Chapter 103: Mana Resonance Imaging
Nexus. The Crown Herald Town of Elaseer. Ambassadorial District. Mortis’ Mage’s Essentials. Local Time: 1445 Hours.Emma“I believe this may be of help, Cadet Booker.” The elemental spoke warmly, her crowd of floating axolotl-like pets maintaining their signature perpetual smiles, with one in particular attempting to hand me a sizable wand for its diminutive size.
To say that I had my doubts would’ve been an understatement.
To say that my interest wasn’t piqued would also be a massive lie.
This was because unlike the previous sleazeball, Mortis actually seemed intent on helping, rather than profiting off of my apparent ‘need’ for a wand.
Moreover, the fact she wasn’t overpromising anything, and actually attempted to cater to my requirements was also nothing short of a complete departure from Olli’s business practices.
What was being discussed here was actually within the realm of possibility.
If anything, it boded well for one of the EVI’s current pet projects — the development of a ‘mana-sense visualizer’.
So if the Nexus truly did have something already cooked up for that very issue, then that might just help bootstrap development significantly.
was something I lived by after all.
I held out my hand, allowing the little axolotl-frilled lizard hybrid to drop a wand just about half its size onto it.
Almost immediately… nothing happened.
“Nothing?” The wandsmith inquired softly.
“Nope, like I said, I don’t have a manafield to interface with.”
“Your armor being in the way I presume…” Mortis rationalized out loud, before reaching out a hand to physically tap the wand’s tip.
ALERT: LOCALIZED SURGE OF MANA-RADIATION DETECTED, 250% ABOVE BACKGROUND RADIATION LEVELS
Not a moment later, following a mana radiation warning, did the etched filigree along the stick begin to glow; pulsating with a soft ethereal light.
This pathway of light all culminated at the very tip, which glowed bright and began dancing through various colors; sort of like an RGB rave stick.
This continued for several moments, until suddenly, it stopped — maintaining a simple white glow.
“I’m afraid I don’t get how this is supposed to—”
ALERT: LOCALIZED SURGE OF MANA-RADIATION DETECTED, 300% ABOVE BACKGROUND RADIATION LEVELS
ALERT: VARIABLE TEMPERATURE SURGE DETECTED.
I stopped in my tracks as I felt the wand tugging my hand, as if urging it to move.
“Allow it to guide your hand, Cadet Booker.” Mortis instructed with a motherly tone of voice, coinciding with the tip of the wand turning a deep red.
I nodded, doing as instructed, following the wand’s physical pull towards the direction it seemed almost magnetically attracted to; its force increased with every degree I turned until suddenly it stopped. At which point, I was face to face with the source of its almost magnetic attraction, and its sudden shift in both color and brightness — the Vunerian’s flame breath.
“ how it’s supposed to work, Cadet Emma Booker.” The Vunerian spoke with his signature smug grin, his smarmy tone of voice egging me on, but failing to elicit a reaction as my excitable mind was assaulted with a torrential downpour of ideas; my rational mind stepping in to stop it just short of an earth-shattering realization.
“Quick question… I’m assuming the range of this thing isn’t limited to say… this room right? Or even this ?” I blurted out, garnering a warm nod from the wandsmith.
“That is correct, Cadet Booker. Though the of the wand is proportional to the strength of the spell being cast. However, with enough training, you could very well become attuned to any slight tug or pull. Thus, a definitive ‘range’ of effect as it were is difficult to discern, as it depends on the training of the mage.”
This seemingly simple and straightforward answer suddenly opened up the floodgates… allowing for my mind to be with ideas, as that earth-shattering realization quickly evolved into something else entirely — an indescribable draw to .
“EVI… I think we’ve just unlocked a boost to the mana-radiation sensory analytics and detection system’s (M-RSADS) range and accuracy.” I spoke excitedly at the EVI. “Amongst many, more upgrades and boosters…”
My eyes were now locked onto the object. My hand, my hand just beneath the base of the armor’s wrist, trembled with not shock, but raw, and pure excitement.
