The roar that rose from the orcish lines did not come all at once.
It began as a low thunder, a rolling vibration that crawled through the ground and up the bones of every warrior standing upon the open plains. Then it grew, layered upon itself, hundreds of voices merging into thousands, old battle chants colliding with new ones, tribal cries overlapping until language itself blurred into raw intent.
Victory was coming.
Sakh’arran felt it before he fully saw it.
He stood upon a slight rise of trampled earth where he could clearly see the broken bodies, the boots stained dark with blood ground of the battlefield ahead. Around him the command circle of the Yohan First Horde still functioned with grim efficiency. Horn bearers stood ready. Messengers ran and returned. War chiefs shouted reports that barely needed saying.
The enemy was breaking.
Not everywhere. Not yet.
But enough.
Sakh’arran lifted his arm slowly, deliberately, so that those nearest him would see the motion before they heard the order. His expression remained hard and controlled, but his eyes burned with something fierce and calculating.
“Now,” he said. “We finish this.”
He turned his gaze toward the mass of hulking figures waiting behind the main line. They had been restless for hours after the initial clash, stamping their feet, flexing, arguing loudly among themselves. Their impatience had been a constant noise behind the disciplined rhythm of the First Horde.
“The Rumbling Clan,” Sakh’arran called out. His voice carried, sharp and unmistakable. “You will take the right flank of the pinkskins. Break it. Shatter it. Leave nothing standing.”
A wave of sound answered him, immediate and deafening.
At the head of that wave stood Dhug’mhar.
The chieftain of the Rumbling Clan threw his head back and laughed, a booming, echoing sound that cut through the sound of battle like a drumbeat. He slapped his chest with both hands, muscles bulging obscenely beneath his armor, which was less protection than ornament, designed as much to show his physique as to deflect blows.
“Did you hear that,” Dhug’mhar shouted, flexing again as if the battlefield itself were watching him. “They finally need the strongest.”
He rolled his shoulders, cracking his neck from side to side, then pointed toward the distant Threian right flank where formations wavered and cavalry scrambled.
“I will carve my name into them,” he boasted. “They will remember my beauty when they die.”
His warriors roared in approval, pounding weapons against shields, boots stamping the ground.
“RUMBLE,” they chanted.
Dhug’mhar lifted his massive weapon high.
“Follow perfection,” he roared. “Follow me.”
They charged.
*****
From the orcish perspective, the battlefield narrowed to a single purpose.
Run. Kill. Break.
The Rumbling Clan surged forward like a living avalanche. Their footfalls shook the earth, sending loose dirt and shattered stones bouncing. The smell of sweat and blood thickened as they passed through the rear of the First Horde and out into open killing ground.
Arrows hissed toward them, some striking home, burying themselves in shoulders and thighs. Orcs grunted, snarled, tore shafts free without slowing. One fell with an arrow through his eye, trampled instantly by the warrior behind him.
Dhug’mhar was already ahead, his long strides eating distance, his laughter rising above the chaos.
“Is this all,” he shouted in broken Threian. “You run like children.”
The Threian right flank saw them coming and felt despair take root.
Captain Merrow screamed himself hoarse trying to bring order to men who had already given everything they had.
“Hold,” he shouted. “Hold the line.”
But they were exhausted. Their shields were dented. Their arms trembled. They had chased retreating orcs only to find those same orcs now forming an unbreakable wall elsewhere.
And now this.
The Rumbling Clan hit them like a falling wall.
There was no measured clash, no shield meeting shield in disciplined rhythm. The impact was violence in its purest form.
Dhug’mhar crashed into the line, his first swing obliterating a shield and the man behind it in one brutal arc. Bone shattered. Blood sprayed across his chest. He flexed again mid stride, grinning wide.
“Too soft,” he mocked. “No muscle.”
A Threian spear thrust toward him. Dhug’mhar caught it, veins bulging as he snapped the shaft, then drove his head forward, crushing the man’s face with a wet crunch.
Around him the Rumbling Clan tore into the flank with savage joy. They grabbed, smashed, trampled. Men were dragged screaming into the press and never emerged. Shields were ripped away and used as bludgeons. Armor folded under repeated blows.
The Threian line folded inward, screams rising as formation dissolved.
*****
Sakh’arran watched the right flank begin to collapse and raised his hand again.
“Let the others join,” he commanded.
Warriors from the allied tribes surged forward, those who had marched with the Horde but not yet tasted the battle that day. They charged with wild cries, eager to prove themselves worthy of standing beside the First Horde.
Axes rose and fell. Clubs crushed skulls. Crude blades hacked into flesh.
They poured into the gaps torn open by the Rumbling Clan, swelling the breach, turning collapse into annihilation.
Behind them the Yohan First Horde eased its assault as ordered. Rakshas in the center advanced with measured steps, spears thrusting in unison, killing with relentless precision. Yurakks slowed their stabbing rhythm, conserving strength, shields locked, blades driving low and deadly.
To the orcs, it was beautiful.
A controlled storm.
*****
Aliyah Winters stood amid the chaos, her scepter gripped tightly in both hands, its crystal head faintly glowing as residual magic bled from earlier spells.
Now she watched the right flank crumble, banners falling one by one, and felt a cold weight settle in her chest.
“No,” she whispered.
Messengers ran toward her, shouting warnings she already understood. Orders were given, contradicted, lost entirely in the roar of battle.
