The Ten Thousand Deaths : 1000x Exp System
Chapter 40: What Came Outside
- 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
The descent took twenty minutes.
Drest’s infrastructure maps showed a maintenance shaft in the Ironworks quarter’s deepest foundry building — a vertical drop of forty meters to the first sublevel, then three more descending passages that followed the ancient rock formations beneath the city’s river clay foundation, cutting deeper than any city maintenance had reason to go.
Someone had been here recently.
Not the Church’s assessment team seventeen months ago — more recent than that. The torch brackets in the upper passages showed fresh oil residue. The lower passage walls had markings that Sera photographed in her notebook without comment — geometric, precise, not vandalism.
"Someone has been studying it," she said.
"How recently?" Kael said.
She touched the wall marking. "The charcoal is dry but not old. Weeks." She looked at the next marking. "And they knew what they were looking at. These are System architecture notations — the same framework Asha used in the codex annotations."
"Someone who reads pre-System documentation," Maren said.
"Someone who has been down here taking notes," Sera said. "Regularly."
Kael filed it and kept descending.
The dead zone at the bottom was absolute.
Not the partial function failure of the upper districts — complete System absence, the architecture so thoroughly dissolved that even the Domain’s stabilization function pressed against it and found nothing to repair. Not cracked framework. Missing framework. The System simply not present the way air is not present in a vacuum.
He stepped into it.
His display disappeared.
Not the external display — the Ring’s controlled output, the Level 60 World’s Warden Partial showing to anyone who looked. His own internal display. The System notifications, the stat readout, the Soul Harvest counter, the bond network status — everything the System provided him, gone, the moment he crossed the dead zone’s absolute boundary.
He stopped.
"Your display," Sera said from behind him. She was at the boundary’s edge — the Domain’s stabilization stopping where the absolute dead zone began, unable to repair what was entirely absent. "It’s gone."
"I know," he said.
"The bond network — "
"Still present," he said. Not through the System’s display — through the Class itself, the raw connection that the System described but didn’t create. The bond to Maren. To Daren. To the Commander. To the Warden. Still there, underneath the System’s absent architecture, the way a river is still there when the map that drew it is taken away.
The Class was not the System.
The Class was older.
He walked forward.
The meteorite impact crater was four hundred meters below Ironhaven’s streets.
It should not have been intact — the Church had assessed it, filled it, built over it seventeen months ago. What he found was an unfilled crater approximately twenty meters across, the stone around it fused in patterns that didn’t match any impact dynamic he’d seen described in Maren’s pre-System texts or Calder’s fourteen volumes.
Not fused by heat.
By something that had arrived here and then — pressed outward. Not an explosion. A presence asserting itself into the surrounding rock.
In the crater’s center, half-buried in the fused stone, was the meteorite.
It was smaller than he’d expected from a forty-meter crater — roughly the size of a large cart, irregular surface, the color of deep water, and it was not a rock.
He understood this the moment the Domain’s grey light touched it.
Not a rock. Not stone. Not any material the Class had encountered in two dungeons and an open moor and seven Veil anchors and a Pale Warden absorption and everything in between.
Something that had no death energy signature — not alive, not dead, not between. Simply — other. The Class reached toward it automatically and found nothing to reach into. No classification. No System architecture. No framework connection of any kind.
Orthogonal.
"It’s looking at us," Sera said.
She was at the crater’s edge. Her notebook was open but her stylus had stopped. She was looking at the meteorite with the expression she got when something exceeded her current analytical framework and she was rebuilding the framework in real time.
"It doesn’t have eyes," Kael said.
"No," she agreed. "But it’s looking."
He walked into the crater.
The absolute dead zone pressed at him from every direction — no System, no display, no notifications, no Soul Harvest, no Domain readings. Just the Class and the bonds and himself and the thing in the stone that had no classification and was looking at him without eyes.
He crouched beside it.
