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Natsu Hyuuga

The Apothecary Diaries: Volume 14

  • Lindsey Kilenhas quoted12 days ago
    Jinshi gazed at Maomao, then gently reached toward her. He looked like he was going to take her hand, but he stopped just short.

    “You’re not going to touch me, sir?” Maomao asked, and he looked awkward.

    “I want to. More than that. I want to hold you close, as tight as I can.”

    “And yet you don’t,” she said teasingly. This from the man who had never hesitated to put his hands on her no matter how many times she told him not to.

    Then again, lately, he’d almost seemed to avoid her, if anything. Even when he’d been hauling her around like a sack of rice earlier that day.

    “I’m holding back. Otherwise I fear I won’t be able to control myself.”

    “You won’t, sir?”

    “No. It won’t stop at holding you close—I’d bite you, I’d lick you.”

    “A chill just went down my spine...” Maomao gave him a mild glower. She had goosebumps.

    That was the pronouncement of a straight-up freak—even if he could probably get away with it on account of being so handsome. If Lahan were to say something like that, she wouldn’t stop at crushing his toes—she’d stab them through with a spear.

    “Now, that is rude,” Jinshi said, but he didn’t look angry, just a bit resentful.

    “Then, since I’m already being rude,” Maomao said, suddenly finding she wanted to tweak him a bit. She drank down her juice, but then she ran a finger along the condensation on the glass. She took her damp finger and placed it on Jinshi’s wrist.
  • Lindsey Kilenhas quoted12 days ago
    There were only so many options here, so she resigned herself to the life of a sack of rice
  • Lindsey Kilenhas quoted19 days ago
    “No, I had my encounter with smallpox before I came to their village. Dangerous business, smallpox, huh? I thought for sure I was gonna die!” As usual, he didn’t sound the least bit concerned about it.

    “We lived in a small pioneer town far to the northwest of the capital,” Yo volunteered. “We cut down the forest to make fields, but it was a very new village, and the fields weren’t enough to sustain us yet, so we sold the wood we cut down to buy food from outside.”

    “I see. One of those frontier towns,” Maomao said, beginning to understand why the village had been lost. “You’d be the first to be hit when there was a shortage of food.”

    Many pioneers were poor folk who had no land of their own.

    Then a plague of locusts occurred.

    Food got more expensive.

    The undersupplied pioneer village could no longer afford it.

    They starved.

    That made everyone weaker.

    Which made them sick.

    A place like theirs would be the first to be abandoned during an outbreak of communicable disease. It would vanish before its name could even be added to the maps. Soon everyone would forget them, and it would be as if they had never existed.

    Hence no word would come to the central government, and there would be no problem.
  • Kimberly Lorenzohas quotedlast month
    “Okay, buddy. Here, have one of these.” Lihaku tossed a rice cracker into Basen’s mouth. He looked shocked for a moment, but didn’t spit it out; instead, he started chewing.
  • Kimberly Lorenzohas quotedlast month
    En’en’s a good cook, isn’t she? What vegetables do you think I could whip up that would make her happy?” Lahan’s Brother asked Maomao
  • Natibeehas quotedlast month
    Jinshi gazed at Maomao, then gently reached toward her. He looked like he was going to take her hand, but he stopped just short.
    “You’re not going to touch me, sir?” Maomao asked, and he looked awkward.
    “I want to. More than that. I want to hold you close, as tight as I can.”
    “And yet you don’t,” she said teasingly. This from the man who had never hesitated to put his hands on her no matter how many times she told him not to.
    Then again, lately, he’d almost seemed to avoid her, if anything. Even when he’d been hauling her around like a sack of rice earlier that day.
    “I’m holding back. Otherwise I fear I won’t be able to control myself.”
    “You won’t, sir?”
    “No. It won’t stop at holding you close—I’d bite you, I’d lick you.”
    “A chill just went down my spine...” Maomao gave him a mild glower. She had goosebumps.
  • Natibeehas quotedlast month
    “Master Jinshi,” Maomao said—no one was close enough to hear them, so she didn’t bother to call him “Moon Prince.” “Do you think this is any way to carry a person?”
    “I don’t.”
    “Then why am I being carried this way?”
    Jinshi pouted for a moment before replying, “I’m not supposed to touch you too much, am I?” He’d chosen the means of carrying her that minimized the amount of physical contact between them.
    “Uh, you can’t make babies just by touching a girl.”
    “Dammit, I know that! Here I am trying to be delicate—don’t just go and say it!”
    “Understood, sir.”
  • Natibeehas quotedlast month
    “Do you remember a physician named Tianyu?”
    “I do. A young man with a...quirky streak, yes?”
    So Jinshi did remember him. He took some peach on his spoon and put it into his mouth.
    “He’s also a descendant of Kada.”
    “Brrf?!”
    Maomao found herself with bits of peach on her face.
    “Oh, my goodness gracious.” Suiren was wiping Maomao’s face in an instant. There were certain people who might have considered it a privilege to have a gorgeous nobleman spit food on them. Maomao, however, could sum it up in one word: unhygienic.
  • Natibeehas quotedlast month
    “We’ll have to be careful not to get dizzy,” Maomao agreed.
    She was thinking about what happened in the retreat area some years before. Jinshi had gotten heat stroke—then, to make matters even more complicated, had been targeted by an assassin.
    And that was how I learned about the frog...
  • Natibeehas quoted2 months ago
    “Aren’t you going home, Master Lihaku?”
    “Ah, well, I figured I should stick around to finish what I started. I’ll go home tomorrow morning.”
    “You really saved a lot, didn’t you?” Maomao said, nudging him with her elbow.
    “Oh, stop,” he said, but he didn’t exactly look unhappy.
    “Hee hee hee! I guess I can look forward to another night,” said Pairin, draping herself over him.
    “Ha ha ha ha!” he laughed. She would be draining him dry for a second night in a row.
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