Akuyaku Reijoutachi wa Yuruganai - Ch. 13

Dex-chan lover
Joined
Jun 28, 2025
Messages
3,653
"The saintess, bears children to preserve a bloodline that may awaken to magic, and yet... Those children are raised by the church and not even permitted to enter their father's households."

Feel like this has some pretty major implications. Mainly:

If Aini becomes the second queen the church could use her kid to make a bid for the throne and establish them as a puppet ruler.

Aini's marriage can't be used to form a powerful political alliance but it could potentially be used to cut off the bloodline of someone powerful in an opposing faction. For example, Orva.

Seems like there's an enormous incentive for the church to pressure Aini to approach powerful members of the Royal faction.
Hopefully we do get a chapter or three from Aini, as I would like to know how aware she is of potentially being a (possibly mostly?) political tool as a saintess apprentice--and whether her sunny disposition is an act, as a result.

As in, is she acting akin to a protagonist in an otome game, capturing all the romance targets you'd normally see for her own sake (Prince, Knight, Intellectual, Quirky younger-ish boy)?

Or, is that merely an intended narrative façade on the part of the story itself, and she's actually operating at the behest of the Church and all of her behavior was with their agenda in mind?
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Mar 29, 2025
Messages
326
To the bit about Bernadetta's genius being recognized by her family--

It's not fully come up yet, because she hasn't officially claimed the right to take over as head of her House. But she did declare her intentions during the string of chapters focused on her story, when Seraphina and the foreign prince together boosted her self-worth & confidence enough to stand and take what's hers. And her abilities were informally recognized by her father at that time, though it's not concluded yet and we'll have to rejoin her story to see what happens.

I do think this was somewhat necessary, because it's another facet of Bernadetta's life within her House and it adds another layer to what she's had to put up with, but from outside her personal perspective. We see that she was correct all along--Aini is A Problem, but nearly everyone around her is simply charmed (Magic Charm'd?) by her beauty and demeanor and personality.
The Brother here gives us a perspective akin to *Orva's on how Aini's fucking things up for people, while also further fleshing out Bernadetta's specific relationship with both the Saintess Apprentice and her own family. She's redeemed as the Brother realizes that she was always a genius, and that he has crippled his chances of inheriting his House due to his own negligence and complacency.

There's a chance he turns the corner and comes out a slightly better person. We saw in his early childhood that he was effectively poisoned by his mother, who seeks more power and control within that House. He's been conditioned and manipulated, but isn't wholly lost; he can see here that he's been an idiot, and blind to what's really going on around him, and has resolved to try and make up for his failings in a constructive manner.

So I think he'll be replaced by his sister, and won't get what he thought he was entitled to. But he'll probably come out okay-ish, and not be subjected to "Punishment Unending" as Bernadetta takes over. He's still her brother, after all, and she's one to use Useful Things, of which he could end up being one, now that he's gotten the rose-tinted glasses off and been made aware as to what's really going on.

You are correct - he's an annoying character, and I think we as readers are meant to dislike him, but to feel some sympathy for how he's gotten to where he has. The fact he actually acknowledged that he's fucked up, means he has potential to get back on the right path. Hopefully with some chastisement and not blanket forgiveness, but allowed the opportunity to work hard and gain some measure of respect again.
I wouldn't call him an annoying character. I'd say sheltered better then rose tinted. His mother did poison him against his sister but like I said in an earlier chapter he was right to note her lack in teaching. The problem was that he didn't understand his sisters intelligence gap till this chapter. To anyone smart his sister did a normal amount of work but aini isn't smart so the mole hill his sister set up looks to be mount everest to aini. He himself understands that the amount of work wasn't the amount to give someone whose only just now started to learn the things they learned as children. In layman's terms their sense of common sense was eschewed from each other. Leading to frustrations; because of that he sheltered aini. His intentions ended up coddling her and made things worse. That's why he couldn't recognize his own faults in his actions. I'm assuming he will eventually see that his actions have hampered her now that he's understood his place.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top