I love the conversation going on between his masters in the background. I like to think that his master took the student girl in and she got to live a good life studying magic and working a good job.
It makes me wonder if Jelly being chosen as a saint wasn't because she herself was actually a saint, but would become the vessel of the person who was.
It was alright, but not particularly special. I do think it's cute that he liked the frogs and lizards enough to think that they were worth giving to her, but otherwise it was probably the weakest of the volume so far.
I kind of like this in its own way from the novel. In the novel you get his thought process and you get to read about him realizing how Cresson's gotten older with some minor streaks of gray fur, but in this one it's a silent realization that feels emotional in its own way.