“Do you have any further questions, Cadet Emma Booker—”
“So I’m assuming this thing has… two? Three primary modes of use?” I shot out excitedly, my former tone and cadence evaporating almost instantly, as urgency filled every ounce of my voice. “Its physical corresponding to the localization of a given surge in mana, er, the direction a spell is being cast from?” I began, as I practically shot up, taking a step towards the water elemental. “Its brightness corresponding to the intensity of the spell being cast?” I took another excited step, my face beaming with excitement. “And its color… I guess it corresponds to the type of spell being cast?”
It was around this point that Thacea moved up towards me, grabbing me by the shoulder and staring at me intensely. “Emma, please. It's quite unbecoming of you to—”
“Oh please forgive her, your highness.” Mortis interjected with a raised hand and an amused chuckle. “This is to be expected from those near-blind to manasight. It’s a reaction I don’t often see given how manasight is still present amongst even the most severe of immature mana-fielder cases. So to see this once again, to witness my creations helping those in need… it sparks great joy in my old, old heart. Because is what I live for.” The water elemental stood up, her axolotls staying behind as she placed a single hand on my shoulder. “I live to serve those in need.”
“Oh, the earthrealmer needs help, that’s for certain.” Ilunor chided with a bemused grin.
I ignored him, of course, as my attention was focused solely on the wandsmith.
“And to address your earlier questions, Cadet Booker, you are indeed correct on all counts.” She nodded deeply, sidestepping Ilunor’s chides like a river parting against an immovable rock. Her indifference to him, perhaps a hint as to her own noble heritage. “However, there’s also —” The water elemental stepped back, grabbing one of her floating axolotls, as the wand began shifting between various fixed colors. “—the fish bowl’s ability to float is a result of a fixed enchantment. Though you must be relatively close to an enchantment in order to ascertain its presence.”
I nodded along intently, not once interrupting as I awaited every ounce of sweet intel the wandsmith had to offer.
“However, I am afraid this is the limit to what the wand can offer.” She announced with a heavy and regret-filled breath. “This wand was, after all, designed with the integration of a mage’s manafield in mind. And as a result, these features we’ve just discussed, are moreso adjacent accessories to its main function.”
“Its main function is to somehow allow you to better visualize manafields and manastreams, I imagine.” I offered, garnering a nod from the elemental.
“Correct. It does so through a process we call mana resonance.” She began.
However, no sooner did those words leave her mouth, did I begin to internally chuckle.
“So… I guess you could say it the world around you through mana resonance.” I managed out with a barely contained chuckle. “In effect, it’s… Mana… Resonance… Imaging?”
“I suppose you could phrase it that way, yes.” The wandsmith nodded congenially. “It’s certainly a… way of phrasing it.” She continued, before getting back on topic. “Mana resonance relies on the wand itself to directly augment a mage’s manafield. Following which, it draws from a mage’s mana-stores directly, generating a series of continuous mana resonance streams, with the intent of gently impacting local manastreams and manafields. Following impact, there is the expectation that of this generated resonance will in a sense ‘bounce’ back towards the wand’s direction; creating a sort of shadow-imprint of the manafields and manastreams around it.”
“Sorta like SONAR, LIDAR, radar, or echolocation.” I spoke internally, towards the EVI, as the virtual intelligence responded with an observation of its own.
“More accurately — an entirely new medium of feedback imaging.”
“Exactly.” I responded inwardly. “So… do you think we can make something of this, EVI?”
“The latter requires integration with a system I do not possess, so its feasibility-for-integration (FFI) is non-existent. However, further studies on the functional operation of Object of Interest #0072-1a: ‘Wand’ may provide insight into the creation of a novel sensor array utilizing similar principles in integration with preexisting mana-detection sensor suites.”
“Yeah, that’s what I was thinking. We now have an existing, principle to base our tech off of. So instead of shooting in the dark, we now have a clear path to work towards. With that being said though… do you think you could work on a quick to our existing mana sensor systems?”
“Clarify: ‘PATCH’.” The EVI replied bluntly.
