This is a locked chapterChapter 37: Forthright Feelings
About This Chapter
The next morning, Towa and Asakura are walking together, and Towa tells Asakura that the cafe is closing at 17:00, which means that they will not be able to see each other that day. Towa says that she would rather be alone with him than with Asakura, because he is so kind to her. She tells him that she has helped him in the past, and that he is still in need of her. Asakura tells her that he loves her, and she blushes, saying that she feels nothing like him. She says that her feelings for Asakura have changed, but that she still feels that he still needs her, because of his "emotional" nature. She asks him what is wrong, and he replies that she is hopeless, because she is too different from him to know what is right and wrong. He says that he can only give her advice after she came to him for help and everything, and now he is interested in hearing more about her. He compares Towa to the first person who always calls him nice to meet up, and then one day, out of nowhere, he calls her nice. He asks her why she would bring up the topic of Towa's mother, and her response is that it is like "a soap opera," and that she does not need to worry about him anymore
This is a locked chapterChapter 37: Forthright Feelings
About This Chapter
The next morning, Towa and Asakura are walking together, and Towa tells Asakura that the cafe is closing at 17:00, which means that they will not be able to see each other that day. Towa says that she would rather be alone with him than with Asakura, because he is so kind to her. She tells him that she has helped him in the past, and that he is still in need of her. Asakura tells her that he loves her, and she blushes, saying that she feels nothing like him. She says that her feelings for Asakura have changed, but that she still feels that he still needs her, because of his "emotional" nature. She asks him what is wrong, and he replies that she is hopeless, because she is too different from him to know what is right and wrong. He says that he can only give her advice after she came to him for help and everything, and now he is interested in hearing more about her. He compares Towa to the first person who always calls him nice to meet up, and then one day, out of nowhere, he calls her nice. He asks her why she would bring up the topic of Towa's mother, and her response is that it is like "a soap opera," and that she does not need to worry about him anymore