Chapter 243: Apprenticeship
The bard Yaslan lightly brushed the strings of the wooden lyre cradled in his arms. A crisp, crystalline note rang out with an uncanny resonance.
Aslan tilted his head as if listening for something only he could hear. After a few seconds, he closed his eyes and gave a slight nod.
“I believe I’ve found the one you’re looking for. Might I see your map?”
His violet eyes opened and fell on Wang Yu. He extended a hand, gesturing for the map the barkeep had provided.
“Of course.”
Wang Yu handed over the bark-carved map without hesitation, waiting for Yaslan to mark the location of the person he sought.
“She’s a human living in Liaheim. Like you, she bears a connection to Elder Gewen. Her name is Moira, and she’s a master alchemist of considerable repute. She and Elder Gewen share some history. If you seek her out, I doubt she’ll turn you away.”
Aslan drew a dot on the map, then returned it to Wang Yu. He offered a few words about the herbalist he was recommending.
“Thank you.”
Wang Yu studied the marked spot, which was conveniently close to their new residence.
“May fortune favor you,” Yaslan replied. He waved farewell with a smile. “You carry something I’ve not seen in years,something rare. You’ll craft a tale all your own, I daresay. Perhaps I’ll have the chance to sing of it in Liaheim. To give voice to such stories… that is both my calling and the source of my power.”
“I’d rather not, myself,” Wang Yu replied wearily. “There’s an old saying from a great leader I quite agree with: ‘The more miracles you experience, the sooner you die.’ Same goes for thrilling tales. I’ll pass.”
“Wise words…” Aslan mused, expression thoughtful, before giving a more solemn nod. “Then allow me to wish you peace, instead.”
“Thanks. Oh, by the way—I missed the chance earlier, but if we meet again, I’ve got a tale I think you’ll appreciate.”
Wang Yu belatedly remembered something. Yaslan was a bard, and Wang Yu happened to carry the final memory of a forgotten soul: Samuel, the librarian who sealed himself away for the sake of unbound knowledge until he was lost to the world.
Wang Yu was one of only two people in the world who knew his true identity. And in the end, even Samuel had hoped that someone, somewhere, would remember his story.
“Then I shall look forward to it,” Aslan replied with a smile and a nod.
With a final wave, the three of them parted from the bard and continued on to their temporary lodging.
The map quickly guided them toward their new residence, which lay near the base of the Tree of Life. It was part of a cluster of dwellings crafted into the massive base. The wooden homes were artfully arranged, refined yet natural, and non-elven races seemed to be a common sight.
At the entrance to the housing district, beside a solitary building manned by elven guards, a familiar figure awaited them.
“There you are,” said Sieg as he approached. “I’ve been waiting for a bit. The guards hadn’t seen you, but I figured you’d pass this way eventually.”
“We stopped by a tavern to ask for directions and met a rather odd bard and a very peculiar cat. We ended up delaying a little.”
“Not surprising. Liaheim is full of strange faces and stranger stories to outsiders like us,” Sieg replied. “I’ve already spoken with the guards. Just show them your tokens—they’ll take you to your lodgings. Elven guests are well looked after.”
He turned to Noelle and affectionately tousled her hair.
“I plan to take Noelle sightseeing around Liaheim. I owe her that much. All these years hiding her away… it’s time to let her see the world a little. With the mists cloaking Liaheim and the safety of elven territory, there’s no longer any need for secrecy.”
Sieg took his sister’s hand and shared his plan with Wang Yu and the others.
“Sounds good. We’re actually heading out ourselves to find a woman named Moira. She’s supposed to be a master herbalist. I’m hoping to learn from her and improve my own skills.”
Wang Yu shared his intentions as well.
“Moira? Where did you hear about her?”
Sieg clearly didn’t expect to hear that name.
“A bard named Yaslan mentioned her. Is something wrong?” Wang Yu tilted his head, puzzled.
“Yaslan… I think I’ve heard that name before. Regardless, I’m sure he’s no ordinary bard.
“What he told you is true. Moira is a master of the craft. Even in all of Liaheim, there are few who could rival her in herbalism—perhaps even none. If you can convince her to teach you, it will be a rare and valuable opportunity.”
He paused, frowning slightly.
“Still, her relationship with Gewen is complicated. I can’t say whether knowing him will help you or hinder you. Given her temperament, if she takes a liking to you, she won’t refuse your request.”
“That’s fair. If it works out, great. If not, no hard feelings.”
Wang Yu was relatively easygoing about it. Seeking a mentor was always a gamble; if she declined, he wouldn’t feel too bad.
“Good luck, then. I’m off to show Noelle the sights.”
Sieg waved at Wang Yu before leading Noelle toward the elven residences.