“Reinforce the right.”
“No, pull them back.”
“Hold your ground.”
Too late.
Through dust and blood she saw Dhug’mhar, towering above the press, flexing even as he fought, laughing as men died beneath his blows.
“They are not even committing fully,” Aliyah said aloud, realization dawning. “They are letting others fight.”
Sir Rhaegar Vance stared at the field, his jaw clenched. “They feel that the battle is theirs for the taking.”
Aliyah felt her hands tremble around her scepter.
She raised it slightly, magic flickering, then lowered it again.
The mages were exhausted. The spells she could cast now would not turn this.
The Threian right ceased to exist as a cohesive force.
Cavalry attempted desperate charges, horses screaming as axes split legs and bellies. Riders were dragged down, torn apart before they could rise.
Infantry dropped shields and ran, only to be cut down from behind. Others fought back to back, sobbing prayers as clubs crushed them from above.
Dhug’mhar climbed atop a mound of bodies, blood dripping from his arms, chest heaving.
“Look,” he shouted, flexing again. “Still perfect.”
His clan roared his name as they butchered what remained.
*****
Aliyah backed her horse slowly, eyes fixed on the carnage.
The center still fought. The left barely held.
The right was gone.
She tasted blood where she had bitten her lip, her scepter glowing brighter as her emotions threatened to break her control.
The orcs roared again, unified, triumphant, their voices rolling across the plains in layered chants of victory and mockery.
Aliyah Winters straightened, lifting her scepter fully now, magic gathering despite exhaustion.
If this was to end, it would not end with silence from her.
The result of the battle was being decided.
And the orcs were deciding it loudly.
The moment did not come with a shout.
It came with a silence inside Aliyah Winters’ mind.
For the first time since the banners of the Winters’ Army had crossed into the Orcish Lands, she stopped searching for a way to win. She stopped weighing gambits, stopped counting reserves that no longer existed, stopped imagining how a spell might turn the tide.
She saw the truth of the field as it was, not as it should have been.
The right flank was gone. Not retreating, not reforming. Gone. Broken into fleeing remnants, pockets of desperate resistance already being swallowed by orcish bodies. The center still fought, but the pressure on it was growing by the heartbeat. The left flank strained under relentless blows, its captains screaming orders that fewer men obeyed with every passing minute.
And behind it all, the orcs were not slowing.
They were enjoying themselves.
Aliyah inhaled deeply, the humid air burning her lungs. Her fingers tightened around her scepter until her knuckles whitened. The crystal at its head pulsed faintly, reacting to her turmoil, casting pale blue light across her armor and the blood splashed across it.
She turned to her standard bearer.
“Sound the retreat,” she said.
The man froze.
Around them the battlefield roared. Orcish chants rolled like thunder. Iron rang against iron. Men screamed.
The bearer stared at her, disbelief written plainly on his face.
“My lady,” he said hoarsely, “the men… if we sound it now…”
Aliyah’s eyes did not leave the field.
“I know,” she said. “That is why you will sound it as I command. Not a rout. A withdrawal.”
She turned sharply toward Sir Ferin Luthen, who stood nearby, his face streaked with blood and ash.
“Archers,” Aliyah said. “They do not stop firing. Not for a breath. Loose until your arms fail. You will cover every step of the retreat.”
Ferin swallowed, then nodded. “They’ll die there if the orcs push through.”
“They’ll die everywhere if we do not,” Aliyah replied. “This way, some will live.”
She looked next to Sir Loric Avelle, the oldest of her mages, his shoulders slumped with exhaustion, his beard matted with sweat.
“Mages,” she said, voice lowering. “Mana gems.”
Loric’s eyes widened slightly.
“My lady,” he began, instinctively, “the cost…”
“I know the cost,” Aliyah snapped, then softened her tone. “I would not ask if there were another way. You will cast only to shield the retreat. Walls. Fog. Ice. Anything to break their momentum. And no more than one gem per mage unless I give the word.”
Loric bowed his head slowly. “As you command.”
Aliyah turned back to the field, raised her scepter high.
“Sound it,” she said again.
The horn blew.
*****
The retreat horn did not shriek.
It did not wail in panic.
It sounded long and steady, a controlled call that echoed across the battlefield in measured tones. Among the Threians, those who still had discipline recognized it instantly.
Withdraw. Not flee. Withdraw.
The archers heard it first.
They tightened ranks even as they fired, stepping back in careful intervals, loosing arrow after arrow into the advancing orcs. Magic flared along bowstrings. Ice kissed arrowheads. Wind guided their flight. Arrows fell like sleet upon the orcish lines, punching through armor, lodging in throats, eyes, joints.
Orcs roared as they were struck, some falling, others tearing arrows free and charging on regardless.
On the shattered right flank, there was no order left to preserve.
Men ran. Horses screamed. Survivors stumbled through mud and blood, pursued by Rumbling Clan warriors who laughed and taunted as they killed. Only when sheets of arrows cut through the space between them did the orcs slow, raising arms, snarling in frustration.
The retreat had begun.
Behind the archers, the mages knelt.
Mana gems were brought forth from satchels and belts, small crystalline stones glowing with stored power. Each mage hesitated for a heartbeat before grasping one.
They knew the risk.