Up close the surface was not uniform — it moved. Not physically. The color of it shifted in patterns too slow to track directly, the deep water quality cycling through variations that suggested depth rather than surface. Something beneath the surface moving.
He put his hand on it.
The Class reached automatically.
Found the boundary of its own architecture — the edge where Death’s Chosen’s framework stopped and the other thing’s framework began. The same boundary the Warden had occupied, the same between-space, but from a direction that had no name in any System the Class could reference.
Something pressed back.
Not hostile. Not consuming. Not curious in the way the Warden had been curious.
Communicating.
The communication was not language — not even the bone-level meaning-transmission of the bound dead or the Warden’s direct conceptual contact. It was more fundamental than that. The transmission of a state rather than a thought.
Lost, it said. In a register below language.
Landed wrong. Framework incompatible. Dissolution unintended.
Kael held his hand against the surface and let the Class translate.
Not a weapon. Not an invader. Something that had been traveling — through what, the Class had no framework to process — and had landed here, in this city, and its presence was incompatible with the System’s architecture the way two frequencies at close but not identical pitches create interference rather than harmony.
Not malice. Incompatibility.
The fracture was not an attack.
It was a crash landing.
"Maren," he said.
The Lich was at the crater’s edge — the absolute dead zone prevented it from entering, the Sovereign bond stretching to its limit. "I can hear through the bond," it said. "Partially."
"It’s not hostile," Kael said. "It landed here. The fracture is interference from its framework conflicting with the System’s." He kept his hand on the surface. "It’s been trying to communicate for seventeen months. The dead zones — they’re not dissolution, they’re — broadcast. It’s been transmitting and the transmission is incompatible with the System architecture so the architecture fails around it."
A silence.
"It’s been trying to talk to someone," Sera said quietly. "For seventeen months. And nobody could hear it because they were looking at the dead zones as damage instead of signal."
"Yes," Kael said.
He thought about the wall markings in the passage above. The geometric notations in pre-System framework. Someone who had been coming down here for weeks, reading the transmission, taking notes.
"The markings in the passage," he said. "Someone else heard it."
"Yes," said a voice from the crater’s other edge.
Calder.
Not a remote unit. Not a borrowed throat. The man himself — Level 44, leaning on a staff that he clearly needed, the left side of his body carrying the specific quality of something that had been partially consumed and had rebuilt imperfectly. His face was older than Kael had imagined from the fourteen volumes — mid-sixties, the particular age of someone who had spent eleven years in a tower thinking instead of moving.
He looked at Kael across the crater.
He looked at the hand on the meteorite.
"You can hear it," Calder said.
"Yes," Kael said.
"I’ve been reading the transmissions for six weeks," Calder said. "The geometric notations — it’s broadcasting in a pre-System framework. Older than Asha’s codex. I recognized the base structure from a text I found in my tower library twelve years ago." He paused. "I couldn’t respond. My Class isn’t — compatible. The transmission passes through Grave Sovereign architecture without connection." He looked at Kael’s hand. "Death’s Chosen. The boundary. The between-space. Of course."
"You came in person," Kael said.
"Your message said it was done," Calder said. "The Warden redirected. Crestfall stabilized." He looked at his rebuilt Level 44 body — at the imperfect restoration of a man who had been Level 67 and had rebuilt twenty-three levels over eleven years of a tower. "I have been in that tower since the second attempt. I decided — " he paused. "I decided it was time to stop waiting for someone else to finish things."
Kael looked at him across the crater.
At the man who had sent fourteen volumes to a stranger on a road.
"The transmission," Kael said. "What has it been saying?"
Calder looked at his notes. "The geometric base structure translates to approximately — " he turned a page. "A request. It needs to be moved. Extracted from the rock and moved to somewhere its framework doesn’t conflict with the System architecture." He paused. "It knows it’s causing damage. It has known since it landed. It’s been asking for help for seventeen months."
"Moved where?" Sera said.
