I'm not sure what Klaus' logic is in making Wendelin and his harem work as lowly storeclerks for commoners. (Provide the goods, yeah, sure, I get it. But someone else should be selling them while they sip tea with their pinkies in the air or whatever.)
That duke knows how to party, it seems.
And next is the priest. Prince for last, I suppose, but will he come to her, or succeed in making her go back to the capital?
What kind of twins are they that they have different facial hair? Their whole shtick is to have a magical martial art that increases the resemblance! (Plus the artist could have copy pasted them...)
@daedalron
I'm not sure he even thought that far. His take may have been "Lutz came to my workplace in a costume and started arguing with my boss, making me look bad by association". It hasn't really sunk in that Lutz is, in fact, a real apprentice merchant.
@AmberLoss
He's a utilitarian, that's how. Providing the greatest good for the greatest number of people is "good character", not following some arbitrary rules.
(It's also possible he only counts humans as people.)
@HDMI1
Deid (Lutz' father) isn't the Master of that shop. I don't think they even do precisely the same job - that's a carpentry workshop, Deid's in construction.
Sieg's problem was reflexive more than anything. He couldn't distinguish between Lutz, Benno's apprentice and Lutz, his little...