i don’t think it’s totally confirmed yet but it’s been taken under advisement! i have so loved book 2 so far but theres a definite lack of closure about how book 1 ends. i am waiting patiently for a chance to chew leon out about itall. until then
Ah, so it was from the author’s Tumblr page. And since the author has already planned for it in the upcoming book 3, it is very likely to come to pass. Just being able to call Leon “Leomar” is wonderful enough for me.
Too bad I’m not able to join Patreon to read side stories like that one. Are they Patreon exclusive? Are we not able to purchase them through other means?
Hm, yeah, would be nice to have a story DLC, like SoH does. Maybe after voting on the Patreon so the patrons would decide if they are okay with the author sharing their exclusive content like that if one wants to be really nice about it.
Despite what you’re saying, I sense you have a thing for mages who treat MC like an actual human instead of a spellcasting flesh golem cough Thalia cough Leomar cough
Making Aunt Bess’ state of pancakes and waffles. Anyone who cant talk like normal goddamned people (cough Leomar cough Talia) get punted into the stratosphere.
unrelated to anything but it is still chaos to me that ante still has a job after the bbq fiasco. i really tend to think that the choice to get mc’s ass out of there ultimately came down to a fundamental deformity in their relationship with leon in that somewhere along the way he stopped trusting them and it wouldn’t have mattered if ante was pushing for it or not bc the problem was between the two of them but.
i’ve seen it and i even get why they would be hesitant to give ante the boot morally. for all that she is eminently hateable and responsible for the outcome, she was symptomatic of a wider problem that making her the fall guy for wouldn’t have fixed. if leon had sacked her, it would’ve felt like handing off responsibility for a situation that was ultimately his sole decision. still! wild that there were zero consequences for anyone involved but guilty consciences