“Should we bring something?” Wang Yu asked Avia. “Feels like it might be rude to show up empty-handed.”
He hadn’t sought out a master before, and the etiquette of such matters wasn’t something he was used to. His instincts from Earth suggested that a thoughtful gift could help.
“No need,” Avia replied calmly. “If she’s close to Elder Gewen, she’s unlikely to be swayed by trinkets. What will matter is our sincerity.”
Avia had a point. If Moira truly was the kind of person Sieg described—admired by elves, praised by Sieg, and connected to Elder Gewen—then there was little Wang Yu could offer materially that would impress her. It was better to come with open hands and earnest hearts.
Without delay, they made their way to the location Aslan had marked.
They arrived within ten minutes. Before them stood a most unusual building—if it could be considered one at all. It resembled a living tree more than a house, lush and vibrant, wrapped in vines and crowned with leaves. It was nestled within a small courtyard built around the Tree of Life.
Only a few features marked it as a dwelling: several glass-paned windows set into the bark, and a wooden door aligned with a stone path that led from the courtyard.
“She’s a true expert,” Wang Yu murmured, eyes scanning the garden. “These are high-grade magical plants, superior even to those in the Forest of Origin. That’s a ten-year mandragora bloom… and over there, timepods? We’ve got to be careful not to disturb anything.”
Just one look was enough to tell him about the depth of Moira’s knowledge of herbalism must run. These plants were notoriously difficult to cultivate outside their native environments. For someone to grow them in a magically sustained courtyard was a testament of skill—and power.
“The environment here is maintained entirely by magic,” Avia observed, her gaze sweeping over the lush, orderly beds. “Each plot of rare herbs has its own array of enchantments and magic circles, carefully tailored to the specific needs of the plants. For so many distinct magical fields to coexist in such proximity without interfering with one another… Whoever set this up must be a magician of considerable skill.”
The courtyard had no gate; it stood open to the forest beyond. A simple stone path led straight to a treehouse nestled among the branches. The two of them followed the path, their steps light against the weathered slabs, until they reached the wooden door.
Seeing no bell or knocker, Wang Yu raised his hand and rapped on the door. The sound of his knuckles echoed within the hollow of the treehouse.
Footsteps approached from inside. Then came a creak as the wooden door opened. An elderly woman appeared, cloaked in grey, leaning on a smooth, polished staff. Her face was etched with deep wrinkles, the sag of her flesh lending her a strange heaviness despite her gaunt frame.
“And who might you be?” the old woman asked sharply. “What business do you have with an old hag like me? If you’re here to rob me, don’t expect me to be polite.”
She was the very image of decrepitude—sunken eyes streaked with red veins, a voice shrill yet oddly vigorous, and a demeanor bristling with suspicion and impatience.
It was hard to believe that this haggard figure was the very same Moira whom Sieg had praised as a master herbalist.
But Wang Yu had no doubt she could make good on her threat. From the vantage point granted by the Chariot, he had already peered into the house and seen the object she was concealing behind her back: a vial of lethal catalyst. A single drop could prove fatal to even a grand knight if left untreated.
Worse, she had infused it with an alchemical ignition agent. If she chose to activate it, the resulting poisonous mist would surely be fatal to any intruder.
“Madam Moira, I presume?” Avia stepped forward, her tone respectful and clear. “We’ve heard of your mastery in the art of herbalism. We’ve come to seek your guidance and see if you would be willing to instruct us.”
Wang Yu had to admit that Avia’s gentle nature and youthful charm made her far more approachable than himself. Her request was delivered with such sincerity that it was hard not to warm to her.
Moira nodded. “I am she. Come to learn herbalism from me, you say? I didn’t think anyone still remembered an old woman like me. And you’re both human, no less. Strange… This is Liaheim, the elven capital. I haven’t shown my face in public in many years. Are you perhaps acquainted with someone I know?”
“Not directly,” Avia replied, “but I believe we do know someone connected to you. This is his token.”
She reached into her satchel and drew out a large, glossy acorn—the token Gewen had entrusted to them—and held it up for Moira to see.
“Gewen? Hm.” The old woman’s brow arched with mild surprise, and her voice took on a note of amused sarcasm. “If that’s the case, it’s a little odd you’d come here to learn herbalism from me.”
She chuckled dryly, though there was a curious glint in her eyes.
“But no matter. That man can’t tell me what to do. It’s been a long time since anyone’s come knocking. No one ever dared, not back then. You two are the first—and both humans, just like me.”
For a moment, a flicker of interest softened the worn lines of her face.
