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You Think I Won't Talk?

Elizabeth, a girl with an unusual personality is reincarnated into the body of a mute woman in what appeared to be medieval times. However, the people surrounding her seemed familiar. She had transmigrated as the dead villainess's older sister in a +19-rated novel she read long ago in her past life. Marianne, the previous owner of the body, had a tragic past. Abused by his obsessed older brother and little sister, the part of her soul left in the body doesn't give Elizabeth freedom. Now she will discover the truth behind Marianne's condition, experience unknown feelings, and recall her past to overcome these new difficulties. 'I'm gonna go crazy...how is it that this girl didn't even have her name mentioned in the novel?... some authors really are idiots...' _________________________________ Give some love to my other book too ^^~ • Barbaric Spouse, Descry the Night's Lure * To find my book you have to either search the title or my pen name. It will not show on my profile. _________________________________ TAGS: #R18 #SlowPaced, #Romance, #Smut, #Medieval, #Trauma, #Father&Daughter... (Sigh... so many tags... do emphasise #SlowPaced ^^) _________________________________ This is an original Story ^^ Author: XimenoideX

XimenoideX · Fantasi
Peringkat tidak cukup
592 Chs

Chapter 150

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Recalling how fruity her muffled singing felt that Masquerade night... And how lusciously mellow it was yesterday evening... the exciting sensation it evoked travelled once again through his spine, making him impatient with an electrifying desire to hear it again.

Answering her without intending to sweeten his true opinion, opposing the outrageous word she used to describe her sound, Zeleskiaz daydreamed as he took her hand unconsciously to convey his thoughts about its dulcet intonation.

"...It was not shallow in the least... Only sweet to the ears and powerful in its melody..."

"..."

Watching her anthracite pupils resonate with brilliance as her blushing cheeks infected her slightly hidden ears, he swallowed to continue the prose.

"Certainly befitting of its portrayer's excellence... The Lady's voice was maddeningly winsome..."