More humans, moving in groups, finding the roots and burning them. They thought they could stop it. They were wrong.
It poured power into the earth, forcing its roots to surge forward—faster, thicker, stronger. The ground twisted. Rocks cracked. New tendrils burst from the soil, black and pulsing.
The humans hesitated. He felt their surprise. But they did not stop. They pressed on.
And that was when the treant understood: it could not keep this up. Not like this. Not with them burning its limbs faster than it could regrow. Not without sacrifice.
So it reached inward, tapping into the pulse that connected him to every corrupted beast, every twisted man, every loyal servant that drank of his rot.
And he gave them one command.
Move! Kill!
A single thought.
Immediately, the weavers and fiends around him stirred, rising from their stillness like puppets pulled by invisible strings. They did not question. They did not speak. Their bodies rippled with readiness.
With crazed howls and chittering cries, they launched southward—dozens, then hundreds—running through the blighted plains and charred forests, straight toward the human city.
Let them burn the roots.
Let them fight.
In the end, they would all kneel.
Whether in flame, in death, or in perfect, rotting silence.
***
A/N – You can read 30 chapters (15 Magus Reborn and 15 Dao of money) on my patreon. Annual subscription is now on too.
Read 15 chapters ahead HERE.
Join the discord server HERE.
PS:
Book 1 is officially launched!
If you’re on Kindle Unlimited, you can read it for free—and even if you’re not buying, a quick rating helps more than you think. Also, it’s free to rate and please download the book if you have Kindle unlimited. It helps with algorithm.
Read HERE.
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