The Ten Thousand Deaths : 1000x Exp System
Chapter 170: The Northern Reach
- Chapter 229: The Intake Desk
- Chapter 228: The Morning She Left
- Chapter 227: What She Taught
- Chapter 226: The Argument
- Chapter 225: The Hollow Territories
- Chapter 224: Sela’s Name
- Chapter 223: The Woman Speaks
- Chapter 222: The Dispaly Gies Quiet
- Chapter 221: Level 100
- Chapter 220: What the Whole Sees
- Chapter 219: The Twelfth
- Chapter 218: The Eleventh
- Chapter 217: The Different Kind of Strong
- Chapter 216: The Seventh Through Ninth
- Chapter 215: Halfway
- Chapter 214: Drevenmoor
- Chapter 213: The Fourth and Fifth
- Chapter 212: Wanting Without Needing
- Chapter 211: The Crossing
- Chapter 210: The Drift
- Chapter 209: The Connection
- Chapter 208: The Second Node
- Chapter 207: The Repair Curriculum
- Chapter 206: Two Hundred
- Chapter 205: The Fear in the Full Presence
- Chapter 204: Oda
- Chapter 203: The Third
- Chapter 202: The Children
- Chapter 201: Priya’s Three
- Chapter 200: What Comes Next
- Chapter 199: Ren’s Map
- Chapter 198: The Ordinary Tuesday
- Chapter 197: Eleven
- Chapter 196: Dael’s Last Pattern
- Chapter 195: The Fifteenth Class
- Chapter 194: What the Network Said
- Chapter 193: The Arrival
- Chapter 192: Six Weeks
- Chapter 191: What Approaches
- Chapter 190: The Second Expressive Institution
- Chapter 189: Kel’s Three Questions
- Chapter 188: The Curriculum Complete
- Chapter 187: Senn’s Last Dispatch
- Chapter 186: The Oversight Board
- Chapter 185: The Next Thing
- Chapter 184: The Grade Nine
- Chapter 183: What Dael Found
- Chapter 182: The Collectors’ Report
- Chapter 181: Ren’s Question
- Chapter 180: The Fourteenth Class
- Chapter 179: Homecoming
- Chapter 178: The Road Home
- Chapter 177: His Mother Teaches
- Chapter 176: Brae
- Chapter 175: Asta
- Chapter 174: Three Grade Eights
- Chapter 173: The Honest Institution
- Chapter 172: What Comes After
- Chapter 171: Grade Eight
- Chapter 170: The Northern Reach
- Chapter 169: The Collector’s Watch
- Chapter 168: What Brill Said at Level 80
- Chapter 167: Level 80
- Chapter 166: Peak
- Chapter 165: The Grind
- Chapter 164: The Rate
- Chapter 163: The Test
- Chapter 162: The Collector’s Army
- Chapter 161: Reintegration
- Chapter 160: The Pre-Withdrawal Records
- Chapter 159: Dael’s Numbers
- Chapter 158: The Collector
- Chapter 157: What Came Through
- Chapter 156: The Door
- Chapter 155: One
- Chapter 154: The Last Three
- Chapter 153: The Return
- Chapter 152: The World at Five
- Chapter 151: What Remains
- Chapter 150: The Ordinary Work
- Chapter 149: He found Lyr in the fifth building.
