In "Dralogy," Villain Warrant Lady Mary appears on every route and interferes with the hero's romance.

Sometimes you use power as a shield, sometimes you use your surroundings, sometimes you embed the protagonist. Players find themselves frustrated by its diverse means, but that's why love burns and leads to the refreshment of the last moment they kick Mary off.

Its ultimate route is his (Patrick) route, which is nothing else.

Patrick Dice in "Dralogy" is a man with a high temper when he does it and can even be considered ruthless rather than cool.

I have a lower initial preference than anyone, and for a while I get stuck with whatever option I choose. When it comes to that level of difficulty, it is so much so that it has been discussed that players' hearts can be broken.

Such a relationship changes after school one day.

A protagonist who happens to be late returns finds Patrick sleeping at his desk in the classroom. After worrying about the daily burdens and fatigue and what to do with Patrick, who falls asleep without appearing, I'll put on my jacket.

So after a while the protagonist waited, he slowly woke up, turning his cheeks red when Patrick alternated his gaze with the jacket hung on him and the protagonist was seen pitiful.

The protagonist finds himself intimate with that attitude that is not like him, and then the two become gradually closer, attracted, Patrick's frozen heart also begins to melt under Alicia's tenderness...

And the villain warrant lady, Mary, makes an engagement with him.

Of course, I used my parents' power. The Dies and Alberts have an ostensibly reciprocal relationship, but in essence the specific gravity of power is biased against the Alberts, and the Dies are in a state to speak of.

If Mary complains that she wants to get married, the House of Dice will have to respond to it. Of course there's no way Patrick can defy you, and more importantly, they make you declare your engagement in front of Alicia.

An arrangement in a world that is ultimately unrivaled by itself. Before that Alicia gives me pessimism and I just have to drop off Patrick's back as Mary takes her arm and leaves......

"Wow, you can't be a lady, you're jealous and you're dumping a woman."

"There's more to rumbling about!... Well, that's good. It's about Mary in the game."

He accused himself of just explaining the game's story and swallowed a bite of tea with a wrinkle between his eyebrows that Mary was uncomfortable. I mean, what about "yelling" at my husband as a squire?

But Mary herself, Mary in the game, was stunned. Because I'm in the same position, I even seem pathetic through disgust at her stupid behavior.

"Does that mean that following that story, your daughter and Lady Patrick will be engaged"

"That's right. At times, it's not weird that we're already talking."

The winning expression Mary announces her engagement to Patrick just after the nightclub event. I don't remember until the detailed date on the game, but I didn't remember pinching the event in between, and given the number of days leading up to graduation, it should happen.

Explaining that, Addy, who was sitting opposite Mary and drinking tea, opened her mouth "But it's okay".

"But your daughter doesn't want to marry Master Patrick, does she?

"Yeah, there's no dust at all. There's no dust."

"That dialogue, if you don't want to be stabbed, please refrain from elsewhere."

It is thus this total denial to the betrothal story with a prince everyone can rush.

There's no other way for Addy to inadvertently sigh. So much Patrick is admired by women, and countless young ladies dream of marrying him.

Addy, who watched many times as Mary and Patrick danced amicably, constantly felt the gaze of jealousy poured at the same time. That's enough to make me tremble.

- "How could your daughter be so..." I sighed, needless to say, relieved inside. No, there's no way I can tell you...

"Lady Mary, the villain of the game, was forced to be engaged to Master Patrick, wasn't she? Well, then, wouldn't it be a problem if your daughter didn't move?

"I'd like to think so too, but I really feel like they're going to go along with the game......"

So whining, Mary touched her curly hair.

Even today the luxurious vertical roll rocks under Mary's thin fingers. but shaking on a roll-by-roll basis can't be said to be delicate in flattery, it's just the strength of not saying drill.

Even so, I desperately blew it in the morning to at least have loose curly hair. That's the two hours three veteran caregivers spend doing all they can with that arm, holding it down, stretching it out and pushing it...

As a result, the caregiver's heart broke before the drill, and to this day.

"Given the power of this (drill), it looks like a lot of power is working..."

"Right......"

Addy turned away softly because she knew the struggle between Mary and the caregivers.

Aside from Mary's progress as a villain's warrant lady, I'd say the current situation is generally in line with the game's story.

Of course, I know that's because of Alicia's efforts and Patrick's actions, but I still think the next thing that happens is an engagement event.