The gem flared as it was activated, foreign mana flooding into their bodies. For a moment, many screamed, their magic circuits straining under the sudden surge. Veins glowed faintly beneath skin. Eyes burned with unnatural light.
Then they cast.
The ground before the orcs froze in a sudden, violent surge. Jagged ice erupted upward, impaling warriors, shattering under their weight, reforming again in uneven walls that forced the horde to slow and regroup.
Fog rolled across the field, thick and biting cold, obscuring vision and muffling sound. Orcs cursed and shouted inside it, their formations faltering as they lost sight of one another.
Winds screamed, not to kill but to push, to shove the orcish advance sideways, breaking momentum just enough.
Every spell cost dearly.
One mage collapsed after casting, blood streaming from his nose and ears. Another screamed as his hands blackened, magic circuits burned beyond recovery. Loric Avelle stood among them, staff planted firmly in the ground, forcing himself to remain upright through sheer will.
“Hold,” he rasped. “Just a little longer.”
*****
The orcs were confused at first.
They had expected a rout.
Instead they found resistance.
Arrows continued to fall. Ice walls rose and fell. Fog stole their vision. Warriors cursed as they stumbled over bodies they could not see.
Dhug’mhar roared in fury when a wall of ice forced his clan to slow.
“They run,” he snarled. “Why do they still bite.”
Sakh’arran watched from the rear, eyes narrowing.
“They are retreating properly,” he said quietly. “Do not underestimate them.”
He raised his hand.
“Do not overextend,” he commanded. “Let them bleed. The field is already ours.”
Some orcs grumbled. Others laughed, still eager for blood. But the First Horde obeyed. The Rakshas held their line. The Yurakks advanced cautiously, stabbing at stragglers, cutting down those too slow to escape.
The orcs let the archers exhaust themselves.
*****
Aliyah remained mounted near the center, her scepter raised, her voice carrying despite the din.
“Step back,” she commanded. “Shield lines turn. Archers, loose. Mages, now.”
She watched every movement, every collapse, every success. Her mind burned as she calculated distances, timing, the dwindling stamina of her forces.
She saw a group of infantry begin to panic and raised her scepter, sending a pulse of frost across the ground to slow the orcs chasing them.
She saw archers falter and rode forward herself, placing herself where they could see her.
“Hold,” she shouted. “Look at me. Hold.”
They did.
Sweat ran down her armor. Her scepter hummed dangerously, magic strain creeping into her limbs. But she did not lower it.
Not yet.
Behind her, may of the mages paid the price.
One young mage tried to draw upon a second gem without permission. The power surged too violently. His scream cut through the battlefield as his magic circuits collapsed entirely. He fell, alive but empty, sobbing as he realized what he had lost.
Another mage finished her spell and collapsed unconscious, her breathing shallow.
Loric moved among them, barking orders, forcing discipline even now.
“No more,” he said harshly. “One gem only. Save your lives.”
The spells slowed, then stopped.
But the retreat had gained enough distance.
At last Aliyah saw the moment.
The archers had pulled back far enough. The surviving infantry had reformed into a ragged but functional line. The orcs had slowed, content with what they had taken.
Aliyah lowered her scepter slowly.
“Fall back,” she said softly. “All units. Now.”
This time the movement was cleaner.
The Winters’ Army withdrew, battered but alive, leaving the field to the orcs.
Aliyah remained at the rear until the last formation passed her, eyes never leaving the enemy.
Only then did she turn away.
The battle had ended.
Not in an overwhelming victory.
But not in annihilation either.
And that, she knew, was the only reason the war was not already lost.
*****
The field was read again at dawn.
Not by parchment first, but by sight.
The light crept slowly across the open plains, revealing what the night fires had hidden. The ground was no longer grassland. It was a ruin of churned soil and blackened blood, broken bodies pressed into the earth by boots and shields, weapons scattered so thickly that one could walk a hundred paces without touching bare ground.
Sakh’arran stood at the edge of the field, unmoving, his silhouette sharp against the pale morning light. He did not speak. He listened.
The First Horde gathered behind him in ordered silence. Rakshas stood in dense blocks, shields resting against the ground, spears upright. They were fewer than before. Anyone with eyes could see that. Gaps existed where ranks should have been seamless. The Yurakks knelt nearby, stabbing blades laid across their thighs as they cleaned them with methodical care, blood flaking away in dark strips.
Shamans moved among the wounded, chanting low, voices rough from smoke and exhaustion.
Then the reports began.
The messenger approached slowly, fist pressed to his chest. His armor was cracked in multiple places, his shield split nearly in half.
“First Warband,” he said.
Sakh’arran inclined his head slightly.
“One thousand marched to the center,” the messenger continued. “Five hundred and ninety stand in formation now.”
A murmur rippled through nearby warriors, quickly silenced.
The Rakshas had been the anvil. They had stood under arrow storms, endured ice magic, absorbed the full force of the Threian infantry’s pursuit. Their shields were pocked and shattered, their spear shafts snapped and replaced mid battle. Many had died standing, crushed where they held the line.
“Two hundred are confirmed dead,” the messenger went on. “Another two hundred are alive but will not fight again. Crushed legs. Broken spines. Magic burns.”
Sakh’arran absorbed this without expression.
“And the Second.”
The second messenger stepped forward.
“One thousand,” he said. “Six hundred and twelve remain fit for formation.”
Slightly better. Still catastrophic.