- Chapter 148: The World at Seven
- Chapter 147: The Eleventh Class
- Chapter 146: What the Observer Said
- Chapter 145: The Work at Ten
- Chapter 144: The Archive
- Chapter 143: Ten
- Chapter 142: The World at Eleven
- Chapter 141: What His Mother Wrote
- Chapter 140: The Tenth Class
- Chapter 139: The World at Seventeen
- Chapter 138: Ora’s Last Section
- Chapter 137: The Ninth Class
- Chapter 136: What His Mother Said
- Chapter 135: The Domain Expands
- Chapter 134: The World at Twenty-Four
- Chapter 133: Three Questions
- Chapter 132: The Curriculum Complete
- Chapter 131: Vael’s Question
- Chapter 130: The Eighth Class
- Chapter 129: The Aggregate
- Chapter 128: What Remains
- Chapter 127: The Announcement
- Chapter 126: The Last Six Months
- Chapter 125: What Was Interrupted
- Chapter 124: Twelve Months
- Chapter 123: What Vael and Lyr Said at Dinner
- Chapter 122: Home Again
- Chapter 121: The Third, Fourth, and Fifth
- Chapter 120: What the School Became
- Chapter 119: The First of Five
- Chapter 118: Three Days
- Chapter 117: What the Responses Said
- Chapter 116: The Opening
- Chapter 115: North
- Chapter 114: Before the North
- Chapter 113: The Eight Locations
- Chapter 112: The Signal Returns
- Chapter 111: The Principle
- Chapter 110: What the Seventh Class Brings
- Chapter 109: Home
- Chapter 108: The Seventh Territory
- Chapter 107: Drevenmoor
- Chapter 106: Two Remaining
- Chapter 105: What Grows in New Soil
- Chapter 104: The Water Channel Methodology
- Chapter 103: Level 61
- Chapter 102: Six Weeks
- Chapter 101: Kel’s Questions
- Chapter 100: What Home Looks Like
- Chapter 99: The Return
- Chapter 98: The Network Expands
- Chapter 97: The Message Home
- Chapter 96: What the Thread Carries
- Chapter 95: Three Months
- Chapter 94: What Returns
- Chapter 93: The Origin
- Chapter 92: Terminal Momentum
- Chapter 91: The City
- Chapter 90: The Network Finds Itself
- Chapter 89: Three Weeks
- Chapter 88: The Territorial Map
- Chapter 87: Roots
- Chapter 86: Below the System
- Chapter 85: The Eighty-Year Worker
- Chapter 84: Departure
- Chapter 83: The Choice
- Chapter 82: Fifty
- Chapter 81: What Oren Showed Aldas
- Chapter 80: The School’s Second Class
- Chapter 79: Ora
- Chapter 78: Rest
- Chapter 77: Two Days
- Chapter 76: When
- Chapter 75: Five
- Chapter 74: The Conversation
- Chapter 73: The Regional Council
- Chapter 72: Two Hundred and Fourteen
- Chapter 71: The Kingdom Agreement
- Chapter 70: Sorel’s Answer
- Chapter 69: What The Church Heard
- Chapter 68: The Morning After the Signal
- Chapter 67: Three
- Chapter 66: The Road South
- Chapter 65: Nineteen Years
- Chapter 64: Thronwall
- Chapter 63: School Open Early
- Chapter 62: Threading
- Chapter 61: First Contact
- Chapter 60: The Signal Reaches
- Chapter 59: What Was Built
- Chapter 58: Lira Arrives
- Chapter 57: The List
- Chapter 56: The Five Hundred Meter Test
- Chapter 55: The Women Watched
- Chapter 54: Range
- Chapter 53: What Suppression Grows
- Chapter 52: The First Morning
- Chapter 51: Sublevel Four
- Chapter 50: Valdenmoor, Three Week Later
- Chapter 49: Walking Back
- Chapter 48: The Evaluator
- Chapter 47: The Teaching
- Chapter 46: The Seeker
- Chapter 45: The Ashwater Crossing
- Chapter 44: The Message
- Chapter 43: The Morning After Coming Home
- Chapter 42: The Road Home
- Chapter 41: World’s Warden
- Chapter 40: What Came Outside
- Chapter 39: Dead Zone
- Chapter 38: Level 60
- Chapter 37: What Crestfall Woke To
- Chapter 36: The Warden Wakes 2
- Chapter 35: The Warden Wakes
- Chapter 34: The Gates of Crestfall
- Chapter 33: Tempered
- Chapter 32: Eleven Years
- Chapter 31: The Necromancer of the North
- Chapter 30: What The Road Carries
- Chapter 29: The Road to North
- Chapter 28: Level 50
- Chapter 27: Hael’s Choice
- Chapter 26: The Church
- Chapter 25: The Hunter Market
- Chapter 24: Hael
- Chapter 23: The Morning After
- Chapter 22: The Last Anchor 3
- Chapter 21: The Last Anchor 2
- Chapter 20: The Last Anchor
- Chapter 19: Six Hours 2
- Chapter 18: Six Hours
- Chapter 17: The First Anchor 2
- Chapter 16: The First Anchor
- Chapter 15: The Ancient Remnant
- Chapter 14: The Ashenmoor Hunt
- Chapter 13: Home And Hunger
- Chapter 12: The Master Below 3
- Chapter 11: The Master Below 2
- Chapter 10: The Master Below
- Chapter 9: The Iron Catacombs 3
- Chapter 8: The Iron Catacombs 2
- Chapter 7: The Iron Catacombs
- Chapter 6: The Market and The Priest
- Chapter 5: The Lich Bargain
- Chapter 4: The First Dungeon 2
- Chapter 3: The First Dungeon
- Chapter 2: The First Minion
- Chapter 1: The Awakening Ceremony
Priya’s message arrived on Friday.
