When a max level big boss picks up a level zero little girl
[Wear it quickly, 1v1, Double Clean Sweet Pet]
Deermouth regretted it.
Which treasure wasn't shiny and which treasure wasn't beautiful?
Why did he take things so hard to get his hands on the Heavenly Lord's divine egg?
Now, it was time to go down to the lower realm with the system to find the child.
A Heaven Realm's max level big shot had been so shameless that he had to run around the three thousand worlds for a level zero divine egg that had yet to hatch. It was really embarrassing!
At first, Deer Mouth thought so.
After that…
The little girl's voice was soft,"Brother, someone is bullying me."
The little human's eyes lit up.
The little beauty pitifully said,"General, I miss you ~"
Thus, Lu Xian's thoughts changed. He snatched the marriage stone and kidnapped the Heaven Monarch cub.
"Father-in-law, don't I look like your future son-in-law?" he asked, running to the Heavenly Lord to propose marriage.
--
[Little skirt: 930049386, the treasure of reading books can enter the skirt to chat ~]
There was also the completed book,"The Little Jiaojiao Who Came Through Is Spoiled Again", which was super sweet!
Wood sheng flower
· 1.8K Views
Overall, it’s not bad—it’s a decent fanfic—but I’d advise the author to check out other novels and fanfics to see how the ANBU actually operates. Because from what I’ve seen, this seems like a bit of a slapdash job. The ANBU simply can’t operate like that, especially when it comes to monitoring the Jinchūriki . It can’t be just one ANBU member watching over him; there should be at least three from ANBU or the Root. At least a few members, because Danzo wouldn’t leave the Jinchūriki unsupervised. They’re unlikely to work alone; it’s impossible. What if some ninjas from the Land of Lightning show up again and try to capture the Jinchūriki—how is a single ANBU agent supposed to handle that? That’s why I’d advise the author to read another fanfic: “Naruto: I Got ‘Return by Death’ Kind Of Cheat!” Even though it’s a Chinese knockoff, it does a pretty good job—maybe even a great job—of describing the realities of ANBU work.