"Outside the System’s coverage area," Calder said. "Beyond the boundaries of any city or settlement where the architecture is active." He looked at the maps in his hand. "There are regions — deep wilderness, uninhabited — where the System’s architecture is present but thin. Natural areas where the framework exists but hasn’t been reinforced by human settlement." He paused. "In those areas the interference would be minimal. The fracture would stop expanding."
"And the existing fracture," Kael said. "Once it’s moved."
"The World’s Warden evolution," Calder said. He looked at Kael’s display — blank, in the dead zone, but the partial evolution visible to System-sensitive perception. "The stabilization function. Once the source of the interference is removed — the remaining fracture damage should be repairable." A pause. "Theoretically."
Kael looked at the meteorite.
At the thing that had been lost and landed wrong and had been asking for help for seventeen months in a language nobody could hear.
He thought about the Warden. About appetite without direction given a foundation. About every ancient thing that had needed someone to find the right place to begin.
He pressed his hand harder against the surface.
The communication strengthened — the state transmission clearer now, the Class holding the connection with the steady certainty of something that had been doing this since the first rat on the Ashrow rooftop.
Can you hear me? he transmitted back. Not language. The state of being heard.
The surface stilled.
The cycling deep-water color stopped shifting.
Then — something he hadn’t expected, that Calder’s six weeks of notes hadn’t predicted, that no framework in any pre-System text had covered.
The thing in the meteorite transmitted relief.
Pure, unqualified, seventeen-months-compressed relief.
The relief of something that had been trying to communicate in a language nobody spoke and had finally found someone who could hear.
Yes, it said. Below language. Below framework. Simply: yes.
[SYSTEM — PARTIAL FUNCTION RESTORED — FRACTURE CENTER] [COMMUNICATION ESTABLISHED — NON-SYSTEM ENTITY] [CLASSIFICATION: TRAVELER — EXTRA-SYSTEM ORIGIN] [STATUS: STRANDED — UNINTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE] [REQUEST: RELOCATION — OUTSIDE SYSTEM COVERAGE] [WORLD’S WARDEN FUNCTION — ACTIVATING — PARTIAL] [NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN ENEMY.] [NOTE: THIS IS SOMEONE WHO NEEDED HELP AND COULDN’T ASK IN A LANGUAGE ANYONE SPOKE.] [NOTE: SOUND FAMILIAR?]
He read the last line.
The System editorializing with the particular precision of something that had been watching him for sixty levels and had an opinion about what it had seen.
Sound familiar.
A thing from outside the known framework. Landed in the wrong place. Causing damage without intending to. Asking for help in a language the System couldn’t process and the Church had classified as a localized anomaly and ignored for seventeen months.
It sounded very familiar.
He looked at Calder across the crater.
"You can move it," he said. "The relocation — you’ve mapped the low-coverage wilderness areas."
"Yes," Calder said. "Six weeks of preparation. I have three candidate sites — all at least forty kilometers from any settlement, System architecture thin enough that the interference would be below fracture threshold." He paused. "The extraction — removing it from the fused rock — I couldn’t do alone. My rebuilt Class doesn’t have the — "
"I’ll extract it," Kael said.
He felt the Class orient toward the task with the particular clarity of something that had been trained for exactly this without knowing it. Every anchor unraveled, every binding released, every thread found and followed to its end.
Not destruction.
Extraction.
He pressed both hands against the surface and found the point where the meteorite’s framework interfaced with the fused stone and began — carefully, deliberately, with sixty levels of accumulated precision — to separate them.
It took eleven minutes.
The thing in the meteorite transmitted something throughout — not language, not direction, simply presence. The specific quality of being helped after seventeen months of asking and not being heard.
He understood that quality.
He’d felt it himself.
The night in the stable yard. Sera saying I haven’t reported you yet. The moment an ally appeared when the world had been deciding what you were worth before you’d done anything to earn the assessment.
He pulled the last thread.
The meteorite came free.
