I really hope he catches him before he leaves and sits him down to explain everything. It'll hurt him but he needs to know and it's better than him returning to that douchebag of a "hyung" and getting sold off ╥﹏╥
Yup. Especially in the novel, the pack loyalty of dogs is highly emphasized. For an abandoned dog like our MC, he actually feels guilty for staying with the ML when he failed to do his job and assumes that his hyung is now in trouble because of his failure. For him, the betrayal is to his hyung and the dog clan who raised him.
Y'all may be disappointed, but I'm actually happy the princess survived. I also get the feeling that this wasn't supposed to be the climax of the story, so maybe that's why I'm fine with it.
Same here! I'm so happy she lived guys think about it. The princess is why Lamille got with Roel anyways.
....are we forgetting that because of what the princess did to him, he became so depressive and lost literally everything? Or that if it wasn't for Lamille, Roel's sister literally dies in the future because Roel couldn't afford it due to losing everything, and the one family he had left was an orphan from the war that he swore to protect? Who gave up his battle victories to another noble so he could take that child in? How far must have such a man like Roel been pushed into despair to even become that villain in the OG storyline?
Lost his self-confidence and ability to walk, his whole strength as a soldier?? A hero soldier who is actually upright, and he lost it due to investigation of corruption, which is what the Princess was involved in.
She could've tried to get Roel onto her side, or even after, try to get Lamille on her side. Whatd she do instead? Tried to incite war with Lamille's family and have her lands conquered by another. I'm not saying she should die, but she needs to take actual responsibility for the damage she caused. She didn't care for the consequences of her actions, only that she achieved her goals and that her knight was fine. But sure, go princess for getting revenge against the king, who honestly died too easily for all he did.