
Dad, dad, dad, hey… Hello? Dad? Huh…? Kiichi…? What’s wrong? No, no, I’m really sorry. Why is that? You think it doesn’t matter and just searched for me… A parent who would blame me like that?!
Wasn’t it said that this boy doesn’t know who his father is?
>>1
The person who is my mother’s ex-husband, who has spent the longest time in my childhood and said he sees himself as a father figure, is making a phone call…
>>1
What an entirely knowledgeable first reply.
I’m already a university student.
It’s probably because he’s my father-in-law that he can pack it like this.
>>4
I was deeply moved to realize how close we have become.
That aside, Ishihira-kun has a bit of a father complex, doesn’t he?
>>5
It’s a lie if I didn’t have daddy issues with this upbringing.
>>5
It’s my father’s best period, and he’s still a teenager, so it can’t be helped…
My love for books is strongly influenced by this father.
This is also a kind of dependency…
As the number of annoying and crazy users working in the library keeps increasing,
The past of being one of them comes crashing down on me.
>>8
Isn’t it in the present continuous tense…?
>>12
Since I’m causing trouble, I end up being quite useful…
Usually, I have a bit of a harsh tongue, but I tend to be particularly mean or sharp-tongued towards people like my dad, Hayasemaruko, and Shirai-san, whom I think it’s okay to be spoiled around…
From the boy’s perspective, this still feels quite compassionate.
Calling Dad
I’m glad there was still a connection.
Just because the mother is loose with men.
Isn’t it usually the case that someone trying to hide and stay after closing time would get the police called, Ishihira-kun?
>>14
If you’re someone who works there, the conversation changes a bit…
>>16
It’s really annoying for someone to be lingering around at a time when they shouldn’t be, even if it’s a staff member! There are security reasons involved too.
Even if we are not related by blood, he is the one who told me that he is your father.
Right after being told that my father is the one who “ignored the library’s requests for returns and ran away without paying for them,” of course I would be upset.
Just like mom!
As expected, there was some restraint in not going to ask the person who was crying about their situation, Ishihira boy.
Shirai is so shocked…
If you’re shown some awkward family circumstances right in front of you, it’s only natural to be put off!
Is Shirai normal…?
>>24
Don’t complicate things!
It’s painful that I can’t explain that the femme fatale doesn’t have that intention…
>>26
That’s more mellow, isn’t it!!
>>55
Sumiya-san and Tsushima-san are great, aren’t they?
Because my dad (not by blood) wrote a work that became a bestseller, and through that, readers are getting snippets of my mother’s affairs, you know?
>>27
Is that a bestseller?
Well, the author’s intention and such are irrelevant to the audience…
When you think about it calmly, this dad isn’t really that great of a person.
>>29
That’s true, but in this case, such standards for recognizing good people are relatively unimportant.
The boy’s father, who was released from his condition, has been out of touch.
I like Shirai, who can be a pain sometimes.
>>34
Maybe sometimes.
I don’t really understand, but I’m happy to be in regular contact with my dad.
I always felt that when Dad appeared, it was for a special episode, so it’s surprising to see him appear normally…
I’m glad that the boy is a boy.
If she were a girl, she would do things like reverse her stepfather.
I’m glad we have a relationship where we can easily get in touch.
Mom probably doesn’t seem to know.
I was surprised that you were keeping in touch.
This way of entangling is really being spoiled, isn’t it?
The annoying old man is being abandoned by his family, and it’s tough.
This repetition of “dad” is a type of seeking affection, a way to hold back, and also a form of sarcasm.
>>44
The true meaning of a complex…!
Just because we share the same blood, it doesn’t make a man I don’t know a father; my dad, who taught me many things during my childhood, is the real father.
I touched on it a little this time, but the reason why my father has never met his wife and children since he left hasn’t been explained, right?
I can’t make the most of Shirai-san’s strengths over the phone.
I’m glad you found someone you can rely on…
Is Ishihira a homosexual?
>>49
I was really interested in the AV section…
I can’t have this kind of conversation with my mother… She’s not a bad person, though.
I wanted the illustration of Shirai to be drawn with more muscle, but that’s just my preference.
From the staff’s perspective, he’s the enemy right now, Dad…
They ran away without compensating and have remained that way until now.
It’s also a late-blooming rebellious phase…
The mother seems to live in a different layer from Ishihira-kun.
While they are at least fulfilling the minimum parental duty by not making me struggle to eat and paying for my university tuition, it still feels lacking.
>>56
If a parent and child have different layers, it can lead to quite a tragedy, but seriously, Ishihira-kun is so mature…
>>56
Compared to a few years ago when I was living with an abusive man, I think he is trying to do motherly things in his own way, so I wonder if that is a result of reflecting on that incident.
>>64
But it’s scary how that mother might casually say something like “Oh, your brother was born” or something like that.
I feel my mother’s genes in the way that makes me wonder if I’m not important to you.
In a bad way
I call my mother by her name, but I call my father “Dad.”
Is it good or bad that Ishihira-kun is strongly influenced by his father?
I wish my real father was around… → No, that’s not right. I don’t know who my father is.
I want to believe that the conversation was somehow the turning point for that mother to change.
When I used to work part-time at a rental video store, I really hated making reminder calls.
Why are you getting angry… I’m the one who wants to be angry here.
(My mother is not this kind of woman!)