She has a friggin fiance, but still gets jealous and hurt when Izumi dares to like someone else? If she likes Izumi so much, she should ditch that fiance! She can't even do that, but still tries to have a lover on the side! What an ugly, selfish hag!
the fiance was probably arranged. idk if she can just ditch him. but its not like i like her or anything someone needs to put her in her place or something
...that someone like her, who saw her own family brutally murdered in front of her very own eyes and then barely escaped with her own life, is completely free of hatred and thoughts of vengeance. Hell, she doesn't even corner Kahlua and demand he tell her everything she doesn't know, about her birth, childhood, powers, etc., etc. I mean, is she even human??
hahahaha xD
I mean, it's obvious that the king's hopelessly infatuated with Okisaki, so her "I'm just a part-timer, I can't have feelings for the king!" angst is completely unnecessary. Sigh...
we know he's infatuated because we see him when he's away from her. She doesn't think he's infatuated with her. She thinks it's just part of the act. And thinks if he finds out she loves him, she'll lose her job and the chance to be near him/of use to him. Sometimes I wonder if he even realizes he's infatuated with her. But their cluelessness is what makes this so entertaining for us to watch lol
So, I know this is one of those fluffy manga's that give you diabetes just by reading them, but honestly...if it was me, I'd be pissed off that my parents weren't telling me everything I needed to know, especially if I got into dangerous situations...but whatever, this is a manga where negative events and emotions don't really exist...
Um, so the white hunter guy is super cruel, huh? He just had to up and murder an innocent human girl who got unwittingly caught up in a supernatural affair. Why couldn't the "queen of the great heavens" obtain her own human body instead of stealing someone else's?
if he didn't kill the human girl then the queen of heaven would have never woken up so this is all his fault











That was so good! And the art was fabulous! I especially love how the author makes you read between the lines--i.e., since the dark-haired woman doesn't get attached to anything and treats everything as disposable, does she think of her partner as disposable and or temporary as well?
what's the problem did they mean??! There're too many possible answers, ugh.