The Second Warband had advanced laterally to stabilize the center when the Yurakks began their fallback. They had taken the Threian charge head on, spear points buried in bodies, shields locked so tight that men suffocated where they stood.
“Three hundred dead,” the messenger said. “Nearly a hundred wounded beyond recovery.”
Sakh’arran finally exhaled.
Two Raksha warbands. Two thousand elite warriors.
Barely twelve hundred remained capable of standing in the spear wall.
But the wall had held.
That mattered.
The Yurakks came next.
They were counted differently. There were more of them, and they had been everywhere at once. Advancing. Falling back. Reforming. Stabbing in the press of bodies. Dragging wounded comrades away with one hand while killing with the other.
“The Third Warband,” came the report. “Five hundred marched. Two hundred and eighty-four answer the horn.”
More than two hundred gone.
“The Fifth,” another voice said. “Five hundred marched. Two hundred and ninety remain.”
“The Sixth. Two hundred and seventy-three.”
“The Seventh. Two hundred and sixty-one.”
“The Eighth. Two hundred and forty-eight.”
The pattern was unmistakable.
The Yurakks had bled steadily from the first clash to the final reforming of the line. Their discipline had saved them from annihilation, but discipline could not stop arrows slipping through shield gaps or swords finding bellies in the chaos of melee.
Out of roughly two thousand five hundred Yurakks committed, fewer than one thousand four hundred remained fit for battle.
Still enough to fight.
Still enough to kill.
Then came noise.
Dhug’mhar did not send a messenger. He came himself.
He strode into the command space bare armed, wounds crudely wrapped, blood already seeping through the bindings. His grin was wide, his chest thrust forward as if the dead themselves were an audience.
“A thousand and sixty four of mine ran,” he announced loudly. “Six hundred and fifty nine still stands.”
A bit over five hundred lost.
A heavy toll by any standard.
Dhug’mhar flexed his arms anyway.
“They died well,” he said. “Breaking the pinkskins. Worth it.”
No one argued.
When all was said, the reality settled like weight on the shoulders of every war chief present.
Of nearly ten thousand orcs committed to the battle, more than four thousand were dead or crippled beyond use.
It was not a light victory.
But it was a victory.
And more importantly, the Horde still had reserves untouched, tribes waiting eagerly for their turn.
Sakh’arran turned his gaze eastward, toward where the Threian banners had retreated.
“They lost more,” he said quietly. “And they felt it.”
*****
On the far side of the plains, Aliyah Winters stood amid rows of the wounded.
There were too many to count at a glance.
Men lay shoulder to shoulder beneath makeshift shelters, bandages soaked through, limbs missing, eyes staring blankly at nothing. Healers moved constantly, faces drawn, hands trembling from exhaustion as they chose who might live and who would not.
Aliyah leaned on her scepter, her strength finally leaving her now that command had passed.
The reports came slower here. Harder.
“Infantry,” a captain said, voice hollow. “Ten thousand engaged.”
He swallowed.
“Four thousand three hundred confirmed present.”
Aliyah closed her eyes.
That meant over five thousand were dead, missing, or dying beyond help.
“Of those,” the captain continued, “nearly two thousand cannot fight again. Broken legs. Gut wounds. Crush injuries.”
Archers followed.
“Five thousand deployed,” Sir Ferin said. “Three thousand one hundred accounted for. Most are wounded. Many will not draw again for weeks.”
Cavalry.
“Two thousand rode,” Sir Helwain said quietly. “Six hundred remain mounted.”
The rest lay scattered across the plains, rider and horse alike torn apart in the collapse of the right flank.
Then the mages.
Sir Loric spoke last.
“Four thousand,” he said. “Three thousand one hundred still breathe.”
Aliyah looked at him sharply.
“And the rest.”
“One hundred and eighty dead,” Loric said. “Five hundred and sixty… empty.”
The word struck harder than death.
“Mana gem burn,” he continued. “Their circuits are gone. They will never cast again.”
Aliyah bowed her head.
By nightfall, the numbers were clear.
Of over twenty thousand who had once marched beneath the banner of the Blue Countess, fewer than nine thousand remained fit to fight without hesitation.
They were wounded. Exhausted. Shaken.
Still alive.
Across the plains, the orcs celebrated a hard won victory, their chants echoing into the night.
Aliyah Winters stood beneath her banner and listened.
She had not lost her army.
