@Hollow7F
i actually forgot...what did she try to do?
Basically, she planned on seducing him, to get him to boink her so she could then force him to have a shotgun wedding.
@Tsukasa_iLy
What chapter is this in the ln. I'm ready to just read ahead
The LN is not translated by anybody (If anyone wants to pick it up and do that project, they can DM me since I have the LN raws).
Only the WN is currently being translated
here ...
And my manga translation has already surpassed theirs in the timeline.
@Liquidxlax
I think Kazura forgives her because she is 16, the culture is far different from Japan and noble girls are ways of acquiring things for a family, but noble girls still want a good husband and kazura is the best she has seen thus far so she'd try anything. It is just that many manga seem to not have situations where a character should be mad at a person for a while and interact with them far different.
Lieze is 14. I think you may be confusing her with Zirconia's flashback or Issac's cousin's flashback.
@Kikaibaka
He's really, really doing himself a disservice by not attempting to learn the language because Lieze isn't biased at ALL no sir.
He actually has...but only a rudimentary level. He was able to read Lieze's handwritten letter just fine when she left him some cookies in a previous chapter. It's the technical terms that are more difficult. It's like how you might know English as your native language, but as soon as you talk political jargon, read some legal documents, laws written, or even some long-winded terms of service agreements... that's enough to make most people's head spin, and even more so when it's their second or third language.
@kingguy3
"I'm being used by father everyday, but I'm somehow handling it."
I'd normally say both father and son
can go fuck themselves (since one physically abuses Marie and the father literally own his own daughter her as slave)...but, maybe they already do
in a different sense.
@tuatara1
It's always strange to me to see people hold fictional characters in such contempt when they have no control over what they say, do, or think. Because they don't actually exist. If someone dislikes a character, they should hold it against the author rather than the imaginary person with no control over their own behavior.
That, and the fact that some characters are meant to be hated because they're written intentionally to be that way, usually as villians...just like in this instance of the father and son being the scumbags of this story. I personally don't agree with you, because hating on the author for writing a character they didn't like (who was meant to be disliked, especially villains), sounds absurd to me.