Miwa and Saeko might not be dating, but that sure hasn’t stopped them from cultivating a much unhealthier set of circumstances. When Saeko realizes that there’s somebody else out there for her, just how will Miwa take this last blow to their relationship?
Pleasure and pain are not exactly distant cousins, but the type on display this time out is far less, say, bondage and whip play than it is emotional turmoil and the knowledge that something is a Very Bad Idea and your physical desires not being especially good at helping you fight it off.
With her utter and total rejection at the hands of Shiho, Miwa spiralled out of control and, in her despair, she reached out to Saeko who really came through for her, but Miwa’s need to be loved and Saeko’s straight up horniness wind up being a bad combination.
Miwa learns a very harsh lesson about not tying your self-worth to the approval of another person. There is never a guarantee that this situation will last, for one, and, well, you really kind of cheapen yourself, as we see. It’s rare to see Saeko being the mature one.
I think the story leaves Miwa in the darkest depths just long enough and I like that Saeko is worried, but is also smart enough to recognize that her friend isn’t as suicidal as she might seem. It’s really the sign of a good book that it’s willing to make one of the leads look this awful and I respect that a lot.
Then we get two exes trying to be friends, which is a whole other juggle, and I admit that something I thought was foreshadowing was actually being used to set-up a somewhat heartbreaking sequence. Whatever happened between these two, there was definitely love and it makes for a bittersweet change in the story.
Of course, that just means more girls in the mix and Saeko falls for her coworker and vice-versa, in a very cute storyline where Saeko reveals herself in a way that she never did with Miwa. I don’t love the chemistry here quite as much, it doesn’t feel as cozy as before, but it’s not bad at all.
Miwa, however, winds up on a collision course with a girl that looks like Shiho, her crush who rejected her utterly. This looks like it’s going to take a real wild swerve into some collar-tugging ‘is this a good idea?’ territory, but it shows that Miwa has changed a little bit and she wants to pay forward the way Shiho treated her that meant so much.
Toss in the usual antics from the other characters and the always welcome frank acknowledging of what being a gay couple precisely means in Japan and you’ve got a strong volume here. Miwa ends up having a full on ‘maybe I should just fake it with a guy’ storyline and it’s fun and fraught in the same breath. It adds up to a very full, very rewarding story that continues to pay out on its narrative choices in unique ways that aren’t being done anywhere else in manga that I’m seeing.
Would I like Miwa and Saeko to get back together? Yeah, I kinda would. I really like them together and, as we see from the always fun commentary track and other in-canon appearances, they have a distinct vibe that’s really enjoyable.
Now, do I need them to get back together? Definitely not. There’s enough here in seeing them as friends and exploring new paths for themselves and it’s really good. Maybe it’ll lead them back to one another, maybe it won’t. There’s a lot in the way that Saeko can’t ever seem to show herself completely to Miwa that needs to be reckoned with.
4.5 stars - what can I say, this is great stuff. In fact, it’s much more lesbian-forward than many, many yuri titles and that’s a pretty strong recommendation all on its own, even without the very solid storytelling it’s adding to the mix.