"Adelinquent" is the title of this chapter's soliloquy, and it begins with the narrator lamenting the fact that he has just witnessed the first time that the king's face appears to be angry. He feels that he is being "an idiot" for thinking that he should care what the king thinks of him. He wonders why the king keeps saying things that are unmanly, such as "fated to be gether" . He also wonders why he has to stay by the side of the king when he can do so himself. The narrator feels that if he had stayed with the king, he would have gotten the wrong idea. He recalls how the king said that he would dump the queen and dump the king. He then remembers the look on his face when the king first saw him as an omega. He wants to embrace the king and rub his insides with his quiver. He shudders at the thought of being an omega and wonders how he came to be one.
"Adelinquent" is the title of this chapter's soliloquy, and it begins with the narrator lamenting the fact that he has just witnessed the first time that the king's face appears to be angry. He feels that he is being "an idiot" for thinking that he should care what the king thinks of him. He wonders why the king keeps saying things that are unmanly, such as "fated to be gether" . He also wonders why he has to stay by the side of the king when he can do so himself. The narrator feels that if he had stayed with the king, he would have gotten the wrong idea. He recalls how the king said that he would dump the queen and dump the king. He then remembers the look on his face when the king first saw him as an omega. He wants to embrace the king and rub his insides with his quiver. He shudders at the thought of being an omega and wonders how he came to be one.