[EXTRACTION — COMPLETE] [TRAVELER — FREED FROM IMPACT SITE] [FRACTURE SOURCE — MOBILE] [WORLD’S WARDEN FUNCTION — STABILIZATION — INITIATING] [FRACTURE DAMAGE — REPAIRING — ESTIMATED TIME: 4 HOURS] [NOTE: GET IT OUTSIDE THE CITY.] [NOTE: NOW.]
"Calder," Kael said. "The nearest relocation site."
"Thirty-two kilometers northeast," Calder said immediately. "I have the route." He looked at the meteorite in Kael’s arms — it weighed less than it should have, the framework incompatibility apparently not extending to gravity. "And Kael — "
"Yes."
Calder looked at him across the crater.
At the Level 60 Necromancer from the Ashrow holding a stranded traveler from outside the System framework in his arms, in a dead zone four hundred meters below a city of eighty thousand people, eleven years and fourteen volumes and one decision to finally leave the tower having led to this specific moment.
"Thank you," Calder said. "For the message. That it wasn’t wasted."
Kael looked at him.
At a man who had tried twice and failed and rebuilt for eleven years and come in person when the tower had finally been sat in long enough.
"Come with us," Kael said. "To the relocation site."
Calder blinked.
"You mapped it," Kael said. "You’ve been down here six weeks. You know the route and the site and the pre-System framework the Traveler broadcasts in." He paused. "And you’ve been in that tower long enough."
A silence.
Calder looked at his staff. At his rebuilt Level 44 body. At the imperfect restoration of a man who had stopped moving for eleven years.
"Yes," he said. Quietly. Like a door opening.
Kael walked toward the ascent passage with the Traveler in his arms and the Class stabilizing its framework against his chest and Calder following for the first time in eleven years and Sera’s stylus moving behind him and Maren waiting above at the dead zone’s boundary with the Ancient Codex and seventeen years of accumulated patience.
His System pulsed — partially, the dead zone’s absolute center repaired enough for partial function.
[CURRENT LEVEL: 60] [FRACTURE — REPAIRING] [TRAVELER — EXTRACTED] [RELOCATION: 32KM NORTHEAST] [WORLD’S WARDEN — FULL EVOLUTION — PENDING IRONHAVEN STABILIZATION] [YOU HAVE 4 HOURS BEFORE THE REPAIR COMPLETES.] [MOVE.] [AND KAEL —] [THE SHROUD ANCHORS.] [YOU FORGOT THE SHROUD ANCHORS.]
He stopped walking.
He had forgotten the Shroud anchors.
Eight anchors. Three compromised. Five standard. The entire reason he’d come to Ironhaven in the first place, sitting in the maintenance tunnels while he’d been four hundred meters below finding a stranded traveler.
"Maren," he said through the bond. "The Shroud anchors — "
"I know," Maren said through the bond. "I’ve been in the maintenance tunnels for the past twenty minutes."
He stared upward.
"All eight," Maren said. "Done."
"You — "
"You were occupied," Maren said. "The three compromised anchors were straightforward — the fracture had already done most of the work. The five standard anchors took approximately twelve minutes total." A pause that carried the particular quality of Maren having done something significant and choosing not to make a production of it. "The Shroud is destroyed. Ironhaven’s Level cap is lifted." Another pause. "You’re welcome."
Kael stood in the passage four hundred meters below Ironhaven holding a stranded traveler from outside the System framework.
He almost laughed.
"Thank you, Maren," he said.
"The Sovereign bond has advantages," Maren said. "I can feel what you’re doing. When you became occupied with something more urgent I assessed the situation and acted." A pause. "It is what allies do."
Sera was writing something.
He didn’t ask what.
He kept climbing.
A/N:
The Traveler just needed help. Calder left the tower. Maren destroyed all eight Shroud anchors while Kael was busy. 32km to the relocation site. 4 hours. Drop a Power Stone — Chapter 41 is the relocation and the full World’s Warden evolution! 🔥
- 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
Comments