I'm just wondering what the hell the monk told him. On one hand, I think that monk probably doesn't have a ton of spine, so under duress he might spill. On the other hand, he's sneaky as all get out, so he might come up with some story.
Once again, we have one of the few things I know about Japanese: That key grammatical ambiguity where they skip verb objects, specifically when it comes to "like". You can bet he didn't really say "I like fried chicken". He just said "suki", with that heart-pitter-pat tinge of "did it mean...
I love this manga. And I love a lot of the little touches, the feeling of period. But I have a big gripe with this whole segment: Japan of this era was a very class-stratified society. The male lead is decidedly upper class. These people are riffraff entertainers. There is no way a son and...
I was with him until he started talking about "human resources". Never trust anyone who calls you a resource. For those of you not ancient, I remember when the authorities started having the guts to call us "resources" instead of people and expect to get away with it--it happened in the 90s...
250 comments? Yeah, not going through that. Anyway, mangaka major troll or what? I've seen this move before . . . but usually the MC makes with the impassioned confession before finding out that their opposite isn't really leaving.
Fucking morons. Boys and girls, when there are hardly any humans left, do you
1) All team up together as best you can, or
2) Create conflict situations so you can kill half of what's left?
Think carefully, this will be on the zombie apocalypse test.