By Fuyutsuki Koki and Haduki Futaba. Released in Japan as “Higeki no Heroine Buru Imōto no Sei de Konyaku Hakishita no Desu ga, Naze ka Seigikan no Tsuyoi Ōtaishi ni Karamareru you ni Narimashita” by Overlap Novels f. Released in North America by Airship. Translated by Sarah Moon. Adapted by Veles Svitlychny.
This is the final volume in the series, and I get the sense that the author knew this and was rushing to fit everything in. They didn’t quite make it – there’s a brief bit at the start where they’re inviting guests for the wedding and discuss whether her parents should get an invitation, but nothing comes of it and they’re never mentioned again. Jill fares slightly better, and while I was a bit dubious about her conversion in Book 2, I remind myself that a lot of people in toxic environments become very different when removed from that environment. You could say the same thing about Lingsha, for that matter, only this volumes brings the toxins to the foreground. Yes, after grumping about her being a “Shampoo” sort of Chinese stereotype in Books 1 and 2, we now get even more of them. Fortunately, it’s not as bad as it sounds.
Leia (alas, not a single Star Wars joke in the book) and Eric are ready to announce their engagement. The King and the ministers seem to take it well. But the nobility is another story, especially as they’ve just had a lot of power stripped from them. Margrave Linboldt is very unhappy that the sister of a traitor and attempted murderer is going to be the future Queen, even if she is a Saint. And then there’s the envoy from the land of Ren, who is incredibly strong, incredibly smug, and seems to want to annoy everyone as much as possible – his minder most of all. He’s there to take his little sister Lingsha back to Ren with him (which she doesn’t want), or, as a compromise, to have Lingsha marry Eric and Leia return with him to the Empire, which has no saints. Is his incredibly aggravating plan all it seems to be?
Obviously it’s not, but there’s enough ambiguity that we’re left wondering what exactly is happening. I do like how Jill, who I described in my review of the first book as the most annoying character I’d seen in a “villainess” book, keeps being relevant to the plot. Just because she’s been convicted and sent to a convent doesn’t mean that her role is over – this world does not have convenient magic-sealing powers, and as it turns out someone whose powers are “untraceable poison” is very valuable to those who have people who need poisoning. That said, the danger here can’t be TOO dangerous. We know that we’re going to end with a wedding and a happily ever after, so we can’t have Jill be kidnapped, or Lingsha be kidnapped. Heck, the moment Lingsha’s brother was killed, my first reaction was sarcasm. And that’s fine, I really don’t need THAT much depth or tragedy in what is essentially a story about two people who are almost exactly alike realizing they love each other and want to spend the rest of their lives together.
As far as I can tell, this is a rare villainess series which does not have an anime in the pipeline. Probably for the best. This was fun, but I am happy it ended here.
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