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Chapter 36: Rejecting the Queen is a Tradition of Our House
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Chapter 38: Nora’s Philosophy of Hunting
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... ldren they brought with them.
The social gathering for the children was much less mature, but its importance wouldn’t pale in comparison to that of the adults. Factions formed as children tended to persist into adulthood, so houses that were close with one another usually requested for their successors to huddle together and form cliques.
For this reason, this banquet was important to children like Roel too. He was already disadvantaged for being absent the previous year, and this ...
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