Primordial Villain With A Slave Harem - Chapter 1524 Magma

Chapter 1524 Magma
Quinlan grinned from three streets away, where he could hear everything because his perception range was absurd and eavesdropping on his new subjects was technically part of governance.
‘Floors. Right. The floors are going to get interesting in about twenty minutes.’
He finished the current residential block, stepped back, and turned his attention deep downward.
The earth beneath the settlement was layered. Topsoil, clay, dense stone, deeper stone. He pushed his awareness through it like threading a needle through fabric, feeling the strata shift and compress as the depth increased. Ten meters. Fifteen. Twenty.
There. A pocket of solid bedrock, sealed on all sides by harder stone. Natural containment.
He reached in with earth manipulation and hollowed the pocket out, expanding it into a chamber roughly fifteen meters across and ten meters tall. The walls of the chamber were solid stone, thick enough to contain what he was about to put inside.
The question was how to fill it.
Fire was the obvious answer, and Quinlan considered it for exactly two seconds before discarding it.
Fire manipulation was a surface tool. It burned outward, consumed what it touched, and moved on. Pouring flame into a sealed stone chamber twenty meters underground would heat the walls unevenly, crack the containment, and produce the magical equivalent of holding a torch under a boulder and hoping the boulder got warm.
He needed the stone itself to become the heat source. He needed it to melt from within.
‘Magma.’
The word surfaced in his mind and stayed there.
Magma was molten stone. Earth that had absorbed so much thermal energy that its crystalline structure collapsed and it became liquid. It wasn’t a foreign substance but earth in a different state, the way ice was water in a different state, the way lightning was wind and water and earth in friction.
Ice had been wind and water, two base elements reconfigured into something new through their interaction. He remembered the moment clearly. Compressed air, stolen heat, a tiny imperfect crystal forming on his palm. Two elements he already carried, combined in a way he hadn’t thought to combine them before.
Earth and Fire.
He already had both.
Quinlan pressed his awareness into the bedrock at the base of the chamber. He could feel the mineral lattice that held the stone rigid, the billions of tiny structures locked together in a grid that made rock hard and cold and permanent.
He fed fire into the lattice from within the earth itself, threading thermal energy through the crystalline matrix the way you’d soak water into cloth, heating every molecule at once rather than burning the surface and hoping the warmth would spread.
The stone resisted. Earth wanted to hold shape. Fire wanted to consume. The two elements ground against each other in his channels like gears that didn’t quite mesh, and the pressure behind his eyes spiked hard enough to blur his vision.
The Abyssal Genesis Physique responded.
He felt it the same way he’d felt it when he forced the gate wider. A channel inside him expanding under strain, something tearing open to make room for a force that hadn’t existed in his body until this moment. Pain lanced through his mana pathways as a new tributary carved itself from the junction where earth and fire met, branching outward into uncharted territory.
The bedrock at the base of the chamber stopped being solid.
The crystalline lattice simply loosened, molecule by molecule, and the stone flowed. Orange-white and viscous, the first pool of magma spread across the chamber floor, radiating a heat so intense that the surrounding bedrock began to glow.
He could feel it.
That was the part that made him pause. He could feel the molten rock the way he felt soil and stone, as naturally as breathing. An extension of his earth sense that ran hotter and deeper than anything he’d touched before, and it responded to his will with the same obedience.
[Ding!]
[Deviant Element Evolution: Magma has been promoted from Elemental Stage to Manipulation Stage.]
[Magma Manipulation Unlocked.]
[Note: Magma Manipulation encompasses control over geological superheating, mineral liquefaction, and tectonic restructuring at scale. The element is no longer restricted to predetermined spell shapes. Output, cost, and form are now limited only by the user’s mana reserves, Magic stat, and imagination.]
Fire destroyed. Earth endured. Magma did both and neither. It was the force that built continents, that raised mountains from flat seabed, that created the ground every living thing walked on. The most destructive and the most creative force in nature were the same thing, separated only by time and pressure.
‘A fitting element,’ he mused, ‘for a man who conquered a city and built one in the same afternoon.’
He let go of the crude two-element approach and reached for magma directly. It answered the way ice had answered when the unlock settled. True and immediate, flowing through his channels with an obedience that made the initial struggle feel like a bad dream.
The reservoir filled. Stone liquefied from within, smooth and controlled, and the chamber became a sealed pool of molten rock, glowing and churning and radiating thermal energy in every direction through the stone that contained it.
Then came the conduits.
He carved channels through the stone beneath the settlement, radiating outward from the magma chamber like spokes on a wheel. Thick stone conduits, each one running beneath the foundations of the residential structures, carrying heat from the central reservoir to every building in the grid. The thermal mass of the magma pocket was enormous. It would radiate for days, possibly weeks, before needing a recharge, and recharging it was a single session of magma manipulation.
Quinlan’s promise delivered. Not a soul among them would be cold.
The effect was immediate.
In the eastern block, the craftsman’s wife sat down on the floor of her new home.
She sat there for a long moment, her palm flat against the warm earth, and the look on her face shifted from skepticism to something she wasn’t ready to name yet.
“We won’t need firewood,” she said quietly.
The craftsman glanced at her.
“No chimney means no chimney fires. No firewood means no fuel costs. The children can sleep on the floor and they’ll be warm without blankets.” Her mind was already running the numbers, the way mothers’ minds did when survival stopped being a crisis and became a budget. “How much did we spend on firewood last winter?”
“Too much.”
“Exactly.”
Outside, children had figured it out faster than anyone. Boots and shoes were coming off across the settlement as kids discovered that bare feet on warm earth felt better than anything they’d experienced the entire winter, and the shrieks of delight carried through the streets with the particular volume that only children who had just discovered something wonderful could produce.
A group of soldiers sat in the middle of an unfinished road, legs stretched out, palms pressed flat to the ground. They were just sitting on warm earth in the middle of winter, staring at the sky, processing the fact that the man who had conquered their city this morning had built them a heated one this afternoon.
One of them laughed. It was the kind of laugh that came out of a man who had been terrified, then furious, then grief-stricken, then kneeling, and was now sitting on a warm road in the middle of a winter forest wondering if the entire day had been a fever dream.
The others joined him, one by one, until the sound of soldiers laughing like idiots echoed down the block and merged with the children’s shrieking into a noise that sounded, against all odds, like the beginning of something.
Quinlan listened to it from three streets away.
The Primordial Villain wasn’t done just yet and wouldn’t stop until he created a city he could be proud of.
Quinlan looked at the rows of homes stretching in every direction, warm and solid and completely dark inside, and his grin sharpened beneath the helmet.
‘Let’s add the finishing touches.’
The kingdom building was in full effect, and he enjoyed every second of it.