“These last few years, I’ve had little to occupy myself with. Taking on two students isn’t out of the question. However…” Her eyes narrowed. “I’ll need to test you first. If you fail, I won’t teach you. In fact, I won’t even let you step across my threshold.”
With that, she slipped the catalyst vial into a pouch at her waist, propped her staff against the door, and folded her arms as she faced them squarely.
“Please,” Avia said with a respectful bow, “we’re ready to face any test you set us.”
“Herbalism,” Moira said, tapping her wrinkled temple with a finger, “is more than practical skill. It demands deep knowledge—of ingredients, properties, interactions. I don’t know the first thing about you, and I certainly won’t waste my ingredients letting you experiment freely. So, we’ll keep it simple. I’ll quiz you. I want to know how much theory you’ve retained.”
Her sharp eyes flicked between the two would-be students.
“One question per person. You’ll alternate. I won’t take on both of you just because one of you passes. You each have to prove yourselves.”
She pointed at Wang Yu. “You first. Why was herbalism split from the broader discipline of alchemy?”
Wang Yu didn’t hesitate. “Because potioncraft lacks the inherent unpredictability of alchemy. Many alchemists thus believed it should be categorized as a separate, more structured field.”
The first question was easy enough.
“Not the most rigorous answer, but passable. Next question. Your turn—name the founding figures of potioncraft.”
“Twelve in all,” Avia answered promptly. “Calliost, Domarthune…”
“Very well. Now you,” she turned back to Wang Yu, “list the individual factions that each of the twelve founders led.”
Sweat began to bead on Wang Yu’s brow. He could recall the schools… barely. He could name them, yes—but Moira’s deepening scrutiny made it clear this was only the beginning.
He was, by nature, a hands-on learner, practical to the extreme. His approach to potion-making was simple: if he didn’t know it, he’d look it up, test it himself, and eventually get it right. He studied hard, no question—but theory was never his strong suit.
Especially not compared to Avia. Her mind was a steel trap. She remembered everything.
They’d only been studying herbalism for a year or so—not long enough to build a foundation comparable to, say, the twelve years one would dedicate to academic studies for a university entrance exam. And herbalism required both theory and practice in spades.
Most of Wang Yu’s time in Aleisterre had been spent in practical work—brewing with a book open, or pestering Avia for clarification.
Even so, he recited carefully from memory, “Disjunction, conjunction, natural convergence…”
“Too slow,” Moira snapped. “Next. From the fourth chapter of General Studies in Herbalism, explain the classification and handling methods of the dragonblood vine.”
The questions were getting tougher at a frightening pace.
Wang Yu scratched the back of his head. This one was a stumper. He didn’t even remember reading the tome. But it was fine—Avia would have no trouble.
“That plant,” she replied with ease, “has no real relation to dragon’s blood, despite its name. It reacts differently to various types of blood, and was historically used to test the authenticity of so-called ‘dragon blood’ in the market.”
“Correct,” Moira nodded. “Matches the source, and you even summarized it well. Next. From Combat Applications of Herbalism, summarize the core principles regarding offensive potions.”
She turned back to Wang Yu.
“…I’m sorry. I haven’t read that one.”
Wang Yu was a straightforward man. He’d never read the textbook in question. All he could do was shake his head and admit his ignorance.
“In that case, you’re eliminated. You, answer the question.”
Moira promptly turned toward Avia.
Eliminated, Wang Yu could only step aside and watch as Avia continued facing Moira’s test.
There was no denying it—Avia was, as always, extraordinary. Her breadth of knowledge was absurd. Even though her primary fields were spellcraft and alchemy, she still effortlessly outstripped Wang Yu even in herbalism.
She answered Moira’s rapid-fire questions one after another—covering everything from the distinguishing features of various schools of herbalism, to the intricate theories of renowned herbalists, and even delving into obscure magical herbs, their properties, and processing methods.
With her bottomless reservoir of knowledge, Avia was able to respond to nearly every question flawlessly. By the end, it became clear to Wang Yu that Moira was no longer merely testing her. The tone had changed—Moira was probing the depths of Avia’s intellect with genuine interest, perhaps even admiration.
At last, Avia was asked an especially obscure question. She shook her head, finally stumped, and the rapid-fire examination came to an end.
“Excellent. You’ve passed. To possess such scholarship at your age… even I would pale in comparison by far. With a student like you, any teacher would consider herself fortunate.”
Moira nodded, the aged lines of her face softening into a rare, appreciative smile.
“Thank you.”
Avia dipped her head. Her tact left Moira even more satisfied.
“As for you—my apologies. I cannot teach you.”
Turning to Wang Yu, Moira delivered her verdict without emotion, her voice calm and final.
“Come, child. Let me teach you something you won’t find in the books.”
