Crowley hates running, by his own admission, but that doesn’t mean he can’t run, as he convincingly demonstrates. Poor car tho’, that kickoff gotta be damaging. Ah, but I’m getting sidetracked.
Back to Yuu and his bringing up the long standing question of how strong Ferid is. He’s strong, of course, but just how strong? The team recounts the information that we already know: that Ferid is the 7th progenitor, which makes him the second strongest after the queen among the vampires presently in Japan, that the higher the rank gets the stronger a vampire is, and that yes, it means that Ferid is stronger than “the ginger vampire”, all of which means that the Shinoa squad’s situation couldn’t suck more (Shinoa herself shows off her guts by being remarkably nonchalant about it though).
The 8.5 fanbook has the line in the description of the Progenitor Council that says that while only the first 6 ranks of the vampire progenitors are allowed to participate, Ferid attends the meetings persistently anyway despite being a 7th. So what does that mean. If, say, Ferid was a couple of ranks stronger than he lets on, then why hide it when it’d allow him to participate in the Progenitor Council sessions officially instead of having to force his way in uninvited every time? Which logically means that his rank among vampires is accurate, and Krul and all the progenitors of the Progenitor Council are indeed stronger than him in raw power… but then again, you never know with Ferid.
Alright, back to the chapter’s developments where an interesting and strange thing happens: Yuu starts actually thinking and connecting the dots. I wonder if it’s a demon/seraph’s side-effect, too (XD) or, dare I say it, a sign of Yuu maturing? For someone who is usually more or less an idiot, Yuu’s deductions there are stunningly impressive and calm-headed. Moreover, at this point he has more information at his disposal than, say, Mika who doesn’t know the human side of things and never really met Kureto or talked to Guren.
So Yuu figures that letting him run away from Sanguinem was all according to Ferid’s keikaku, which Mika confirms, though says that Ferid never revealed any details to him. To Yuu, it means that his meeting with Guren was also prearranged, and it sort of shocks him, but not for long, and I’m proud of how quickly he regains cool head and keeps thinking rationally, not going emotional or starting accusing Guren. He zeroes in on how Guren was crying and what it means: that Guren himself is being used by someone. But from what Kureto said about the Hyakuya orphanage and from how he said, it follows that the keikaku had started prior to the destruction of the world, and neither Guren nor Kureto, with his incomplete knowledge of things related to the orphanage, could be the mastermind behind it. It could be Ferid Bathory then, but Yuu’s not sure, which leads him to what he was thinking from the start, ‘In that case, maybe meeting with him once wouldn’t hurt…’
Crowley hates running, by his own admission, but that doesn’t mean he can’t run, as he convincingly demonstrates. Poor car tho’, that kickoff gotta be damaging. Ah, but I’m getting sidetracked.Back to Yuu and his bringing up the long standing question of how strong Ferid is. He’s strong, of course, but just how strong? The team recounts the information that we already know: that Ferid is the 7th progenitor, which makes him the second strongest after the queen among the vampires presently in Japan, that the higher the rank gets the stronger a vampire is, and that yes, it means that Ferid is stronger than “the ginger vampire”, all of which means that the Shinoa squad’s situation couldn’t suck more (Shinoa herself shows off her guts by being remarkably nonchalant about it though).The 8.5 fanbook has the line in the description of the Progenitor Council that says that while only the first 6 ranks of the vampire progenitors are allowed to participate, Ferid attends the meetings persistently anyway despite being a 7th. So what does that mean. If, say, Ferid was a couple of ranks stronger than he lets on, then why hide it when it’d allow him to participate in the Progenitor Council sessions officially instead of having to force his way in uninvited every time? Which logically means that his rank among vampires is accurate, and Krul and all the progenitors of the Progenitor Council are indeed stronger than him in raw power… but then again, you never know with Ferid.Alright, back to the chapter’s developments where an interesting and strange thing happens: Yuu starts actually thinking and connecting the dots. I wonder if it’s a demon/seraph’s side-effect, too (XD) or, dare I say it, a sign of Yuu maturing? For someone who is usually more or less an idiot, Yuu’s deductions there are stunningly impressive and calm-headed. Moreover, at this point he has more information at his disposal than, say, Mika who doesn’t know the human side of things and never really met Kureto or talked to Guren.So Yuu figures that letting him run away from Sanguinem was all according to Ferid’s keikaku, which Mika confirms, though says that Ferid never revealed any details to him. To Yuu, it means that his meeting with Guren was also prearranged, and it sort of shocks him, but not for long, and I’m proud of how quickly he regains cool head and keeps thinking rationally, not going emotional or starting accusing Guren. He zeroes in on how Guren was crying and what it means: that Guren himself is being used by someone. But from what Kureto said about the Hyakuya orphanage and from how he said, it follows that the keikaku had started prior to the destruction of the world, and neither Guren nor Kureto, with his incomplete knowledge of things related to the orphanage, could be the mastermind behind it. It could be Ferid Bathory then, but Yuu’s not sure, which leads him to what he was thinking from the start, ‘In that case, maybe meeting with him once wouldn’t hurt…’
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