The three households. I visited all of them over four days. A pause. Tea first. Presence before naming. The curriculum’s practices. Another pause. The first household — a family of five, the father runs the territory’s largest grain storage operation. When I sat with them the between-space quality in the room was noticeably thinner than the street outside. The fear was present without being named. I didn’t name it. I stayed for two hours. We talked about the harvest season, the children’s classes, the oversight board’s recent session. Another pause. When I left the between-space quality in that house was measurably improved. Not resolved. Improved. Another pause. I’ve visited twice more since. Each time the quality improves. The fear is still present. But it’s no longer running against the between-space. Another pause. The father asked me on the third visit what I was doing in the territory. I told him honestly — watching the between-space’s quality. He was quiet for a while. Then he said: I’ve been afraid the good years won’t last. I didn’t know that was causing something. Another pause. I told him: the fear is real. The good years are also real. The between-space doesn’t require the fear to stop. It requires honest participation with what is present. Another pause. He said: I can do that. Another pause. I think he meant it.
He read the message at the kitchen table.
His mother read it over his shoulder.
"The father said: I can do that," she said.
"Yes," he said.
"That’s the curriculum working," she said.
"Yes," he said.
"Priya did it right," his mother said. "Tea first. Present before naming. When the naming came — it came from him." She paused. "She didn’t tell him what was wrong. She was present until he could tell himself." She paused. "That’s the intake."
He sent a message to Priya.
You did it right. The father naming his own fear is worth more than you naming it for him. The between-space communicates when someone is genuinely present. You provided the presence. The between-space did the rest. He paused. The second and third households.
Priya: Similar patterns. Different fears, same root. The second household — a widow who has been accumulating material against the possibility of illness. The third — a young couple who inherited land and are expanding at a rate that feels driven by anxiety rather than need. A pause. Same fear. Different expressions. Another pause. I haven’t named it to the second or third households yet. Still in the presence phase. Another pause. How do I know when the naming phase is ready.
He thought about his mother’s section.
About be present first. Let the thing be there. Then name it when they are ready.
When they begin to name it themselves, he sent. The same way the father did. The between-space communicates when you’re genuinely present. The person begins to feel what’s running and reaches for language. That reaching is the readiness. He paused. You’ll feel it before you hear it.
Priya: Thank you. Continuing.
He set the message thread down.
Kel’s curriculum section had arrived that morning — the coal keeper waiting for permission to trust the coal.
He had read it twice.
It was right.
Specific. Accurate. Written from the inside by someone who had watched enough practitioners hesitate at exactly this point to know precisely where the hesitation came from.
The section ended:
The ordinary work is sufficient. Not sometimes. Always. The between-space returns to what it recognizes as its own. The coal keeper keeping the coal honestly — the between-space recognizes that. The practitioner sitting in a household with tea and genuine presence — the between-space recognizes that. The work does not require a specialized technique to address individual drift. The work requires honest presence. You have been trained in honest presence. Trust it. The permission you are waiting for is this: it is enough.
He sent it to Priya.
She responded immediately.
I needed this.
He looked at the window.
At the northern reach where Priya was visiting households with tea and genuine presence.
At the Collector network watching thirty-one territories.
At the between-space present in the world at one point six.
Falling.
Still falling.
Three weeks after Priya’s message the oversight board received the first formal request from outside the kingdom.
Not a between-walker request.
A governance request.
A city council from a territory four hundred kilometers south had heard about the oversight board model through the school’s graduates working in their region and had sent a formal letter requesting consultation on establishing civilian review of their institutional Class registration process.
Not the correction work.
Not the school’s curriculum.
The governance model.
The Kingdom Agreement’s framework being requested by a governance body outside the kingdom.
He read the letter at the Tuesday session.
His mother chaired.
Hael read the specific request.
"They want the oversight board model," Hael said. "The civilian review authority. The advancement credit mechanism. The transparent multiplier display." He paused. "They don’t have the Kingdom Agreement framework — they’re not part of the kingdom’s institutional structure. But they want the functional equivalent." He paused. "They’re asking for consultation on how to build it within their own governance structure."
He looked at the letter.
At the specific request.
At what it meant.