She beckoned to Avia, who followed her into the treehouse. This next lesson, it seemed, would be conducted privately.
Just before stepping inside, Avia shot Wang Yu a meaningful glance. The two of them shared a tacit understanding—she intended to pass on what she learned to him.
Wang Yu responded with a silent thumbs-up, though he couldn’t help but feel a little helpless. How had it come to this? It was supposed to be his attempt to improve as an amateur herbalist. Somehow, the budding alchemist Avia had gotten the opportunity instead.
Granted, the outcome was largely the same—Avia was a fine teacher, and he had no doubt she’d be able to pass on her newfound knowledge. Still, something about it all felt… off.
He sighed. Wang Yu didn’t dwell on it too much. Aside from the lingering sense of weirdness, he had no strong complaints. He crouched with his back to the treehouse, resigned to waiting until Moira’s first lesson was over. He couldn’t very well barge in uninvited.
It was then that Moira’s hoarse, sharp-edged voice rang out from the still-open wooden door.
“One last chance for you, lad. I have a long-standing challenge: If you can open this and retrieve what’s inside, I’ll teach you too. Don’t get your hopes up, though—I’ve been trying for years and never managed it.”
She tossed out a black cube from within the treehouse. Wang Yu reacted swiftly, catching it in both hands.
“Good luck.”
Clearly, Moira didn’t expect him to succeed. Her gesture felt more like a formality than anything else. After flinging the object to him, she shut the door.
Wang Yu examined the item in his hand—a pitch-black block, like some kind of carved monolith. Its cracked surface gleamed with an uncanny smoothness. Except for a few damaged spots, it was flawless to the touch and almost frictionless beneath his fingers.
He turned it over, inspecting it from every angle. Then he applied force—brute strength backed by fighting spirit and finely-honed muscle. The power of an advanced knight surged through him, but the object didn’t so much as tremble.
He gave it a gentle shake and heard the sloshing of liquid inside. So it was hollow. Whatever Moira wanted must be sealed within.
Brute force was out. Shifting tactics, Wang Yu activated the power of the Chariot. His body became a source of “radiation,” projecting invisible force outward to envelop the stone block. Command, distortion—he attempted to alter the object’s nature using his power. It was no use. The Chariot’s power could sense the object and exert pressure upon it, but not change it. Its form resisted manipulation.
“It’s beyond my level of influence—no, hold on. I can affect it, just barely. I can read some of its properties, too… Antimagic… anti-void… anti-fighting-spirit… and it’s resistant to a few forces I can’t even identify, too. What the hell is this thing?”
Wang Yu’s curiosity flared as he felt the object’s uncanny resilience. It lay partially beyond the Chariot’s dominion. But perhaps—if he used that…
Drawing in a deep breath, Wang Yu steadied himself. He turned all his focus inward. The extended perception of the Chariot’s power began to align with the sensory inputs of his physical body. The two fused—sensation and projection, flesh and force—melded into a singular, focused state.
His Bloodsurge Doppelgänger had divided body and mind. This new development was the inverse: it fused the body and mind together.
An invisible tremor rippled out from him, subtly shaking the world around him. A field bloomed into existence, centered on his very being: Extrasensory Convergence.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 435: Torn by Doubts
- Chapter 434: The Old Node
- Chapter 433: Breaking the Formation
- Chapter 432: Frost Unbound
- Chapter 431: Investigation on the Snowfields
- Chapter 430: Cold Snap
- Chapter 429: Unknown Outcomes
- Chapter 428: The Void and the Gods
- Chapter 427: The Runaway Fortress
- Chapter 426: The Living Fortress
- Chapter 425: The New King
- Chapter 424: Records of History
- Chapter 423: Grudges Settled
- Chapter 422: Shattering the Cage
- Chapter 421: Spellweaver
- Chapter 420: Imprisoned
- Chapter 419: The Endless Corridor
- Chapter 418: Void Engine
- Chapter 417: Poof
- Chapter 416: A Gift Delivered
- Chapter 415: Blitzkrieg
- Chapter 414: Overwhelming Suppression
- Chapter 413: Facing Legends
- Chapter 412: Astrologer and Annihilation
- Chapter 411: Archangel
- Chapter 410: The Mad Bomber
- Chapter 409: The Hour of Reckoning
- Chapter 408: News of Charles
- Chapter 407: "Algorithmic" Optimization
- Chapter 406: Relics of Another World
- Chapter 405: The Door Revisited
- Chapter 404: A Home Reborn
- Chapter 403: Not So Perfect
- Chapter 402: The Skys The Limit
- Chapter 401: Myriad Forms
- Chapter 400: Trinity, the Incarnation of Lightning
- Chapter 399: A Battle Without End
- Chapter 398: The Armored Dragon
- Chapter 397: Calamity of the Void
- Chapter 396: The Remade Dragons
- Chapter 395: Vanguards of Hell
- Chapter 394: On the Eve of Battle
- Chapter 393: Escape
- Chapter 392: The Tides Collapse
- Chapter 391: I, A Wizard
- Chapter 390: A Golden Body?