But she had tasted her first ever defeat at the hands of the orcs.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 729 - 728
- Chapter 728 - 727
- Chapter 727 - 726
- Chapter 726 - 725
- Chapter 725 - 724
- Chapter 724 - 723
- Chapter 723 - 722
- Chapter 722 - 721
- Chapter 721 - 720
- Chapter 720 - 719
- Chapter 719 - 718
- Chapter 718 - 717
- Chapter 717 - 716
- Chapter 716 - 715
- Chapter 715 - 714
- Chapter 714 - 713
- Chapter 713 - 712
- Chapter 712 - 711
- Chapter 711 - 710
- Chapter 710 - 709
- Chapter 709 - 708
- Chapter 708 - 707
- Chapter 707 - 706
- Chapter 706 - 705
- Chapter 705 - 704
- Chapter 704 - 703
- Chapter 703 - 702
- Chapter 702 - 701
- Chapter 701 - 700
- Chapter 700 - 699
- Chapter 699 - 698
- Chapter 698 - 697
- Chapter 697 - 696
- Chapter 696 - 695
- Chapter 695 - 694
- Chapter 694 - 693
- Chapter 693 - 692
- Chapter 692 - 691
- Chapter 691 - 690
- Chapter 690 - 689
- Chapter 689 - 688
- Chapter 688 - 687
- Chapter 687 - 686
- Chapter 686 - 685
- Chapter 685 - 684
- Chapter 684 - 683
- Chapter 683 - 682
- Chapter 682 - 681
- Chapter 681 - 680
- Chapter 680 - 679
- Chapter 679 - 678
- Chapter 678 - 677
- Chapter 677 - 676
- Chapter 676 - 675
- Chapter 675 - 674
- Chapter 674 - 673
- Chapter 673 - 672
- Chapter 672 - 671
- Chapter 671 - 670
- Chapter 670 - 669
- Chapter 669 - 668
- Chapter 668 - 667
- Chapter 667 - 666
- Chapter 666 - 665
- Chapter 665 - 664
- Chapter 664 - 663
- Chapter 663 - 662
- Chapter 662 - 661
- Chapter 661 - 660
- Chapter 660 - 659
- Chapter 659 - 658
- Chapter 658 - 657
- Chapter 657 - 656
- Chapter 656 - 655
- Chapter 655 - 654
- Chapter 654 - 653
- Chapter 653 - 652
- Chapter 652 - 651
- Chapter 651 - 650
- Chapter 650 - 649
- Chapter 649 - 648
- Chapter 648 - 647
- Chapter 647 - 646
- Chapter 646 - 645
- Chapter 645 - 644
- Chapter 644 - 643
- Chapter 643 - 642
- Chapter 642 - 641
- Chapter 641 - 640
- Chapter 640 - 639
- Chapter 639 - 638
- Chapter 638 - 637
- Chapter 637 - 636
- Chapter 636 - 635
- Chapter 635 - 634
- Chapter 634 - 633
- Chapter 633 - 632
- Chapter 632 - 631
- Chapter 631 - 630
- Chapter 630 - 629
- Chapter 629 - 628
- Chapter 628 - 627
- Chapter 627 - 626
- Chapter 626 - 625
- Chapter 625 - 624
- Chapter 624 - 623
- Chapter 623 - 622
- Chapter 622 - 621
- Chapter 621 - 620
- Chapter 620 - 619
- Chapter 619 - 618
- Chapter 618 - 617
- Chapter 617 - 616
- Chapter 616 - 615
- Chapter 615 - 614
- Chapter 614 - 613
- Chapter 613 - 612
- Chapter 612 - 611
- Chapter 611 - 610
- Chapter 610 - 609
- Chapter 609 - 608
- Chapter 608 - 607
- Chapter 607 - 606
- Chapter 606 - 605
- Chapter 605 - 604
- Chapter 604 - 603
- Chapter 603 - 602
- Chapter 602 - 601
- Chapter 601 - 600
- Chapter 600 - 599
- Chapter 599 - 598
- Chapter 598 - 597
- Chapter 597 - 596
- Chapter 596 - 595
- Chapter 595 - 594
- Chapter 594 - 593
- Chapter 593 - 592
- Chapter 592 - 591
- Chapter 591 - 590
- Chapter 590 - 589
- Chapter 589 - 588
- Chapter 588 - 587
- Chapter 587 - 586
- Chapter 586 - 585
- Chapter 585 - 584
- Chapter 584 - 583
- Chapter 583 - 582
- Chapter 582 - 581-2
- Chapter 581
- Chapter 580
- Chapter 579
- Chapter 578
- Chapter 577
- Chapter 576
- Chapter 575
- Chapter 574
- Chapter 573
- Chapter 572
- Chapter 571
- Chapter 570
- Chapter 569 - 569
- Chapter 568 - 568
- Chapter 567
- Chapter 566
- Chapter 565 - 565
- Chapter 564 - 564
- Chapter 563
- Chapter 562
- Chapter 561 - 561
- Chapter 560 - 560
- Chapter 559
- Chapter 558
- Chapter 557
- Chapter 556
- Chapter 555
- Chapter 554
- Chapter 553 - 553
- Chapter 552 - 552
- Chapter 551
- Chapter 550 - 550
- Chapter 549
- Chapter 548
- Chapter 547
- Chapter 546
- Chapter 545
- Chapter 544
- Chapter 543
- Chapter 542
- Chapter 541 - 541
- Chapter 540 - 540
- Chapter 539 - 539
