Love the fact that the prostitute didn't end up falling in love or smth its way more realistic that way
It's almost as if she is a professional who is not morally obligated to fall in love with every client just because the two of them are the leads in a manga. :-)
To be fair, in real life prostitutes always fall in love with their clients if the two of them are the leads in a manga. Or at least, I'm not aware of any counterexamples where a real life prostitute and her client were the leads in a manga but DIDN'T fall in love. ;-)
Is that a veiled rebuttal? :P Because if so, you've missed my point somewhat: my peeve was with the pervasiveness of the sex-worker-falls-in-love-with-the-protagonist trope in recent yuri manga, not with the supposed lack of realism of such an event. Primarily, I am disappointed by the lack of variety in Pay for gay
plots, which most often seem to boil down to the Yuri Story A with extra steps.
though i do appreciate that in spite of her determination not to get emotionally involved, she has become somewhat fond of the client, to the point of actively wanting to comfort her. this ambiguity also feels much more real than the usual dichotomy where the sex worker is either just waiting to fall in love and be 'taken away from all that', or on the other hand completely jaded and cynical.
I agree, and I think it's only human to become emotionally attached to someone who spends time and shares their worries with you for months. But Mizaki is still a professional, so she has to balance her emotions and her work, like all professionals, and the depiction of that balancing act is what makes this story stand out.