This has definitely cemented Minta Suzumaru as one of my favorite mangaka. Possibly my top favorite, because unlike the others (Hinohara, Minaduki Yuu), who largely have one couple/series of couples they follow for about a gazillion volumes, Minta jumps from story to story and hasn't missed yet. At least in the ones I've been able to read.
With that said, I Didn't Mean to Fall in Love has been my absolute favorite of the bunch since I first read it, three years ago. Which meant that I was happy about a sequel...but also pretty nervous.
I am NOT someone who likes to see my favorite stories get dragged on and on and on, because it always means there will be more drama introduced, and there's no guarantee it's going to avoid tropes or scenarios I actively hate. So I was a little worried that this could have the potential of ruining a favorite story for me.
And it...does get into pretty dangerous territory. There's one line in particular I did not like, which was Rou telling his new coworker that if he (Rou) had still been single, he definitely would've made a move on him. It felt jarring, unnecessary, and pretty hurtful to Yoshino, if he'd known about it.
But I'll circle back to that in a minute.
There's a little bit of a time skip in this volume, with Rou graduating from college and entering the workforce - he's an editor, I think, for a food magazine, which isn't really a career I'd expected for him, but I'd had no sense of what he would be into, so it works out fine. Mostly, it seems to be leaning into his heavy extroversion and ability to seamlessly get along with everyone he meets.
He, of course, immediately fits into his workplace super well - it's fairly chill about dress code and hair colors/piercings/etc - but he had, leading up to it, been nervous about whether he'd make actual friends at work. It's the Rou that we met at the end of the previous volume, once all his ultra-charming bravado broke down and Yoshino realized how young this intensely charming, seemingly flawless guy was.
Because that's the thing...while Rou has a ton more romantic/physical experience, and a lot of confidence when it comes to short term relationships and one night stands, Yoshino has far more life experience.
Rou actually displayed a lot of serious immaturity in the initial stages of his relationship with Yoshino - playing hot and cold and trying to get Yoshino to chase him, like everyone had done in the past...and then panicking when Yoshino turned out to be too serious and practical to understand his role in the game. He realized that he was going to lose this incredibly beautiful, deeply kind, wonderful man if he didn't step up and do the most cringingly humiliating thing he could imagine...being honest about his feelings and throwing himself out there for possible rejection.
He's still struggling with that, a little bit, but he is so much better about it now that they're together. They talk a ton - the opening scene is Rou preparing for work and having to close out the phone call so he's not late for his new employee orientation...because they'd just stay on the phone forever! Love that. Love seeing a couple just liking each other that much. And Rou does his best to pretty much constantly tell and show Yoshino how much he cares about him.
That still doesn't remove all worries, particularly when Rou starts getting close to a guy at work who is his age, "thrilling" to be around (in his words), and gay...which he finds out later, before phoning Yoshino to tell him he's going to spend the night at this guy Niko's apartment.
Good boyfriend behavior: immediately phoning Yoshino to explain the situation.
Clueless boyfriend behavior: thinking it's okay to spend the night with another gay dude??
Yoshino does express his concerns, but backs off when Rou reassures him that Niko actively dislikes him so there's nothing to worry about. That's...not as comforting as it's meant to be, because it wasn't actually Rou saying that he would never be interested in Niko if Niko started to like him more. Which he does, over the course of a really heartfelt conversation about the relationship Niko had just been shattered by, and Rou's reassurance that things will be okay, someone will eventually come along who sees how incredible it would be to be loved by someone like him.
Which is where that line I disliked comes in.
In context, for the story and for Rou, it actually makes sense. It doesn't particularly mean anything to him. Because, yeah? Before he was dating Yoshino, he very much would have made a move on anyone who was remotely attractive and potentially interested in him. That was literally his entire deal. Because Yoshino was so different and such a transformative relationship for him - he tells Niko in the same breath that of course it would never happen now because he's committed to his boyfriend for life - it doesn't occur to him that this is a thing he shouldn't be saying to other people anymore.
Rou is Yoshino's first everything, but Yoshino is Rou's first and only love, and that means he's fumbling through a lot of things still, too. He doesn't actually know what a committed relationship looks like, and what sorts of things are not okay.
What I liked was that all of this was very specifically addressed. Not that exact line, but the entire incident that surrounded it. Rou is genuinely shocked that his friends (mostly Sui) would call him a cheater and tell him to come fetch his extremely drunk, really upset boyfriend. But the moment he realizes he messed up, he literally runs to fix it, and to figure out what he can do in future to never, ever make Yoshino feel like that again.
I just really love the maturity of their relationship, and how much they both work at understanding and adapting to each other. Yoshino honestly isn't entirely sure if he should feel upset about what Rou did...it wasn't cheating, and he knew it wasn't like Rou was actually doing anything with Niko. But he still didn't like Rou being there with him in such an intimate, overnight, emotional setting...and because of his lack of relationship experience, he didn't know if it was reasonable to be hurt or angry about it.
I always love series where there's a whole queer social group to provide support and advice for situations like this. The guys at the bar go...yeah, that would upset me! And Yoshino's able to accept his own feelings and then figure out how to express them in an honest but productive way.
Honestly, I could spend forever unpacking this story, but I loved the bedroom scene that came after they left the bar, and how incredibly distraught Rou was to realize how much his actions had been damaging their relationship. Not just in the immediate situation, but in the way Yoshino was reacting, and feeling like he had to do things to make Rou still want to stay with him. It was an intense, really wonderfully written scene, with so much love in it.
That's the key to all of this...while I hate rival love interests and jealousy arcs and things like that, this one was presented as a real world situation that does sometimes need to be talked about and dealt with. Their relationship really does feel like it came out stronger and more established as a result of being forced to talk through some of these issues.
And, of course, Niko is very much not going to be a lasting rival...for a number of reasons, but a primary one being that he will very obviously be the star of a spin-off volume with Sui. I hope that does end up happening, both for the background Rou/Yoshino and also because they do have some cute potential.
As a final note, I'm very, very pleased that Seven Seas grabbed and translated the bonus story at the end of this volume...it's a pamphlet I had in Japanese because of some merch I'd bought, but now I can actually read it! Love that.
I just loved this whole story, a lot, and I'm delighted that while it strayed into some dodgy territory, it did so in a way that proved what a brilliant, mature, thoughtful storyteller Minta is.