The moment Ester snaps and attacks Ivy, you know this isn't just about duty - it's personal. Her venomous words about being a 'substitute' reveal deep insecurity. Watching her claw at Ivy while screaming 'Go to hell!' feels like a soap opera on steroids. The king's entrance? Perfect timing. His Lost Lycan Luna just got real messy, and I'm here for it.
When Ivy cries 'What's wrong with me?' after pushing Ester away, my heart cracked. She didn't ask for this chaos - she wanted to protect someone else, and now she's the target. The way she collapses beside the unconscious maid shows how overwhelmed she is. His Lost Lycan Luna doesn't hold back on emotional gut-punches. You feel every tear.
'If I scratch your face, the king will leave you forever.' That line? Chilling. Ester isn't just jealous - she's calculating. She knows exactly where to hurt Ivy: her place in the king's heart. Calling her a 'toy' adds another layer of cruelty. This isn't rivalry; it's psychological warfare. His Lost Lycan Luna turns domestic drama into royal thriller.
He doesn't yell. He doesn't run. He walks down those stairs like thunder wrapped in black fabric. 'Dare you touch my mate?' - one sentence, zero hesitation. The way Ester freezes mid-scream? Chef's kiss. His Lost Lycan Luna knows how to deliver a hero entrance that shuts down chaos without raising his voice. Absolute alpha energy.
She genuinely believes the king loves 'his lost Luna,' not Ivy. That delusion fuels her violence. When she laughs hysterically saying 'You're just a substitute,' you see the cracks in her sanity. It's not just jealousy - it's identity collapse. His Lost Lycan Luna makes villains feel human, even when they're terrifying. Tragic villain arc activated.