"The correction work reaches territories through correction workers," he said. "The school’s curriculum reaches through graduates." He paused. "The governance model — the oversight board, the institutional reform framework — we’ve been building that through the Kingdom Agreement’s formal coverage." He paused. "This territory is outside that coverage." He paused. "They’re asking to adopt the model independently."
"The chain extending through governance rather than through the correction work," Sera said from the corner where she was documenting.
"Yes," he said.
Hael looked at the letter.
"I can consult," he said. "The retroactive review framework, the oversight board structure, the civilian authority mechanism — I built those. I can show them how." He paused. "But the consultation needs to be adapted to their specific governance structure. The Kingdom Agreement is tailored to the kingdom’s institutional context." He paused. "Their context is different." He paused. "The principles transfer. The specific mechanisms may need to be rebuilt for their framework."
"Can you adapt it," he said.
Hael looked at him.
"I’ve been building honest institutional frameworks for nine months," Hael said. "Yes. I can adapt it." He paused. "I’ll need two weeks of direct consultation in their territory." He paused. "With permission to bring Sera for the documentation."
"Permission granted," his mother said.
She didn’t look up from the session log.
Hael almost smiled.
He looked at the letter.
At the governance model being requested by a territory four hundred kilometers south.
At the chain extending through governance.
At what came after the correction work and the participatory curriculum and the school’s graduates.
The institutional model.
The honest governance framework replicating through request rather than through correction workers deploying to territories. 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚
The communities asking to build what the Kingdom Agreement had demonstrated was possible.
Not because the correction work had reached them.
Because the model’s reputation had.
The chain extending through demonstration.
The between-space’s return producing communities that looked at the Kingdom Agreement and said: that’s what honest governance looks like and we want it.
"There will be more requests," Dael said from the documentation corner.
Everyone looked at them.
"The pattern," Dael said. "The governance model request is the leading edge of a pattern that’s been building in the territories adjacent to the kingdom’s influence for eight months." They paused. "As the between-space returns to those territories through the wellspring’s flow and the correction work — the communities experience what honest participation feels like and they look at their institutional structures and the institutional structures don’t match the quality of what they’re experiencing." They paused. "The gap produces the request." They paused. "The pattern says the governance model requests will increase significantly over the next year." They paused. "Not hundreds. But dozens." They paused. "The oversight board model scaling through governance requests rather than through direct deployment." They paused. "Faster than direct deployment." They paused. "The communities building the model themselves with consultation support." They paused. "The model becoming self-propagating."
The model becoming self-propagating.
The chain extending through request.
He thought about what Asha had built.
About documentation left for whoever came after.
About the Kingdom Agreement as documentation of what honest governance looked like.
About territories four hundred kilometers south reading that documentation and requesting consultation.
About the chain.
"The consultation framework," he said to Hael. "When you adapt the oversight board model for their governance structure — document the adaptation process. Not just the outcome. The process." He paused. "The next territory that requests will have a different governance structure. The adaptation process documentation will let them adapt it themselves without requiring Hael to consult directly." He paused. "The model scales through the documentation of how to adapt it."
Hael looked at him.
"Yes," he said. "The meta-framework." He paused. "The framework for adapting the framework." He paused. "I should have thought of that." He paused. "I’ll document as I go."
"That’s the work," he said.
His System pulsed.
[GOVERNANCE REQUEST — TERRITORY 400KM SOUTH] [HAEL + SERA — CONSULTATION — 2 WEEKS] [GOVERNANCE MODEL — SELF-PROPAGATING — BEGINNING] [META-FRAMEWORK DOCUMENTATION — HAEL — DEPLOYING] [NOTE: THE CHAIN EXTENDING THROUGH DEMONSTRATION.] [NOTE: COMMUNITIES LOOKING AT THE KINGDOM AGREEMENT AND WANTING IT.] [NOTE: THE MODEL SCALES THROUGH REQUEST FASTER THAN DEPLOYMENT.] [NOTE: DOCUMENT THE ADAPTATION PROCESS.] [NOTE: THE NEXT TERRITORY ADAPTS WITHOUT DIRECT CONSULTATION.] [NOTE: THE CHAIN.] [THE WORK CONTINUES.]