- Chapter 389: The Living Forge
- Chapter 388: Mana Singularity
- Chapter 387: The Layered Barrier
- Chapter 386: Aid From Another Plane
- Chapter 385: The Dragons Lament
- Chapter 384: The Strongest Shackles
- Chapter 383: The Dream of Eternal Sleep
- Chapter 382: The Old Mans Lullaby
- Chapter 381: A Day Repeated
- Chapter 380: The Argent Kingslayer
- Chapter 379: Steadfast Will
- Chapter 378: The Power of Heretics
- Chapter 377: King of Dragons
- Chapter 376: Tidal Cataclysm
- Chapter 375: Shadows of the Past
- Chapter 374: The Sea of Perdition
- Chapter 373: Descent of the Dragon God
- Chapter 372: A Bitter Battle
- Chapter 371: The Tidal Passage
- Chapter 370: The Red Moon Rises
- Chapter 369: His Purpose? His Decree?
- Chapter 368: Three Paths Converge
- Chapter 367: Selwyns Fallen Capital
- Chapter 366: Shifting Calamities
- Chapter 365: A Crushing Finale
- Chapter 364: Blood and Flame
- Chapter 363: Total Suppression
- Chapter 362: A Reverse Ambush
- Chapter 361: Old Grudges, New Enemies
- Chapter 360: Probing the Way
- Chapter 359: Preparing for the Endless Sea
- Chapter 358: Perfect Protection
- Chapter 357: A Stable Breakthrough
- Chapter 356: The Dragons Shadow
- Chapter 355: The Path of Redemption
- Chapter 354: Supplication and Struggle
- Chapter 353: The Inescapable Calamity
- Chapter 352: The Summons and the Trap
- Chapter 351: Free Labor
- Chapter 350: Take This Slap
- Chapter 349: Beyond the Firmament
- Chapter 348: The World Beneath The Abyss
- Chapter 347: The Eternal Gear
- Chapter 346: The Handover
- Chapter 345: Power Unleashed
- Chapter 344: The Fire Elemental Lord
- Chapter 343: Curios and Gods
- Chapter 342: The Hammer of Fusion
- Chapter 341: Conclusion and the Door
- Chapter 340: After You Kill Me, Then What?
- Chapter 339: The Iron Snare
- Chapter 338: The Sacrificial Blade
- Chapter 337: High-Energy Overcharge
- Chapter 336: The Divine Scales
- Chapter 335: What Did You Say? 2V2!
- Chapter 334: Target Acquired
- Chapter 333: A Hall of Knowledge?
- Chapter 332: Warning
- Chapter 331: Seeking the Truth
- Chapter 330: An Unfinished Work
- Chapter 329: Is Infinite Potential That Difficult?
- Chapter 328: The Void Chatroom and the Midnight Library
- Chapter 327: Aid from Beyond
- Chapter 326: A Catastrophic Incident
- Chapter 325: The Usurped Vessel
- Chapter 324: Corpse Retrieval
- Chapter 323: Dragonslayer
- Chapter 322: Dragon Crash
- Chapter 321: A Corrupted Draconian
- Chapter 320: A Rare Foe
- Chapter 319: The Dragons Roar
- Chapter 318: The Swordbearer Arrives
- Chapter 317: The Lichs Phylactery
- Chapter 316: The Stairway of Progress
- Chapter 315: The Living Dragon Armor
- Chapter 314: Regarding the Abyss
- Chapter 313: Abyssal Beasts and the Alchemical Legion
- Chapter 312: Draconic Magic and Hypermagic
- Chapter 311: Blitz Battle
- Chapter 310: The Machine Spirit
- Chapter 309: The Sword of Darkness
- Chapter 308: Godslayer
- Chapter 307: The Clever "Orc"
- Chapter 306: The Bell Ringer
- Chapter 305: The Forgotten Town
- Chapter 304: The Fog Rising
- Chapter 303: The Stirring Darkness
- Chapter 302: Tip of the Iceberg
- Chapter 301: Invitation and Upheaval
- Chapter 300: Strange Dragonbreath
- Chapter 299: The Silver Dragons Blood
- Chapter 298: Wings of Steel
- Chapter 297: A Horde of Dragons
- Chapter 296: Reunion and the Enemy
- Chapter 295: Undead Plane; Old Bones
- Chapter 294: A Pocket Dimension
- Chapter 293: A Growing Reputation
- Chapter 292: The Stars Above
- Chapter 291: Knowledge Is Wealth
- Chapter 290: Skyborne City
- Chapter 289: Void Processor
- Chapter 288: The Seed of Eden, Bane of Spellcasters
- Chapter 287: Sparring and the Winged
- Chapter 286: The Lucky Fellow
- Chapter 285: Triumphant Return
- Chapter 284: An Old Acquaintance
- Chapter 283: Soulflame and the Commanders Throne
- Chapter 282: Two-Way Portal
- Chapter 281: Charging Straight Into the Void
- Chapter 280: The Voidwell
- Chapter 279: Blazing Wrath, A Thousand-Mile Pursuit
- Chapter 278: The Devils Smile
- Chapter 277: Purification and the Blood Pool
- Chapter 276: One-Tenth!
