In After Hours, Volume 2, Emi finds herself lost in the cracks of her own life. She likes being part of what Kei is doing and she likes the team, but she has no confidence in herself, or the choices she’s making. And the fact that she’s never told Kei about her boyfriend, her apartment and the life she walked away from is driving a wedge between them.
In the meantime, the team has added a new member, Midori and navigated more than one breakdown in teamwork. But they’ve got a location and equipment and music and a designer and Kei and Emi are working together pretty well…so why is neither of them all that happy?
Luckily for them, Emi snaps and comes clean, and finally asks the question that really is eating at her – wat, exactly, is she to Kei? She’s a little surprised to find that Kei’s answer is conventional and they get to say to each other that being together is what makes them happiest.
And then…it’s the night of the event.
The characters in this series – especially for such a short series- pretty well-developed, but we still have to a do a fair bit of reading into the characters, particularly when it comes to motivation. I can’t help wonder why Emi makes the choices she makes. Kei, who was presented as a bohemian free spirit, turns out to be pretty traditional after all.
Ratings:
Art – 5
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 2
Yuri – 9
Overall – 8
For a seinen magazine, and for a story that is mean to frame sex scenes, the frame is pretty solid and the sex scene in’t too pandery.
Volume 3 will be available at the end of 2018, and we’ll get to see what happens when Emi and Kei are able to work in sync, at last.