- Chapter 538
- Chapter 537
- Chapter 536
- Chapter 535
- Chapter 534 - 534
- Chapter 533 - 533
- Chapter 532 - 532
- Chapter 531 - 531
- Chapter 530 - 530
- Chapter 529 - 529
- Chapter 528 - 528
- Chapter 527 - 527
- Chapter 526 - 526
- Chapter 525 - 525
- Chapter 524 - 524
- Chapter 523 - 523
- Chapter 522 - 522
- Chapter 521 - 521
- Chapter 520 - 520
- Chapter 519 - 519
- Chapter 518 - 518
- Chapter 517 - 517
- Chapter 516 - 516
- Chapter 515 - 515
- Chapter 514 - 514
- Chapter 513 - 513
- Chapter 512 - 512
- Chapter 511 - 511
- Chapter 510 - 510
- Chapter 509 - 509
- Chapter 508 - 508
- Chapter 507 - 507
- Chapter 506 - 506
- Chapter 505 - 505
- Chapter 504 - 504
- Chapter 503 - 503
- Chapter 502 - 502
- Chapter 501 - 501
- Chapter 500 - 500
- Chapter 499 - 499
- Chapter 498 - 498
- Chapter 497 - 497
- Chapter 496 - 496
- Chapter 495 - 495
- Chapter 494 - 494
- Chapter 493 - 493
- Chapter 492 - 492
- Chapter 491 - 491
- Chapter 490 - 490
- Chapter 489 - 489
- Chapter 488 - 488
- Chapter 487
- Chapter 486
- Chapter 485
- Chapter 484
- Chapter 483
- Chapter 482
- Chapter 481
- Chapter 480
- Chapter 479
- Chapter 478
- Chapter 477
- Chapter 476
- Chapter 475
- Chapter 474
- Chapter 473
- Chapter 472
- Chapter 471
- Chapter 470
- Chapter 469
- Chapter 468
- Chapter 467
- Chapter 466
- Chapter 465
- Chapter 464
- Chapter 463
- Chapter 462
- Chapter 461
- Chapter 460
- Chapter 459
- Chapter 458
- Chapter 457
- Chapter 456
- Chapter 455 Chapter 455
- Chapter 454: Chapter 454
- Chapter 453: Chapter 453
- Chapter 452: Chapter 452
- Chapter 451: Chapter 451
- Chapter 450: Chapter 450
- Chapter 449: Chapter 449
- Chapter 448: Chapter 448
- Chapter 447: Chapter 447
- Chapter 446: Chapter 446
- Chapter 445: Chapter 445
- Chapter 444: Chapter 444
- Chapter 443: Chapter 443
- Chapter 442: Chapter 442
- Chapter 441: Chapter 441
- Chapter 440: Chapter 440
- Chapter 439: Chapter 439
- Chapter 438: Chapter 438
- Chapter 437: Chapter 437
- Chapter 436: Chapter 436
- Chapter 435: Chapter 435
- Chapter 434: Chapter 434
- Chapter 433: Chapter 433
- Chapter 432: Chapter 432
- Chapter 431: Chapter 431
- Chapter 430: Chapter 430
- Chapter 429: Chapter 429
- Chapter 428: Chapter 428
- Chapter 427: Chapter 427
- Chapter 426: Chapter 426
- Chapter 425: Chapter 425
- Chapter 424: Chapter 424
- Chapter 423: Chapter 423
- Chapter 422: Chapter 422
- Chapter 421: Chapter 421
- Chapter 420: Chapter 420
- Chapter 419: Chapter 419
- Chapter 418: Chapter 418
- Chapter 417: Chapter 417
- Chapter 416: Chapter 416
- Chapter 415: Chapter 415
- Chapter 414: Chapter 414
- Chapter 413: Chapter 413
- Chapter 412: Chapter 412
- Chapter 411: Chapter 411
- Chapter 410: Chapter 410
- Chapter 409: Chapter 409
- Chapter 408: Chapter 408
- Chapter 407: Chapter 407
- Chapter 406: Chapter 406
- Chapter 405: Chapter 405
- Chapter 404: Chapter 404
- Chapter 403: Chapter 403
- Chapter 402: Chapter 402
- Chapter 401: Chapter 401
- Chapter 400: Chapter 400
- Chapter 399: Chapter 399
- Chapter 398: Chapter 398
- Chapter 397: Chapter 397
- Chapter 396: Chapter 396
- Chapter 395: Chapter 395
- Chapter 394: Chapter 394
- Chapter 393: Chapter 393
- Chapter 392: Chapter 392
- Chapter 391: Chapter 391
- Chapter 390: Chapter 390
- Chapter 389: Chapter 389
- Chapter 388: Chapter 388
- Chapter 387: Chapter 387
- Chapter 386: Chapter 386
- Chapter 385: Chapter 385
- Chapter 384: Chapter 384
- Chapter 383: Chapter 383
- Chapter 382: Chapter 382
- Chapter 381: Chapter 381
- Chapter 380 380
- Chapter 379 379
- Chapter 378 378
- Chapter 377 377
- Chapter 376 376
- Chapter 375 375
- Chapter 374 374
- Chapter 373 373
- Chapter 372 372
- Chapter 371 371
- Chapter 370 370
- Chapter 369 369
- Chapter 368 368
- Chapter 367 367
- Chapter 366 366
- Chapter 365 365