- Chapter 275: War of Attrition; the Crucial Breakthrough
- Chapter 274: Descent of the Titan
- Chapter 273: Endless Life, Corrupted Scourge
- Chapter 272: A Mothers Overindulgence
- Chapter 271: Confrontation, Upheaval, and Kin
- Chapter 270: The Wishing Coin
- Chapter 269: Prepared for Battle
- Chapter 268: Full Mobilization
- Chapter 267: Spatial Turbulence
- Chapter 266: Distortion
- Chapter 265: Moiras Past and the World-Eater
- Chapter 264: Iron King Bogul
- Chapter 263: The Druids Masterpiece
- Chapter 262: Dirge of the Druids
- Chapter 261: The Great Mushroom
- Chapter 260: Crimson Rot
- Chapter 259: The Crimson Clan
- Chapter 258: Journey to the Sorensen Mountains
- Chapter 257: Confrontation and an Unexpected Discovery
- Chapter 256: A Mages Realm
- Chapter 255: Whence It Came
- Chapter 254: Tracing the Roots
- Chapter 253: Cleansing and Visitation
- Chapter 252: Allied in Battle
- Chapter 251: The Bloodthirsty Forest
- Chapter 250: Dwarven Engineering
- Chapter 249: Within the Depths; Mothers Anomalies
- Chapter 248: Investigation, Pressure, and the Shattered Starsteel Blade
- Chapter 247: Life Siphoning
- Chapter 246: The Twisted Woodling
- Chapter 245: The Golden Apple and a Rekindled Flame
- Chapter 244: Where Talent Lies; Stardew
- Chapter 243: Apprenticeship
- Chapter 242: A Strange Land, A Strange People, and Strange Happenings
- Chapter 241: News and Arrangements
- Chapter 240: The Elves and Dwarves Clash
- Chapter 239: The Forests Fury
- Chapter 238: The Elven Capital
- Chapter 237: The Road Ahead
- Chapter 236: The Church of Dragonkind
- Chapter 235: See You In Hell
- Chapter 234: The Battlemage
- Chapter 233: Fall of the Desolate Dragon
- Chapter 232: The Power of Origin: The Chariot
- Chapter 231: Threads of the Web
- Chapter 230: The Prelude to Rescue
- Chapter 229: Torture and Inquisition
- Chapter 228: Search and Contingency
- Chapter 227: Victory and Disappearance
- Chapter 226: A Final Gambit and a Dead End
- Chapter 225: The Blazing Shell
- Chapter 224: A Desperate Gamble
- Chapter 223: The Long Night Ends
- Chapter 222: The Bastion of Souls; A Divine Vessel
- Chapter 221: The Darker the Night, the Brighter the Stars
- Chapter 220: The Sea of Silence
- Chapter 219: Blank Paper Stains Easily
- Chapter 218: Battle of Divine Power
- Chapter 217: A Deitys Corpse
- Chapter 216: Chaos Reversed, Perfection Attained
- Chapter 215: Settling Old Scores; the Immature Playwright
- Chapter 214: A Partners Bond
- Chapter 213: United Against the Infernal Fiend
- Chapter 212: An Outburst of Power
- Chapter 211: Malevolent Possession; A Battle to the Death
- Chapter 210: The Lone Avenger Arrives
- Chapter 209: Into the Abyss
- Chapter 208: The Mirror of the Stars
- Chapter 207: A Writer and a Mission
- Chapter 206: Deepening Dread and the Cage of Memory
- Chapter 205: Celebration, Ceremony, and Divine Descent
- Chapter 204: Capitals Downfall
- Chapter 203: Legends Take the Stage
- Chapter 202: Shadows Stir Beneath
- Chapter 201: City-Crushing Momentum
- Chapter 200: The Eve of the Final Battle
- Chapter 199: Were All Fools
- Chapter 198: Destructive Might
- Chapter 197: Destructive Meteor
- Chapter 196: Chaos; a Bold Plan
- Chapter 195: The Will to Leave
- Chapter 194: Sudden Killing Intent
- Chapter 193: Brazen Exploitation
- Chapter 192: Temporary Victory; Re-Election
- Chapter 191: The Merciless Battlefield
- Chapter 190: Attitude, and the Intensifying War
- Chapter 189: Interception and a Statement
- Chapter 188: Relocation