Author’s Note: Priya’s household drift work — the father naming his own fear. The curriculum: the permission you’re waiting for is this — it is enough. First governance model request from outside the kingdom. Hael and Sera deploying for consultation. The model becoming self-propagating through request. Document the adaptation process so the next territory adapts without direct consultation. Drop a Power Stone! 🔥
- Chapter 229: The Intake Desk
- Chapter 228: The Morning She Left
- Chapter 227: What She Taught
- Chapter 226: The Argument
- Chapter 225: The Hollow Territories
- Chapter 224: Sela’s Name
- Chapter 223: The Woman Speaks
- Chapter 222: The Dispaly Gies Quiet
- Chapter 221: Level 100
- Chapter 220: What the Whole Sees
- Chapter 219: The Twelfth
- Chapter 218: The Eleventh
- Chapter 217: The Different Kind of Strong
- Chapter 216: The Seventh Through Ninth
- Chapter 215: Halfway
- Chapter 214: Drevenmoor
- Chapter 213: The Fourth and Fifth
- Chapter 212: Wanting Without Needing
- Chapter 211: The Crossing
- Chapter 210: The Drift
- Chapter 209: The Connection
- Chapter 208: The Second Node
- Chapter 207: The Repair Curriculum
- Chapter 206: Two Hundred
- Chapter 205: The Fear in the Full Presence
- Chapter 204: Oda
- Chapter 203: The Third
- Chapter 202: The Children
- Chapter 201: Priya’s Three
- Chapter 200: What Comes Next
- Chapter 199: Ren’s Map
- Chapter 198: The Ordinary Tuesday
- Chapter 197: Eleven
- Chapter 196: Dael’s Last Pattern
- Chapter 195: The Fifteenth Class
- Chapter 194: What the Network Said
- Chapter 193: The Arrival
- Chapter 192: Six Weeks
- Chapter 191: What Approaches
- Chapter 190: The Second Expressive Institution
- Chapter 189: Kel’s Three Questions
- Chapter 188: The Curriculum Complete
- Chapter 187: Senn’s Last Dispatch
- Chapter 186: The Oversight Board
- Chapter 185: The Next Thing
- Chapter 184: The Grade Nine
- Chapter 183: What Dael Found
- Chapter 182: The Collectors’ Report
- Chapter 181: Ren’s Question
- Chapter 180: The Fourteenth Class
- Chapter 179: Homecoming
- Chapter 178: The Road Home
- Chapter 177: His Mother Teaches
- Chapter 176: Brae
- Chapter 175: Asta
- Chapter 174: Three Grade Eights
- Chapter 173: The Honest Institution
- Chapter 172: What Comes After
- Chapter 171: Grade Eight
- Chapter 170: The Northern Reach
- Chapter 169: The Collector’s Watch
- Chapter 168: What Brill Said at Level 80
- Chapter 167: Level 80
- Chapter 166: Peak
- Chapter 165: The Grind
- Chapter 164: The Rate
- Chapter 163: The Test
- Chapter 162: The Collector’s Army
- Chapter 161: Reintegration
- Chapter 160: The Pre-Withdrawal Records
- Chapter 159: Dael’s Numbers
- Chapter 158: The Collector
- Chapter 157: What Came Through
- Chapter 156: The Door
- Chapter 155: One
- Chapter 154: The Last Three
- Chapter 153: The Return
- Chapter 152: The World at Five
- Chapter 151: What Remains
- Chapter 150: The Ordinary Work
- Chapter 149: He found Lyr in the fifth building.
