Even if I can agree that those feelings could have been expanded upon, I don't think I agree that nothing has been said about it either.
Considering all the events (at least how I see it):
- they stopped being family after the divorce, scene at the grave also states rather directly that their time as a family is over,
- Kaoru moved away and they didn't see each other for at least a year,
- Kaoru is shown dedicated to living for her own sake and working to build her own happiness,
- Kaoru came back after a long time and end up living with Uta as adults,
I think that pretty much the only conclusion one can get out of the story is that she explored the feeling and came to the conclusion that, with her familial obligation gone and, presumably, feelings for Uta remaining, she can love her for her. Not because of the obligation of loving a family member or fear of being left alone etc. Love her for the sake of being happy.
There is also a much smaller probability, that Kaoru is a sadist and willingly jumped into a situation where she drains Uta's affection for her own happiness, while not reciprocating her feelings, but she was not portrayed as that kind of person, so I don't think it makes sense.
I also don't think that Kaoru remained unshaken in interpreting her love for Uta as loving a family member until the very end. The end of ch 35 IMHO shows that she at least might consider Uta's love as what she longed for romantically. A "genuine" love, not based on any obligations or other factors.
And even if I agree that open-ended conclusions are usually a way for the author to avoid commitment to a specified ending, I think this one works rather well, even if it leaves some space for interpretation.
I have agreed all along in these discussions that readers are capable of making up material in their own heads that will enable this story to make sense--readers have in fact expended enormous amounts of imaginative labor doing so.
But I don't think anybody can point to one single piece of evidence contained in the actual text itself that Kaoru has ever had any sexual interest in girls generally or in Uta in particular. We do know, however, that she has had a serious and long-lived interest in heterosexual relationships, and we have seen her in sexual situations with her husband.
If the story means for us to believe that she has now developed romantic feelings for Uta, that means that we have had dozens of chapters showing in great detail Kaoru's growing awareness that her marriage was unsatisfactory, and exactly zero panels depicting her romantic/sexual feelings toward Uta.
In any case, we certainly have wildly different ideas of what constitutes an ending that "works rather well."
last edited at Oct 21, 2020 1:33PM