- Chapter 364 364
- Chapter 363 363
- Chapter 362 362
- Chapter 361 361
- Chapter 360 360
- Chapter 359 359
- Chapter 358 358
- Chapter 357 357
- Chapter 356 356
- Chapter 355 355
- Chapter 354 354
- Chapter 353 353
- Chapter 352 352
- Chapter 351 351
- Chapter 350 350
- Chapter 349 349
- Chapter 348 348
- Chapter 347 347
- Chapter 346 346
- Chapter 345 345
- Chapter 344 344
- Chapter 343 343
- Chapter 342 342
- Chapter 341 341
- Chapter 340 340
- Chapter 339 339
- Chapter 338 338
- Chapter 337 337
- Chapter 336 336
- Chapter 335 335
- Chapter 334 334
- Chapter 333 - 333 Chapter 333
- Chapter 332 - 332 Chapter 332
- Chapter 331 - 331 Chapter 331
- Chapter 330 - 330 Chapter 330
- Chapter 329 - 329 Chapter 329
- Chapter 328 - 328 Chapter 328
- Chapter 327 - 327 Chapter 327
- Chapter 326 - 326 Chapter 326
- Chapter 325 - 325 Chapter 325
- Chapter 324 - 324 Chapter 324
- Chapter 323 - 323 Chapter 323
- Chapter 322 - 322 Chapter 322
- Chapter 321 - 321 Chapter 321
- Chapter 320 - 320 Chapter 320
- Chapter 319 - 319 Chapter 319
- Chapter 318 - 318 Chapter 318
- Chapter 317 - 317 Chapter 317
- Chapter 316 - 316 Chapter 316
- Chapter 315 - 315 Chapter 315
- Chapter 314 - 314 Chapter 314
- Chapter 313 - 313 Chapter 313
- Chapter 312 - 312 Chapter 312
- Chapter 311 - 311 Chapter 311
- Chapter 310 - 310 Chapter 310
- Chapter 309 - 309 Chapter 309
- Chapter 308 - 308 Chapter 308
- Chapter 307 - 307 Chapter 307
- Chapter 306 - 306 Chapter 306
- Chapter 305 - 305 Chapter 305
- Chapter 304 - 304 Chapter 304
- Chapter 303 - 303 Chapter 303
- Chapter 302 - 302 Chapter 302
- Chapter 301 - 301 Chapter 301
- Chapter 300 - 300 Chapter 300
- Chapter 299 - 299 Chapter 299
- Chapter 298 - 298 Chapter 298
- Chapter 297 - 297 Chapter 297
- Chapter 296 - 296 Chapter 296
- Chapter 295 - 295 Chapter 295
- Chapter 294 - 294 Chapter 294
- Chapter 293 - 293 Chapter 293
- Chapter 292 - 292 Chapter 292
- Chapter 291 - 291 Chapter 291
- Chapter 290 - 290 Chapter 290
- Chapter 289 - 289 Chapter 289
- Chapter 288 - 288 Chapter 288
- Chapter 287 - 287 Chapter 287
- Chapter 286 - 286 Chapter 286
- Chapter 285 - 285 Chapter 285
- Chapter 284 - 284 Chapter 284
- Chapter 283 - 283 Chapter 283
- Chapter 282 - 282 Chapter 282
- Chapter 281 - 281 Chapter 281
- Chapter 280 - 280 Chapter 280
- Chapter 279 - 279 Chapter 279
- Chapter 278 - 278 Chapter 288
- Chapter 277 - 277 Chapter 277
- Chapter 276 - 276 Chapter 276
- Chapter 275 - 275 Chapter 275
- Chapter 274 - 274 Chapter 274
- Chapter 273 - 273 Chapter 273
- Chapter 272 - 272 Chapter 272
- Chapter 271 - 271 Chapter 271
- Chapter 270 - 270 Chapter 270
- Chapter 269 - 269 Chapter 269
- Chapter 268 - 268 Chapter 268
- Chapter 267 - 267 Chapter 267
- Chapter 266 - 266 Chapter 266
- Chapter 265 - 265 Chapter 265
- Chapter 264 - 264 Chapter 264
- Chapter 263 - 263 Chapter 263
- Chapter 262 - 262 Chapter 262
- Chapter 261 - 261 Chapter 261
- Chapter 260 - 260 Chapter 260
- Chapter 259 - 259 Chapter 259
- Chapter 258 - 258 Chapter 258
- Chapter 257 - 257 Chapter 257
- Chapter 256 - 256 Chapter 256
- Chapter 255 - 255 Chapter 255
- Chapter 254 - 254 Chapter 254
- Chapter 253 - 253 Chapter 253
- Chapter 252 - 252 Chapter 252
- Chapter 251 - 251 Chapter 251
- Chapter 250 - 250 Chapter 250
- Chapter 249 - 249 Chapter 249
- Chapter 248 - 248 Chapter 248
- Chapter 247 - 247 Chapter 247
- Chapter 246 - 246 Chapter 246
- Chapter 245 - 245 Chapter 245
- Chapter 244 - 244 Chapter 244
- Chapter 243 - 243 Chapter 243
- Chapter 242 - 242 Chapter 242
- Chapter 241 - 241 Chapter 241
- Chapter 240 - 240 Chapter 240
- Chapter 239 - 239 Chapter 239
- Chapter 238 - 238 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 - 202
- Chapter 201 - 201
- Chapter 200 - 200
- Chapter 199 - 199
