This follow-up volume gives more of the same. It keeps the heavy tone and continues to try and twist the genre expectations of capture targets, villainess’s, crossdressing, and more. The characters tend to be intriguing as they struggle through their lives. There is an incremental build to skills but often the momentary action is intense; over quickly. There are credibility issues as our eight-year-old protagonist eats through guild after guild of highly trained adults and is gifted equipment as needed. The execution is starting to feel a bit stuttering. I find myself skimming the constant status check updates. Despite long explanations, there is inconsistency to the cost of sorcery and magic activations. The timeline will often go back slightly between chapters without warning or pause to give a long tragic backstory to explain new characters—even if we are in the process of killing them off. Worse, I often find the goal posts are moving. Arya’s going to train to be a maid, be an adventurer, or level train dagger arts—but then doesn’t. There is a betrayal, missing heirloom, or blackmail that pushes her onto something else. I understand we are trying to explain her diverse skill set and it keep things interesting… but the haphazardness drains tension. It does enough to appease current fans but at least this reader lacks enthusiasm for the next entry.