“The wand’s ‘accessory systems’, and the potential for it to augment MRSAD with just a of good-old fashioned jury-rigging. The intensity feature may be a bit redundant, but it's the other two that’s game changing. From increasing our range of spotting localized mana radiation bursts, to what is arguably most game-changing — determining the precise of spell being cast — we’ve just gotten our shortcut into a next-gen sensor suite. But given how we can’t just integrate it directly into the suit’s systems, I was thinking of a sort of patch, an… analog to digital conversion algorithm or something, y’know?”
“A system to interpret OoI#0072-1a’s analog outputs into viable sensor-data via physical and visual feedback?”
“Precisely.” I responded just as bluntly. “And maybe a purpose-designed housing unit or something too. Like a gyroscopic ball, or maybe a permanent housing compartment on the ARMS, or heck, maybe we could even tape it onto the helmet’s sensor kit!”
“OoI#0072-1a’s sensitivity and specificity parameters are still unknown.” The EVI responded a-matter-of-factly, sidestepping my latter suggestions entirely. “Further testing will be required to determine whether integration will impact the Minimum Acceptable Margin-of-Error Thresholds for Mission-Critical Systems.”
“We can do that. Moreover, that brings me to another point…” I quickly shifted my attention, and my mic output, back towards the wandsmith.
“Lady Mortis? I do have another question, if that’s quite alright with you?” I began politely, garnering a soft nod from the water elemental.
“Yes, Cadet Booker?”
“Well, I was just wondering… does the wand come with like… an instruction manual or something? I’m assuming that because the colors correspond to various spell types and such, that there’s gotta be a reference to tell what each color represents?”
“I am afraid that this is where your comes in, Cadet Booker.” The wandsmith responded with all the warmth of maternal wisdom. “Your classes cover all forms of magic eventually. It is now up to you, as a pupil of the Transgracian Academy, to learn this for yourself. Because remember, this wand, this dowsing rod, is a means with which to empower yourself as a mage; there are no shortcuts towards that end goal.” She smiled, before settling back in her seat. “Moreover, given that each wand is functionally unique in its creation, the various colors it generates may be wildly different. Thus, a universal catch-all system is very much impractical. After all, a wand is an extension of a mage, and a simple tool or implement.”
You might be reading a stolen copy.housand gold, followed by four successive installments to be paid at your leisure.” Mortis proclaimed warmly, placing down the contract in front of us, with little more than a few paragraphs worth of plain, straightforward text.
The entire gang almost immediately went to town on the document, with Thacea’s keen eyes, Thalmin’s discerning glare, and Ilunor’s distrustful visage landing one every letter of every word.
A few minutes passed, before each of them gave me their individual go-aheads.
“Alright.” I nodded. “I think we can settle on that.” I continued, before reaching for my pen to settle the deal.
The lack of magical ink, or any surge of mana radiation made it clear that this was perhaps the actual contract to be signed without any hidden shenanigans, once again reaffirming the rather straightforward nature of the agreement.
And following a flow of coins from my purse to the water elemental, the whole thing was settled.
Mortis stood up almost as soon as the transaction was done, as she grabbed one of the fanciest boxes I’d ever seen to date — a literal marble and granite box with glowing golden filigree — from one of the shelves. Following this, she gently reached for the wand, and placed it inside the masterfully carved interior of the box, the whole thing settling seamlessly into its confines.
“Whilst it may sometimes seem as if the world is a merciless cliff face incapable of being scaled, know that this wand, and my services, shall forever be by your side to at least offer some respite amidst the seemingly impossible. Magic, after all, is the refuge of the dreams of the sapient. Do not let anyone rip that dream away from you.” She spoke confidently, before handing the box to me with a reassuring smile; one that was mirrored by her army of axolotls.
I dipped my head deeply at that, as despite all the highs of excitement swirling through my mind, one errant thought came through in spite of its banality.
“I don’t imagine you’d have a bag for this?” I blurted out.
Nexus. The Crown Herald Town of Elaseer. Ambassadorial District. Boutique Boulevard en route to The Adventurer’s Guild Hall. Local Time: 1525 Hours.
