My Bully Tries To Corrupt My Mother Yuna Link [exclusive] Direct
And Silas, standing behind her, smiles. He doesn’t have to hurt Kaito anymore. He’s already won the only heart that mattered.
The corruption was subtle, a drip of poison into well water. It started with small, dismissive comments. “It’s sad how stressed Sam gets over little things, isn’t it, Ms. Link? I try to help, but he pushes everyone away.” Then came the manufactured evidence—a fake text conversation on his phone, cleverly doctored, showing me making cruel remarks about her. “I didn’t want to show you this,” he said with faux remorse, “but I thought you should know how he really talks about you behind your back.”
Title: The Serpent in the Garden: When the Bully Targets Home my bully tries to corrupt my mother yuna link
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: The plot centers on an antagonist (the bully) using leverage to manipulate Yuna, including specific scenarios like a teacher attempting to blackmail her. And Silas, standing behind her, smiles
Home is supposed to be a refuge from bullying, but the antagonist breaches that boundary.
I stood in the shadows of the hallway, my fists clenched until my knuckles turned white. He looked over her shoulder, catching my eye. He didn't say a word, but the slow, predatory smirk that crept across his face told me everything. He wasn't here for dinner. He was here to take the one person I had left and turn her against me—or worse, make her look at him the way she used to look at my father. The corruption was subtle, a drip of poison into well water
Plots involving bullies, family drama, and specific character names like Yuna are staple storylines in independent visual novels.
Whenever I called, Ethan was “just leaving.” My mother’s texts grew shorter. “Busy. Ethan helping with the books.” He had convinced her that I was “stressing her out” with my trauma talk. “Let the past go,” she told me once. My own mother.
Critics argue that the "Yuna Link" trope is profoundly misogynistic. It reduces a mother to a prize to be stolen, a circuit to be shorted. It suggests that any woman, no matter how loving, is just one handsome bully away from betraying her child. Furthermore, it romanticizes the "corruption" process, turning emotional manipulation into a dark game.
The contrast between how the bully treats the protagonist versus how he handles the mother creates dramatic irony. The reader knows the villain's true nature, while the mother remains oblivious.