Taiyo Asano has been on his own ever since his parents died. The only one who seems to care for him is his childhood friend and classmate, Mutsumi Yozakura. But Mutsumi has a secret—she is the head of a family of spies!
Taiyo somehow manages to survive the Silver-Rank spy exam, earning his promotion. He finally gets to talk to Kawashita and relay Tsubomi’s desire to perish. He quickly learns that Kawashita also faces an unenviable fate. To make matters worse, Momo Yozakura appears!
Oh no daddy has plans or something and also there are flowers so many flowers lots of flowers and enough flower power to make Super Mario jealous!!! And also Mutsumi is fat!!! Haha, so much fun, hehe, haha, hohoho, hoooooo. Gotta use the power of love to fight flower daddy and flower mommy yup.
It was a light hearted with some twists. First it starts with Shinzo going to weapon shopping with Ayaka. He is a shy person and speaks to Ayaka at home as a family member but when coming out he is unable to communicate with her. His brothers watch over him and help him to spend his time nice with Ayaka. Shinzo does know at the end and the brothers get so scared of his threats, they request Futaba to sleep with them and save them. Then Kyoichiro accidentally takes the wrong medicine and gets young. It is funny as how all siblings react to his good and kind side. Finally Taiyo meets with Kawashita alone but is interrupted by his father-in-law. The siblings interfere and Taiyo gets to find the solution to the problem. The cutest was the one week which AI spends with the Yozakura siblings and gets a spy license. And we get to see the dynamics of Shion and Futaba and the technology. Lastly it ends with Mutsumi's major dieting phase.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Doctor Mutsumi pantyhose...! Now, THIS is a manga!
Otherwise, I don't remember much else about this volume. We're moving closer to the father as the Final Boss, but also not really because I'm like one-hundred-fifty chapters behind. The manga keeps following every "serious" arc with a bunch of episodic slice-of-life/comedy chapters, so it's hard to get too invested. That is, if it was all comedy all the time, that would be one thing. Not necessarily that it needs to be all serious, lengthy arcs. But the flip-flopping makes it feel weird. I don't know.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.