Emma
We left Mortis’ Mage’s Essentials with not only a renewed faith in the wandsmithing industry, but with a strange sense of warmth and satisfaction that was only dampened by the cost it took to acquire said wand.
The investment, despite being an exchange for an item worth more than its weight in gold — quite literally given its price — was bound to pay off though, in ways I could’ve never previously imagined.
“So what’s next, princess?” I turned to Thacea with a skip in my power-armored step.
“We’ve purchased all that is required of us from the course syllabus.” The princess responded following a thorough double-checking of her planner.
“Which means we should be headed back to the adventuring guild.” Thalmin surmised.
“Precisely.” Thacea reaffirmed, but not before something across the street managed to catch my eye…
The building was unlike any other on the block.
In fact, it seemed to stand significantly than most.
This was primarily due to a quirk of its construction, one that I wasn’t at all expecting — a literal wizard tower piercing its angled tiled roof, completely divorcing it from the rest of its neighbors’ uniform height limit.
The whole thing looked like one of those weird post-post-post-modern architectural messes, combining architectural elements that didn’t at all seem like it belonged, if only to draw your attention to just how it all was.
And to its credit, it .
As despite the admittedly ugly choice of stylistic choices, it stood out.
And where they get you.
Because the longer you stared at it, the more the weirdness kept going, with off-kilter windows, doors plastered several stories up on the facade, and even miniature golems of dragons, wyverns, and all sorts of flying creatures circling the narrow and spindly wizard tower.
“What… the heck is that?” I pointed towards the unwieldy structure, only to earn a collective sigh from everyone.
“A souvenir shop.” Ilunor muttered out under a dismissive breath. “A den of useless knick knacks and tacky paraphernalia that is as creatively bankrupt as it is devoid of talented craftsmanship.” The Vunerian continued, practically turning his nose up at the whacky establishment.
“Huh.” I responded with a growing sense of curiosity. “Say, Thacea… do you think we can squeeze in one impromptu visit into our itinerary?”
The princess’ features immediately shifted to one of disappointment, as she crisply flipped through her planner, if only to return a glance that only a mother could give to a child asking to stop at a drive-through.
This was where my helmet came at a disadvantage.
As I couldn’t employ the puppy-eyed pleading that’d worked so well for me in the past.
But that didn't stop me from trying though.
“Please?” I pleaded.
“A quarter hour.” Thacea responded with a despondent breath. “And please try your best to restrain yourself from any impulse purchases, Emma.”
“No promises, princess.” I shot back with a sly chuckle, dragging the rest of the gang along with me for what I’d file in my report under — .
…
Appropriately enough, the first thing that caught our attention was the revolving door that rotated on a axis. We arrived to find a store that had somehow perfectly balanced themed quirkiness with mercantile practicality, these traits personified by a service counter decorated with a bunch of curiosities protected behind luminous glass that seemed to glow brighter the closer we got to them. Maybe it was a security feature, but the lighting also seemed to serve as spotlights for these items.
The most eye-catching thing in this section was without a doubt the gigantic turtle shell that rested atop a wide velvety pillow. The shell had an earthy color, but was polished instead of rugged, the lips of it lined with a plush fabric. The carapace scutes were pointed and slicked back, each one tipped in crownings made of various precious metals; brass on the outermost, silver in-between and some gold caps in the middle portion. Quite honestly, I was surprised that of all things wasn’t behind any glass.
The whole place gave me theme park souvenir shop vibes, with tastefully themed corners that seemed to be referencing cultural and regional themes that I simply was not privy to.
Each little ‘section’ seemed to be built with aesthetics and features that were supposed to be representative of a given region, and it was clear some of them were far more impressive than the rest.
With the first among these being what I could only describe as a volcano and lava themed region, with the floorspace of that little nook covered by a thick layer of glass, covering what appeared to be flowing beneath the floor. Within this little themed area, were all sorts of, as Ilunor put it, useless knick-knacks. Ranging from little animated postcards, to painted plates and its accompanying utensils. Next to that, were what I could only describe as little snow globes that had fully animated volcanoes within them, expertly detailed and dynamically moving.