- Chapter 187: Gaze from the Stars
- Chapter 186: Reason
- Chapter 185: Clash of the Grand Knights
- Chapter 184: A Violent Rescue and a Second Perpetrator
- Chapter 183: Targeted
- Chapter 182: Drawing Attention
- Chapter 181: Kamikaze Attack
- Chapter 180: Night Raid
- Chapter 179: A Good Death
- Chapter 178: Pursuit
- Chapter 177: The Death of a Noble
- Chapter 176: A Brand-New Way to Fight
- Chapter 175: Conflict, Unleashed
- Chapter 174: The Utopian Circus
- Chapter 173: Resolution
- Chapter 172: Rest and Reflection
- Chapter 171: Lost Power
- Chapter 170: Stories of the Past
- Chapter 169: Collapse and Survival
- Chapter 168: Flipping the Table
- Chapter 167: Beyond Any Expectations
- Chapter 166: Recognition and Sudden Change
- Chapter 165: Material Shaping; The Secret Tome Reappears
- Chapter 164: Edwards Family Affairs; Heading to the Library
- Chapter 163: The Opening of the Grand Library
- Chapter 162: Annihilation and Ugliness
- Chapter 161: Dual Assault
- Chapter 160: Raid on the Cult of the Abyss
- Chapter 159: The Growing Tree of the Night
- Chapter 158: A Tribute to the Prayer Network
- Chapter 157: Shocking News
- Chapter 156: Diverting the Contamination
- Chapter 155: The Rampaging Automaton; Abyssal Corruption
- Chapter 154: The Abnormal Automaton
- Chapter 153: An Underground Invasion
- Chapter 152: The "Demonic" Dragon
- Chapter 151: The Alchemy Convenience Store
- Chapter 150: Transient Pains
- Chapter 149: The Void Programmer
- Chapter 148: Tree of the Night
- Chapter 147: Bindings
- Chapter 146: Intelligence and Trouble
- Chapter 145: The Devil "One," Prisoner of Fate
- Chapter 144: The Academys Gratitude; Visiting the Ryders
- Chapter 143: A Strange Message
- Chapter 142: Entering the Void; Taking Center Stage
- Chapter 141: Transcending Death; Pillars of Flame
- Chapter 140: Bloodsurge Doppelgnger
- Chapter 139: Lethal Carnage
- Chapter 138: Deadlock and a Crazy Plan
- Chapter 137: An Evolved Body
- Chapter 136: A Spark Ignites
- Chapter 135: Playing with Fire
- Chapter 134: Efficient Handling of Mutated Flesh
- Chapter 133: The Wolf Kings Pursuit and a Sudden Realization
- Chapter 132: A Gun
- Chapter 131: An Intrusion into the Gap
- Chapter 130: Undercurrents
- Chapter 129: The Rampaging Beast Tide
- Chapter 128: Bloodshed Among the Wolves
- Chapter 127: The Howls of Winters End
- Chapter 126: Gradual Change
- Chapter 125: The Effects of Dragon Blood
- Chapter 124: The Nights Shelter; the Dragons Shackles
- Chapter 123: The Cost of Betrayal
- Chapter 122: The True Hunter
- Chapter 121: An Alleyway Fight
- Chapter 120: Siegs Visit; the Dragons Descendants
- Chapter 119: One Day, One Answer
- Chapter 118: The Mountain Forge and the Spellweavers Tome
- Chapter 117: Reunion and Temporary Peace
- Chapter 116: The Banner of Triumph; Void Research Notes
- Chapter 115: Honors from the King
- Chapter 114: A Turning Point, and the Kings Summons
- Chapter 113: Vengeance and the Shattered Gate
- Chapter 112: A Meteoric Path; the Demon Vanguard
- Chapter 111: Storm of Order
- Chapter 110: The Dragons Curse; the Firmament of Eternal Night
- Chapter 109: An Aerial Battle, and a Shocking Turn
- Chapter 108: Prelude to the Final Confrontation
- Chapter 107: He Who Defies Fate
- Chapter 106: A High-Level Battle
- Chapter 105: Dragon
- Chapter 104: Blood-Based Healing, and a New Objective
- Chapter 103: Lionheart
- Chapter 102: The Situation Stabilizes
- Chapter 101: A Carnival of Demons
- Chapter 100: All Forces Assembled
- Chapter 99: A Bloody Battle Begins
