Ororon has promised Chiaki that he won't kill, but what will his promise cost? Lika, Shiro and Chiaki herself are beset on all sides by bounty hunters while a severly injured Ororon struggles with his new mandate despite his overwhelming impulse for murder. Even if he gives into his bloodlust to save his new family, will the guilt-ridden devil be able to face his half-angel with so much death on his hands?
Romeo-and-Juliet takes on Heaven and Hell. A beautiful love story with unique art. It's horribly violent in some parts, but I'm totally in love with it. I just wish the series was longer
This volume continues the streak from the first one, in being very violent and very weird. I'm still have trouble actually grasping the story, but (as mentioned in my review of the first volume) I think it might be because parts of the dialogue is badly translated. I'm also slowly coming to the conclusion that I might not have actually ever have read the series. I'm almost sure that I've read most of the first volume, but I'm suspecting that when I first bought the series I just looked at the art, and that was it. I was a lot less critical as a reader at that time, so I think not actually reading the series is very telling of how I feel about the series.
A good installment to the series, but not as catching as the first volume. I feel like the moral conundrums and interesting myth/theology are less present here, which makes the story less interesting. But I did enjoy reading about the balance between evil and good between both Chiaki and Ororon. And Chiaki's growing source of power is intriguing.