I picked one up, instinctively shaking one, causing the little world within to shake and rumble — leading to a volcanic explosion that covered the entire globe in a thick goopy sea of red hot magma.
“I’m afraid if you shake it, you buy it.” A boisterous but firm voice emerged from one of the many corners of the close-to-cluttered room.
We looked around, trying to find the source of the voice, before hearing a series of from the counter up front.
Approaching us slowly, rising from what appeared to be a nap, was the encrusted tortle-like-turtle with an equally ornate cane in his hand.
“IIIII only jest, of course.” He corrected himself, yawning out the first word before making a dry chuckle. “Those things reconstruct after an hour or so. Or immediately if you put some mana into it.”
He eventually gestured for me to return the lavaglobe, which I did so without question.
“Where are my manners… my name is Baronet Kathan Kafkan, the eternal proprietor of this fine establishment.” The man bowed, or at least, he dipped his body as much as he could given the encumbrance that was the shell. “I take it you are all first years?”
“Indeed we are.” I replied matter of factly.
“I see, I see.” Kathan adjusted the fabric along the lip of his shell, winding his neck as if to admire his vast collection of knick-knacks. “Hmmm… my vendibles must have some enticement to your eyes if you’ve come to take an ogle. Feel free to discover the wonders collected from many worlds, my youths of esteem. I’d be happy to share the histories of what you come across… oooor just simply package them aptly without a word to waste if you so choose.” While that seemed a bit glum, the turtle chuckled at the humor he found in it.
“Actually, I do have a question about the building itself if you don’t mind?”
“Oh?”
“Well… it quite from the rest of the structures in town. If anything, it feels almost out of place. I was wondering if there’s—”
“A story behind that?” The man interjected with an excitable smile.
“Yup, precisely.” I acknowledged.
“It’s simple, really. This establishment existed to the incorporation of Elaseer into the ranks of the Crown Heralds.” He announced proudly, a sense of pained nostalgia coloring his voice. “Thus, the entire ambassadorial district was built me.” He continued, his arms raised as far as they could, pointing his gem-encrusted cane towards the ceiling. “Therefore, I, among a handful of others, was partially from the strict zoning laws of the district, save for, of course, the dreadful off-white paint scheme the crown seems to be so insistent on forcing upon us all.”
“So you were grandfathered in, essentially.” I surmised.
“Correct, newrealmer.” He nodded, then just as swiftly took the opportunity to introduce the of the various knick-knacks on offer. “Though you can rest assured, my wares do not reflect that fact. Unlike the stocks of a certain wandmaker.” He spoke with a wink, gesturing towards more of the extensive lineup across what he’d begin to refer to as the various ‘core regions’ of the Nexus.
“From the eternally spiteful region of the Brimstone Expanse, eternally burning from the righteous fury of His Eternal Majesty’s final stand against the forces of evil.” He started from where we stood, before gesturing for us to move along with him on this impromptu field trip. “To the infinite archipelagos of the boundless seas.” He raised his arms wide, towards what I could only describe as the ‘sealand’ portion of the souvenir shop, complete with a whole wall of snow globes depicting not just sunny seaside towns, but what appeared to be ships, flotillas, and entire fleets.
Indeed what drew me in wasn’t the detail of the models in and of itself, but rather, the actual of ships on display. As unlike the caravel-like ship from Thacea’s sight-seer, what was on display here appeared to be a wooden vessel without sails or seams. In fact, the wood almost seemed to be into a solid mass. And in the place of sails, there appeared to be additional masts, each of which towered high and ungainly above the ship, almost to the point of unwieldiness, reminding me of those rotor ships from the mid twenty-first century.
“What sorts of ships are those?” I inquired, pointing at a particular ship-in-a-bottle about half the size of Ilunor.
“Standard royal merchant mariner craft, employed by many of the maritime kingdoms and duchies.” The tortle explained, gesturing towards the model in question. “To your newrealmer eyes, a vessel this large without sails or oars must be quite foreign to you. But to our discerning Nexian eyes—” He paused, adding emphasis to the Nexian nature with a grandiose tone that hid well the humor he meant to convey. “—this sort of vessel is indeed quite common. It relies not on the power of sail, but instead, a combination of the ambient power of mana and the enriched mana-stores provided by the graces of nobility. A truly vessel, for a magical age.”
