LATEST UPDATES

Published at 28th of April 2022 06:39:49 AM


Chapter 255: - 5 "I met my sister" ①

If audio player doesn't work, press Stop then Play button again




(It's awkward... ...... This is not mother and son, but strangers to each other...)

I don't think I'm handling it very well.

Sam is Sam, and Melanie, perhaps because of her own guilt, calls Sam's name "Mr. Samuel" in a strangerly manner.

If someone were to see this scene, he or she would see a baroness dealing with an earl. If someone were to look at the scene, they would see nothing more than a baroness dealing with an earl.

No one would think that they are related to each other by blood.

Sam would like them to treat each other without any guilt.

However, there is a problem on Sam's side.

Sam is always friendly, but when he calls Melanie, he calls her "you" or "Ms. Melanie" and does not call her mother.

Maybe that is why Melanie cannot call Sam as her son.

(I'm in trouble. What should I do? (What should I do? I think this is a problem before a father and a son.)

In the meantime, Sam wants to make things work with Melanie.

He has no memory of his mother, and it is difficult for him to recognize Melanie as his mother. Still, she is the mother who gave birth to him.

He thinks that it is not good to say goodbye to Melanie without having a good relationship with her, and he thinks that he should do something about it.

Melanie will not be able to get rid of the guilt and the guilt she feels, and her fiancées will be saddened to know that Sam and Melanie could not repair their relationship.

(Well, what should we do?)

Even Sam does not know how to treat his mother, whom he thought was dead, because she is alive.

Sam has never needed a mother.

With Daphne as his mother, he did not miss his mother and there was no inconvenience for him.

Daphne's love for Sam was real and she was like a mother to him.

(Is there anything to talk about?)

Melanie remains silent while Sam wracks his brain.

I wonder if she has any more questions for Sam.

There are so many questions she could ask him, such as what he was doing, how he was doing as a wizard, and so on.

In that sense, Sam also has questions about Melanie's past, her new family, etc., but she is too reserved to talk about them.

For better or worse, they are reserved with each other.

As Sam folds his arms and ponders, there is a knock at the door.

"Melanie, Sam, it's Lieselotte."

"Lise-sama?"

"Please come in, Miss Lieselotte."

Melanie motioned for her to come in, and Lise, with a kind smile on her face, walked into the room and thanked her.

"Thank you very much. Sam, Miss Melanie, I have spoken with Viscount Teeling, would you like to move to a different place?"

"Uh?"

"I thought it would be better if you two talked together, but I was concerned that we weren't having a good conversation. I know I'm meddling, but would you like to have a cup of tea on the terrace for a change?"

I don't mind.

I looked at Melanie and she nodded.

"I don't mind either."

"Thank you. Viscount Teeling would like to say hello to Sam again. Let's go.

At Lise's urging, Sam and the others moved to the terrace on the second floor of the house.

"Mr. Samuel Scheidt. I am Stephen Teeling. I would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for the opportunity to meet with the greatest wizard in the land, Mr. Samuel."

"My name is Samuel Scheidt. Pleased to meet you."

Stephen Teeling was a man about Melanie's age.

He was a clean-cut man with flaxen hair slicked back.

Sam looks at the smiling baron and thinks he is a kind man.

No, in fact, he is a kind man.

He protects Melanie, who has lost her memory and fallen ill, and is in love with her and has a child with her.

I also admire him for accepting Melanie, whose identity was unknown to him.

At least many of the nobility would not do what Viscount Thieling did.

At the most, they would have kept their relationship with Melanie as a sidekick or a mistress. However, the Viscount has Melanie as his wife, and he has no mistress or mistress. It is clear that he loves Melanie that much.

"I would love to introduce you to my daughter, but she is a little shy, and I am sorry I have not greeted her."

"No, I think it's understandable, since several people suddenly showed up at the house.

I'm glad to hear you say that.

Looking back, when I visited the Viscount's house, I was welcomed by many people, but none of them seemed to be his daughter.

He wondered what kind of child she might be, and thought of his sister whom he had not yet seen by blood.

Then..,

"-- hmm?"

I feel a gaze on my back.

I turned around and saw a little girl looking at me from the other side of the window.




Please report us if you find any errors so we can fix it asap!


COMMENTS