I don't think everything is made of programs while I think this world is the same as games.

I don't think everything is as the game goes, but on the other hand, it's also true that things like the game are happening.

In this world like 'Dragonology', days pass like 'Dragonology'.

It's somewhat of an ambiguous drop for Mary, but admitting that there are too many cases to say it's perfectly irrelevant, or the game itself, is unwillingness for Mary to live in this world.

Based on them, Mary had a hunch about her engagement to Patrick. Of course, I'm not willing to bring up my own engagement story with him.

Storytelling of the game is also when this event occurs, and more importantly, given Mary's relationship with Patrick, it's not weird if the engagement story goes up.

Instead, if you take the inside line from someone you don't know, on the contrary, you might wonder why you weren't engaged before. Though a stranger, its beauty and family name are a combination of first-class Mary and the perfect Patrick that everyone can scorch, without complaining.

"Does that mean that your husband or the owner of the Dice family brings up an engagement story?

"Until now, the Alberts and the Dies have been in a relationship of 'hand in hand', but there has been no substantial connection. Even though both households are impeccable... do you know why?

"Well, isn't that because you didn't have kids your age in both houses"

"Right. But nobility is a natural world of political marriage. I'm not saying I'm the same age, and my wife will be married to someone 10 or 20 years away."

"That's... that's true. But the Alberts, the Dies, you don't have to marry so desperately."

"That's where it matters."

Nodding, Mary threw the scone into a shard mouth.

Freshly baked scones convey fragrance and moderate sweetness the moment they are placed in your mouth, delicious that makes you want to run right into the kitchen and compliment the pastry chef.

Apparently Addy likes it, too, and her hands are stretching to the scones as she listens to Mary with a serious look. This is the third one, by the way.

"The Alberts and the Dies are both powerful, and not big enough to take other houses, etc. That's why I couldn't get a political marriage between the two families."

"And say?

"Both families have chosen the most conditional of the numerous offers when it comes to marriage. The room leads to the authority of both houses just like that."

"Sure, the Alberts and the Dies were always on the" side of choice. "

"If those two families had married a separated child, they might have thought something had happened."

Political marriage is, in the end, the ambition of parents.

I want to make a new pipe, I want to make my current connection deeper, I want a conjugate at the end of the day... for a variety of purposes, and instead I give my daughter, sometimes even my son.

Conversely, it also means that a house desperate for a political marriage is so ambitious or needs the support of the other party.

That's why the Alberts and the Dies didn't imitate the way they offered their children while getting closer together. We wanted to give them an advantage over having them choose, and show each other how much room they could afford.

"That's the current situation in both houses. But it collapsed."

Talking pale, Mary includes another shard sconce in her mouth.

"Patrick and I are close in age and not too close. Rather a friendly looking couple from the side. I mean, a man and a woman who don't look like the political marriage the two families have been waiting for."

Even if an engagement announcement were made at this moment now, for example, the public would not be so surprised. Of course no one can smell political marriage there.

How many times have two people I've known for a long time taken their hands and danced, and that's just how they got tied up when they were old.

"The outside world will not understand, and the connection between the two houses will be deeper. If you think about it from your fathers, it's like," Hooray for everything. "

Addy looked at her jiggly to Mary, who made tea for the sighing mixture.

The way Mary talks is like some other HR, and if a girl her age doesn't have the hotness to talk about love, let alone mourn that she was made to get engaged in a place she doesn't know.

All I'm saying is that I've known for a long time that this is only going to happen pale and as if.

Surely Mary has knowledge as a game, I guess she anticipated this engagement beforehand as part of the story. Nevertheless, I am oddly calm to think about it after the memory of the game comes back to life.

Instead, I've been saying for a long time that that's what should have happened regardless of the game, etc.

"... Lady, maybe I've been meaning to marry Master Patrick for a long time."

"I thought you'd let me marry you. Well, Patrick would be better off if he was enough to be married to a man he didn't even know well. It's thoughtful, and..."

"And?"

Turning his gaze to Chira and Addy, Mary immediately clouded the story, "It's nothing."

Put your mouth on tea with a face that doesn't eat anything like that. A hint of sweetness and fruit aroma spread in his mouth, and Addy, who saw the empty cup, was poured anew.

"But this engagement isn't going to go any better than it did with Alicia."

To put it mildly, Mary reached for the second sconce.

It was just then that Mary's father and Patrick's father appeared with pleasant bickering.