“Right.” I nodded, my eyes going over the EVI’s frantic logging of every ounce of intel there was to scrounge from this interaction. “That’s certainly interesting alright!”
“Indeed it is.” The old man nodded, as we moved onto other regions seamlessly, going from icy tundras, to expansive taigas, to great canyons, and then finally, towards what appeared to be Ilunor’s mountain kingdoms.
However, before we could arrive, my eyes landed on what appeared to be a neglected portion of the store.
One that was with I could only describe as…
“Are those plushies?” I asked, gesturing towards the large bean bag-like slime, and the hoard of soft plushies atop of that. With the one sitting atop of the whole pile… being what was undoubtedly… a Vunerian.
Chapters
×
Chapter 1
- Second Contact
Chapter 2
- A Fated Career Change
Chapter 3
- They Sent a Commoner
Chapter 4
- A Table of Misfits
Chapter 5
- Oathbound
Chapter 6
- Tainted Promises
Chapter 7
- All Talk and No Food
Chapter 8
- Cultural Differences
Chapter 9
- Setting Boundaries
Chapter 10
- Baggage Claim
Chapter 11
- A Ticking Time Bomb
Chapter 12
- Bridging the Gap
Chapter 13
- Some Assembly Required
Chapter 14
- Hello Darkness I am Emma
Chapter 15
- A Complicated Breakfast
Chapter 16
- I Spy With My Little Eye
Chapter 17
- Theres Only One Place Where We Can Find Answers
Chapter 18
- Study Buddy
Chapter 19
- Knowledge for Knowledge
Chapter 20
- Drones and Diplomacy
Chapter 21
- The Shot Heard Around The World
Chapter 22
- Threat Nullified
Chapter 23
- Its Like a Crossbow but Better
Chapter 24
- A Birds-Eye View
Chapter 25
- Under My Skin
Chapter 26
- Fullmetal Armorer
Chapter 27
- Arcane Arsenal
Chapter 28
- The Factory Must Grow
Chapter 29
- No Full-Auto in the Building
Chapter 30
- The Basics of the Game
Chapter 31
- Now THATS A Lotta Damage
Chapter 32
- Bread
Chapter 33
- Skip Cutscene
Chapter 34
- Grappling with the Problem
Chapter 35
- We Do What We Must Because We Can
Chapter 36
- Strained Diplomacy
Chapter 37
- Hello Emma I am Darkness
Chapter 38
- A Call to Distant Lands
Chapter 39
- The Final Countdown
Chapter 40
- Picking Up The Pieces
Chapter 41
- No Stone Left Unturned
Chapter 42
- Explosive Repercussions
Chapter 43
- Out of the Frying Pan and Into the Fire
Chapter 44
- Attendance is Compulsory
Chapter 45
- Youve Just Activated My Trap Card
Chapter 46
- Objection
Chapter 47
- A Heart to Heart
Chapter 48
- Confessions
Chapter 49
- Rules of Acquisition
Chapter 50
- Radio Killed the Magic Star
Chapter 51
- Sky Shattering Revelations
Chapter 52
- The Fugitive
Chapter 53
- Winging It
Chapter 54
- Better Call Emma
Chapter 55
- Harbinger of Truth
Chapter 56
- Go To Bed
Chapter 57
- From The Library With Love
Chapter 58
- Downtime
Chapter 59
- The Mercenary Prince
Chapter 60
- Wings and Scales
Chapter 61
- Welcome to Earth
Chapter 62
- Monolithic
Chapter 63
- The Impossible City
Chapter 64
- The Path Less Taken
Chapter 65
- I Hate Earth
Chapter 66
- The Adversary
Chapter 67
- A Princess and a Knight
Chapter 68
- Wearing Power Armor to a Magic Class
Chapter 69
- A Nice Start to Class
Chapter 70
- Points of Contention