- Chapter 148: The World at Seven
- Chapter 147: The Eleventh Class
- Chapter 146: What the Observer Said
- Chapter 145: The Work at Ten
- Chapter 144: The Archive
- Chapter 143: Ten
- Chapter 142: The World at Eleven
- Chapter 141: What His Mother Wrote
- Chapter 140: The Tenth Class
- Chapter 139: The World at Seventeen
- Chapter 138: Ora’s Last Section
- Chapter 137: The Ninth Class
- Chapter 136: What His Mother Said
- Chapter 135: The Domain Expands
- Chapter 134: The World at Twenty-Four
- Chapter 133: Three Questions
- Chapter 132: The Curriculum Complete
- Chapter 131: Vael’s Question
- Chapter 130: The Eighth Class
- Chapter 129: The Aggregate
- Chapter 128: What Remains
- Chapter 127: The Announcement
- Chapter 126: The Last Six Months
- Chapter 125: What Was Interrupted
- Chapter 124: Twelve Months
- Chapter 123: What Vael and Lyr Said at Dinner
- Chapter 122: Home Again
- Chapter 121: The Third, Fourth, and Fifth
- Chapter 120: What the School Became
- Chapter 119: The First of Five
- Chapter 118: Three Days
- Chapter 117: What the Responses Said
- Chapter 116: The Opening
- Chapter 115: North
- Chapter 114: Before the North
- Chapter 113: The Eight Locations
- Chapter 112: The Signal Returns
- Chapter 111: The Principle
- Chapter 110: What the Seventh Class Brings
- Chapter 109: Home
- Chapter 108: The Seventh Territory
- Chapter 107: Drevenmoor
- Chapter 106: Two Remaining
- Chapter 105: What Grows in New Soil
- Chapter 104: The Water Channel Methodology
- Chapter 103: Level 61
- Chapter 102: Six Weeks
- Chapter 101: Kel’s Questions
- Chapter 100: What Home Looks Like
- Chapter 99: The Return
- Chapter 98: The Network Expands
- Chapter 97: The Message Home
- Chapter 96: What the Thread Carries
- Chapter 95: Three Months
- Chapter 94: What Returns
- Chapter 93: The Origin
- Chapter 92: Terminal Momentum
- Chapter 91: The City
- Chapter 90: The Network Finds Itself
- Chapter 89: Three Weeks
- Chapter 88: The Territorial Map
- Chapter 87: Roots
- Chapter 86: Below the System
- Chapter 85: The Eighty-Year Worker
- Chapter 84: Departure
- Chapter 83: The Choice
- Chapter 82: Fifty
- Chapter 81: What Oren Showed Aldas
- Chapter 80: The School’s Second Class
- Chapter 79: Ora
- Chapter 78: Rest
- Chapter 77: Two Days
- Chapter 76: When
- Chapter 75: Five
- Chapter 74: The Conversation
- Chapter 73: The Regional Council
- Chapter 72: Two Hundred and Fourteen
- Chapter 71: The Kingdom Agreement
- Chapter 70: Sorel’s Answer
- Chapter 69: What The Church Heard
- Chapter 68: The Morning After the Signal
- Chapter 67: Three
- Chapter 66: The Road South
- Chapter 65: Nineteen Years
- Chapter 64: Thronwall
- Chapter 63: School Open Early
- Chapter 62: Threading
- Chapter 61: First Contact
- Chapter 60: The Signal Reaches
- Chapter 59: What Was Built
- Chapter 58: Lira Arrives
- Chapter 57: The List
- Chapter 56: The Five Hundred Meter Test
- Chapter 55: The Women Watched
- Chapter 54: Range
- Chapter 53: What Suppression Grows
- Chapter 52: The First Morning
- Chapter 51: Sublevel Four
- Chapter 50: Valdenmoor, Three Week Later
- Chapter 49: Walking Back
- Chapter 48: The Evaluator
- Chapter 47: The Teaching
- Chapter 46: The Seeker
- Chapter 45: The Ashwater Crossing
- Chapter 44: The Message
- Chapter 43: The Morning After Coming Home
- Chapter 42: The Road Home
- Chapter 41: World’s Warden
- Chapter 40: What Came Outside
- Chapter 39: Dead Zone
- Chapter 38: Level 60
- Chapter 37: What Crestfall Woke To
- Chapter 36: The Warden Wakes 2
- Chapter 35: The Warden Wakes
- Chapter 34: The Gates of Crestfall
- Chapter 33: Tempered
- Chapter 32: Eleven Years
- Chapter 31: The Necromancer of the North
- Chapter 30: What The Road Carries
- Chapter 29: The Road to North
- Chapter 28: Level 50
- Chapter 27: Hael’s Choice
- Chapter 26: The Church
- Chapter 25: The Hunter Market
- Chapter 24: Hael
- Chapter 23: The Morning After
- Chapter 22: The Last Anchor 3
- Chapter 21: The Last Anchor 2
- Chapter 20: The Last Anchor
- Chapter 19: Six Hours 2
- Chapter 18: Six Hours
- Chapter 17: The First Anchor 2
- Chapter 16: The First Anchor
- Chapter 15: The Ancient Remnant
- Chapter 14: The Ashenmoor Hunt
- Chapter 13: Home And Hunger
- Chapter 12: The Master Below 3
- Chapter 11: The Master Below 2
- Chapter 10: The Master Below
- Chapter 9: The Iron Catacombs 3
- Chapter 8: The Iron Catacombs 2
- Chapter 7: The Iron Catacombs
- Chapter 6: The Market and The Priest
- Chapter 5: The Lich Bargain
- Chapter 4: The First Dungeon 2
- Chapter 3: The First Dungeon
- Chapter 2: The First Minion
- Chapter 1: The Awakening Ceremony
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