- Chapter 98: Echoes of War
- Chapter 97: Is It Too Late
- Chapter 96: The Devil
- Chapter 95: A Race Against Time
- Chapter 94: Justice From Above
- Chapter 93: Run If You Cant Win
- Chapter 92: The Jesters of Fate
- Chapter 91: Ones Own Strength, and the Ryder Seers
- Chapter 90: The Alchemy Workshop
- Chapter 89: Flourishing Growth
- Chapter 88: Whence Faith
- Chapter 87: A Foreign Faith
- Chapter 86: Seeds of Calamity
- Chapter 85: Investigation and Self-Reflection
- Chapter 84: Cleanup and Investigation
- Chapter 83: Combat Synergy
- Chapter 82: Encirclement
- Chapter 81: Premature Birth
- Chapter 80: Science and Ruthlessness
- Chapter 79: The Violent Breakthrough
- Chapter 78: What Lay Hidden
- Chapter 77: The Eerie Sewers
- Chapter 76: Hes Like A Clown
- Chapter 75: True Genius
- Chapter 74: The Banquet
- Chapter 73: Nourishment
- Chapter 72: Bloodburn Drive
- Chapter 71: Knight Training
- Chapter 70: A New Plan
- Chapter 69: A Groundbreaking Creation
- Chapter 68: Outburst and Growth
- Chapter 67: Irresistible Coercion
- Chapter 66: Church of Nightfall
- Chapter 65: Me, the Archbishop?
- Chapter 64: Beyond Expectations
- Chapter 63: Abyssal Will and Malevolence
- Chapter 62: Land of Chaos, Abyssal Outpost
- Chapter 61: The Capitals Shadow
- Chapter 60: Mutual Understanding and the Nights Watch
- Chapter 59: Annihilation and Hidden Dangers
- Chapter 58: The Smoke Demon Knight
- Chapter 57: The Source of the Mutation
- Chapter 56: Suppression
- Chapter 55: The Gift of Restoring Life
- Chapter 54: A Knights Secret Arts
- Chapter 53: The Absurdity of the Church of Light
- Chapter 52: The Rift and the Dark Web
- Chapter 51: Here to Report In
- Chapter 50: The Power of the Lady of the Night, Eunice
- Chapter 49: New Arrivals
- Chapter 48: The Royal Capital
- Chapter 47: Investigations and Human Scum
- Chapter 46: An Enemy Plot?
- Chapter 45: The Invisible Goblin
- Chapter 44: Goblin Marauders
- Chapter 43: The Gnome Merchants Guild
- Chapter 42: A Parting Gift and a New Beginning
- Chapter 41: The Noble Investigation Team
- Chapter 40: A Rainy Night and a Conversation
- Chapter 39: The Song of the Void
- Chapter 38: The Warrior Whos Never Late
- Chapter 37: She Who Fights Alone
- Chapter 36: Wallbreaker
- Chapter 35: Iron Fortress
- Chapter 34: Slaughter in the Rain
- Chapter 33: The Stormy Night
- Chapter 32: The Calm Before the Storm
- Chapter 31: A Negotiation with Hidden Motives
- Chapter 30: The Girl and Her Knight
- Chapter 29: The Enemys Calculated Plot
- Chapter 28: Storm on the Horizon
- Chapter 27: The Incompetent Alchemist
- Chapter 26: Curios and Alchemy
- Chapter 25: The Mindflayer and the Practical Leader
- Chapter 24: Severing the Illusion
- Chapter 23: Direct Confrontation
- Chapter 22: The Sinister Cabin
- Chapter 21: A Low-Level Task
- Chapter 20: Strange Fighting Spirit and a New Task
- Chapter 19: The Source of Fighting Spirit
- Chapter 18: Future Turmoil
- Chapter 17: His Foundation
- Chapter 16: A Disparity in Talent
- Chapter 15: A Dramatic Appearance
- Chapter 14: Fear and Shadows
- Chapter 13: Formless Spying
- Chapter 12: The Crazed Hagbirds
- Chapter 11: The Strange Forest of Fog
- Chapter 10: The Start of a New Journey
- Chapter 9: Latent Abilities and Avias Family
- Chapter 8: Wizardry and Latent Awakening
- Chapter 7: Do You Need a Squire?
- Chapter 6: Resolute Advance
- Chapter 5: Relentless Fighting
- Chapter 4: Vengeful Assault
- Chapter 3: The Silent Killer
- Chapter 2: Allies in Prison
- Chapter 1: In Dire Straits