Chapter 71
- Angry Birds
Chapter 72
- Please Dont Assault The Birds
Chapter 73
- The Big Bang With Extra Steps
Chapter 74
- Do You Believe in Fate
Chapter 75
- A God A Day Keeps Oblivion Away
Chapter 76
- A Workout to Die For
Chapter 77
- Please Dont Tap the Glass
Chapter 78
- I Wonder if Hes Still Mad
Chapter 79
- Counterspelling
Chapter 80
- Its Time to DUEL
Chapter 81
- An Introverts Nightmare
Chapter 82
- A Magical Mixer
Chapter 83
- Paper Trail
Chapter 84
- Galvanized Composalite
Chapter 85
- I Require Your Strongest Potion
Chapter 86
- You Cannot Handle My Potions
Chapter 87
- Malicious Compliance
Chapter 88
- Where Is My Sports Suit
Chapter 89
- The Eternal Hunter
Chapter 90
- A Literal Arthurian Challenge
Chapter 91
- YEET
Chapter 92
- Book it Booker
Chapter 93
- GG no re
Chapter 94
- Master Forger
Chapter 95
- I Love Gold
Chapter 96
- The Wealth Cube
Chapter 97
- Mining Off Camera
Chapter 98
- Thinking With Portals
Chapter 99
- That Time I Met A Nexian Guild Master
Chapter 100
- Silksongs Silken Shop
Chapter 101
- Wish You Were Here
Chapter 102
- The Pen is Mightier than the Wand
Chapter 103
- Mana Resonance Imaging
Chapter 104
- Retail Therapy
Chapter 105
- Youre Hired
Chapter 106
- Language Barriers
Chapter 107
- We Gave Up
Chapter 108
- The Bare Minimum
Chapter 109
- Deluxe Kobold on Ice
Chapter 110
- Staring Into The Abyss
Chapter 111
- Aethra Primus
Chapter 112
- The Iron Lung
Chapter 113
- Children of the Void
Chapter 114
- One Small Step
Chapter 115
- Children of a Dead Realm
Chapter 116
- Beauty in the Dark
Chapter 117
- Academic Dishonesty
Chapter 118
- Draconic Repercussions
Chapter 119
- Inquisitive Interludes
Chapter 120
- How To Track Your Dragon
Chapter 121
- Chekhovs Railgun
Chapter 122
- An Enlightning Experience
Chapter 123
- Bloom and Doom
Chapter 124
- Respect Your Betters
Chapter 125
- The Stoppable Bull vs The Emmovable Object
Chapter 126
- Etholins Gambit
Chapter 127
- Bottomless Devotion
Chapter 128
- We Have Manasight at Home
Chapter 129
- The Martial Gap
Chapter 130
- Bringing a Knife to a Swordfight
Chapter 131
- Telling a Druid to Touch Grass
Chapter 132
- The Dark Never Bothered Me Anyway
Chapter 133
- Designed on Mars Made in the Nexus
Chapter 134
- Around the Nexus in Seven Days
Chapter 135
- RTS - Real Time Smackdown
Chapter 136
- Im Something of a Spymaster Myself
Chapter 137
- Did A Crab Fry This Rice
Chapter 138
- The Four Racketeers
Chapter 139
- Cranking Up The Heat
Chapter 140
- Mustve Been the Wind
Chapter 141
- My Little Township - Farming is Magic
Chapter 142
- My Little Kelpie - Drowning is Friendship
Chapter 143
- No More Kelping Around
Chapter 144
- Emma B Goode
Chapter 145
- Shipping Company
Chapter 146
- A Sick Way to Travel
Chapter 147
- Why Are You Here
Chapter 148
- Cheesed To Meet You
Chapter 149
- Hot Pursuit
Chapter 150
- Coughing Wyverns vs Nuclear Dragon
Chapter 151
- Culture Shock
Chapter 152
- Dreadwolf Steelpaw
Chapter 153
- Parry This You Filthy Casual
Chapter 154
- Rip and Togor Until it is Done
Chapter 155
- Do Dragons Dream of Electric Sheep
Chapter 156
- We Taught Crystals to Scream