notes – we need more ryoheihana in the world.
The Out-Fighter
It's different from how those shoujo comics depict it, that much she can say with confidence.
He's got the makings of a typical shounen hero – frighteningly strong and dumb, always working hard to achieve this particular goal, surrounded by a myriad of friends, an upbeat personality – the works. And her? She's cynical, selectively quiet, and if she could be half as attractive as Kyoko, she'd be contented for the rest of her life. She's nothing like a shounen heroine, and even further from the main lead in the bestselling shoujo.
It isn't flattering to know this.
But then he comes along, just when the books say he should – when she is in a daze of emotions and a pit devoid of self-esteem – and asks her 'what's the matter'. The mangas advise her to tell him 'nothing' because, well, that's how to get the guy after eighty chapters.
Hana doesn't listen though – like hell she can wait eighty chapters.
She grabs his shoulders and does that love confession scene-thing.