Chapter 53
54
Fee looked back and understood the situation by checking the cooinu, which was still solidifying with the curtains open.
(Totally cracked, right?)
That’s right. Because they saw me naked.
Couinu had turned his face bright red like a tomato, keeping his mouth full, stiffened.
Fee’s mind on the other hand was strangely calm.
I feel a little embarrassed, but is it because Cousin is too upset?
Looking at the cousin, who was upset and completely out of function, Fee decided to be grand this one.
It’s NG to hide the body for now. The fact that this one wants to hide it is misleading.
There was no stipulation that there should be no girls in the Knights of Austol, but I tried to get in and found out, but that was because there were no girls in Austol at all who wanted to be knights.
The apprenticeship knight system is also made assuming the boys.
So if I find out, I’ll be terrible. That’s what Fee had in mind.
Fee was remembering what Mr. Conrad had taught him.
Asked as a bargaining class, it’s about human emotion.
Approximately humans have two emotions.
Emotions emanating from within and received from outside.
For example, when people are laughing, there are cases where they are funny and laughing, and cases where they are laughing because everyone is laughing.
In the latter case, people feel the air from the outside that it is a situation to laugh at, and in response they laugh at it because they find it interesting.
In other words, a person’s emotions can be determined by the air of the place.
This creates interesting effects in relationships.
When you do something wrong, there are people who are not bad and people who are bad.
Then which has a better chance of getting mad.
Normally, I think people who don’t get bad are more pissed off.
But that’s not necessarily true.
The air that reflects on you for doing something wrong is contagious as’ doing something wrong ‘to your opponent. And they also feel they’ve done something wrong, which promotes anger.
As a result, only those who are reflecting can get angrier.
This may be easier to understand by showing the reverse pattern.
Have you ever forgotten to be angry because they weren’t too bad when you suddenly did something rude?
In that case, my anger will come to a boil about the matter later.
Or there are cases where they don’t know how to get angry because they have an attitude that they should be angry minded but not bad at all.
Even though there is anger in your heart, your brain is confused because you can’t receive the air that you can be angry from the outside, and as a result, you can’t express your anger.
In other words, there is a situation in the communication where the anger of the other person can be avoided by not daring to go bad.
Of course, there’s a pitfall in this.
This acts to avoid anger until the other person’s anger reaches a threshold that appears on the table as a clear emotion.
When an opponent’s anger crosses more than a constant and his internal emotions alone are ignited, an attitude that is not reflecting acts in a direction that promotes his anger from within, this time.
And once that happens, apologies and reflections make it impossible to tackle it any longer than you have an attitude of not reflecting.
So abuse is strictly forbidden.
Somewhat, even if you have amplified your opponent’s anger by air, it is better for your relationship to honestly reflect and apologize and have your anger dissolved from within.
But in this case, Phee decided it was a better case not to be bad.
If Fee gets upset or tries to hide in this situation, it passes as the air that Fee is doing something wrong to the other person. In this fatal situation, the position is definitely disadvantaged.
Now Couinu is just upset and blushing and panicking. The emotion of trying to disprove this one is not in it.
Now is the time to follow.
Phee did not hide her body, looked more dignified at the cooinu and said as if nothing was wrong here.
“What? Suddenly you open the curtain. You wanted to take a peek at my bath?
Hearing the words, Couinu blushed and desperately beheaded.
“Oh, no… no…”
“Hmm, then close the curtains. How long have you been watching this?
“Ah… sorry!
That’s what Phee told me, and Couinu hastily closed the curtain.
Then for a while, I hear the fluttering footsteps of the cooinu and the sound of hitting the wall, and eventually the sound drifts away from this scene.
In the meantime, this took off the first crisis.
Because if we got into a scene here, there was a chance we could all get caught up in the potato ceremony.
I don’t have that anymore.
And then there’s the cooinu.
Couinu has just come to this quarters and doesn’t have any good friends.
You won’t be able to easily talk to someone, so there is still a respite to pass around even if it is said to be a woman.
(Stick a nail in that head firmly before then…)
Phee wiped her body, dressed as an apprentice knight, and bathed quietly in the water.