- Chapter 198 - 198
- Chapter 197 - 197
- Chapter 196 - 196
- Chapter 195 - 195
- Chapter 194 - 194
- Chapter 193 - 193
- Chapter 192 - 192
- Chapter 191 - 191
- Chapter 190 - 190
- Chapter 189 - 189
- Chapter 188 - 188
- Chapter 187 - 187
- Chapter 186 - 186
- Chapter 185 - 185
- Chapter 184 - 184
- Chapter 183 - 183
- Chapter 182 - 182
- Chapter 181 - 181
- Chapter 180 - 180
- Chapter 179 - 179
- Chapter 178 - 178
- Chapter 177 - 177
- Chapter 176 - 176
- Chapter 175 - 175
- Chapter 174 - 174
- Chapter 173 - 173
- Chapter 172 - 172
- Chapter 171 - 171
- Chapter 170 - 170
- Chapter 169 - 169
- Chapter 168 - 168
- Chapter 167 - 167
- Chapter 166 - 166
- Chapter 165 - 165
- Chapter 164 - 164
- Chapter 163 - 163
- Chapter 162 - 162
- Chapter 161 - 161
- Chapter 160 - 160
- Chapter 159 - 159
- Chapter 158 - 158
- Chapter 157 - 157
- Chapter 156 - 156
- Chapter 155 - 155
- Chapter 154 - 154
- Chapter 153 - 153
- Chapter 152 - 152
- Chapter 151 - 151
- Chapter 150 - 150
- Chapter 149 - 149
- Chapter 148 - 148
- Chapter 147 - 147
- Chapter 146 - 146
- Chapter 145 - 145
- Chapter 144 - [Bonus ] 144
- Chapter 143 - 143
- Chapter 142 - 142
- Chapter 141 - 141
- Chapter 140 - 140
- Chapter 139 - 139
- Chapter 138 - 138
- Chapter 137 - 137
- Chapter 136 - 136
- Chapter 135 - 135
- Chapter 134 - 134
- Chapter 133 - 133
- Chapter 132 - 132
- Chapter 131 - 131
- Chapter 130 - 130
- Chapter 129 - 129
- Chapter 128 - 128
- Chapter 127 - 127
- Chapter 126 - 126
- Chapter 125 - 125
- Chapter 124 - 124
- Chapter 123 - 123
- Chapter 122 - 122
- Chapter 121 - 121
- Chapter 120 - 120
- Chapter 119 - 119
- Chapter 118 - 118
- Chapter 117 - 117
- Chapter 116 - 116
- Chapter 115 - 115
- Chapter 114 - 114
- Chapter 113 - 113
- Chapter 112 - 112
- Chapter 111 - 111
- Chapter 110 - 110
- Chapter 109 - 109
- Chapter 108 - 108
- Chapter 107 - 107
- Chapter 106 - 106
- Chapter 105 - 105
- Chapter 104 - 104
- Chapter 103 - 103
- Chapter 102 - 102
- Chapter 101 - 101
- Chapter 100 - 100
- Chapter 99 - 99
- Chapter 98 - 98
- Chapter 97 - 97
- Chapter 96 - 96
- Chapter 95 - 95
- Chapter 94 - 94
- Chapter 93 - 93
- Chapter 92 - 92
- Chapter 91 - 91
- Chapter 90 - 90
- Chapter 89 - 89
- Chapter 88 - 88
- Chapter 87 - 87
- Chapter 86 - 86
- Chapter 85 - 85
- Chapter 84 - 84
- Chapter 83 - 83
- Chapter 82 - 82
- Chapter 81 - 81
- Chapter 80 - 80
- Chapter 79 - 79
- Chapter 78 - 78
- Chapter 77 - 77
- Chapter 76 - 76
- Chapter 75 - 75
- Chapter 74 - 74
- Chapter 73 - 73
- Chapter 72 - 72
- Chapter 71 - 71
- Chapter 70 - 70
- Chapter 69 - 69
- Chapter 68 - 68
- Chapter 67 - 67
- Chapter 66 - 66
- Chapter 65 - 65
- Chapter 64 - 64
- Chapter 63 - 63
- Chapter 62 - 62
- Chapter 61 - 61
- Chapter 60 - 60
- Chapter 59 - 59
- Chapter 58 - 58
- Chapter 57 - 57
- Chapter 56 - 56
- Chapter 55 - 55
- Chapter 54 - 54
- Chapter 53 - 53
- Chapter 52 - 52
- Chapter 51 - 51
- Chapter 50 - 50
- Chapter 49 - 49
- Chapter 48 - 48
- Chapter 47 - 47
- Chapter 46 - 46
- Chapter 45 - 45
- Chapter 44 - 44
- Chapter 43 - 43
- Chapter 42 - 42
- Chapter 41 - 41
- Chapter 40 - 40
- Chapter 39 - 39
- Chapter 38 - 38
- Chapter 37 - 37
- Chapter 36 - 36
- Chapter 35 - 35
- Chapter 34 - 34
- Chapter 33 - 33
- Chapter 32 - 32
- Chapter 31 - 31
- Chapter 30 - 30
- Chapter 29 - 29
- Chapter 28 - 28
- Chapter 27 - 27
- Chapter 26 - 26
- Chapter 25 - 25
- Chapter 24 - 24
- Chapter 23 - 23
- Chapter 22 - 22
- Chapter 21 - 21
- Chapter 20 - 20
- Chapter 19 - 19
- Chapter 18 - 18
- Chapter 17 - 17
- Chapter 16 - 16
- Chapter 15 - 15
- Chapter 14 - 14
- Chapter 13 - 13
- Chapter 12 - 12
- Chapter 11 - 11
- Chapter 10 - 10
- Chapter 9 - 9
- Chapter 8 - 8
- Chapter 7 - 7
- Chapter 6 - 6
- Chapter 5 - 5
- Chapter 4 - 4
- Chapter 3 - 3
- Chapter 2 - 2
- Chapter 1 - 1