The manga and novel make clear that even during this period, Hikari and her mother are close with Yuu's mother. Yuu's characterizarion has consistently been that he's the kind of conflict avoidant person that would avoid a complicated scheme - asking his mother to lie would invite questions that he can avoid by just not telling her/being evasive and not telling her about Aya is less messy than lying about Aya.
And precisely because he's someone who seeks to avoid conflict, it makes perfect sense for him to tell his parents about that girl he's so emotioned about, or perhaps when they start noticing their son's get-outs and that these dates aren't with Hikari, they'll force him to tell them the truth. Yuu responds very easily WHEN THEY ASK HIM DIRECTLY. Look, something Hikari never did.
They'd be inconsiderate parents if they didn't notice Yuu's depression after the breakup either.
Not telling them about sex is more than enough. Why would he hide from them that he's got a girlfriend, goes on dates with her, and they kiss in maid cafes? Isn't that what his parents know he always wanted?
I couldn't find a Kaneda in Yuu chap 3-5 or in the main story 25-30. Where is he mentioned?.
For the beach chapter, Yuu explicitly didn't involve anyone else in the cover up:
Because no teenager is going to want to tell their parents, "I'm going to fuck my girlfriend in a hotel for three days." He could have easily said, "I'm going to study with Yami-senpai and other people for three days," or something like that, like a cover-up most teenagers wear to have sex.
Kaneda is mentioned in Chapter 24 of the Web Novel (and Hikari also met him during her arc in Chapters 1-19). He's the friend who told Takamura's parents that Yuu was with him. Kaneda is the anonymous hero who made possible this whole glorious catastrophe.
And yes, he's proof that Yuu's parents are capable of keeping secrets, and that if he asks them not to tell Hikari "because it's a matter between her and me, and I'll tell her at the appropriate time," they will.
He wasn't though? He said yes to the setups Hikari offered him but couldn't muster interest in any of the girls. He was obsessed with Hikari. He originally said yes to Aya b/c he wanted comfort & it was mutual wound licking. This is in his flashback chapter. He doesn't get with Aya b/c he wants just any girlfriend, he gets with Aya b/c he's at his lowest and that blooms into a relationship.
Yes, he was obsessed with getting a girlfriend. And he was obsessed with that girlfriend being Hikari. But at that low point in the restaurant, where he notices Ayami's growing interest (yes,
interest) in him and she offers to "comfort" him, it makes perfect sense that he finally decides to let Hikari go and pursue a serious relationship with Ayami. That's why he followed her to the love hotel, because he hoped to get a girlfriend by doing that.
A girlfriend much more compatible with his true tastes, with the direct and assertive personality he always wanted but never got from Hikari (nor probably from the girls he dated through Hikari), and who we know made him feel protected from the moment he met her.
And Yuu DID IT.
No, just that she had no reason to do a formal introduction before the folks met.
It's still a stupid thing to do in case there's a surprise and unplanned encounter, as technically ended up happening. In a case like this, what would Hikari have expected? Her friends would greet Yuu as "Taa-kun"? That's incredibly disrespectful.
Authorial intent - if it's important for the reader to know than it's mentioned. Regardless of word count. If Yuu figured out that Aya was a virgin that would be important for the reader to know because it would let the reader know that Yuu knows Aya's experienced senpai act is an act.
Because he already realized that "Yami-senpai" was an act the night before, with her crying and opening up psychologically in the love hotel bed. That was a scared little girl, not an "experienced senpai". Seeing her bleed during her first time only reinforced it. This omake isn't Yuu's true POV; it's just the peak of the iceberg. The author already told us that Ayami was virgin in her POV, so Yuu must have noticed it anyway; the boy isn't a fool.
And yes, anime tropes make it clear. Waifus always, always, always bleed during her first time. See White Album 2 for more references.
Aya says she's gonna quit in chapter 31.
Yes, she said that. Once again, rants from an angry tsundere. She probably would have gone back anyway if she had to put up with her mother for two or three days straight.
Where do you get that Hikari is passive and submissive?
From each and every one of her decisions. Of all the opportunities she wasted, despite Aya-chan herself urging her to do so, to propose to Yuu. Of how she stood in the doorway, like a complete idiot —just as Aya-chan always said she was— while her childhood best friend was slapped.
Face it, as Ayami herself said, Hikari is Yuu in female form. She is as passive as him and even more.
She wanted Yuu to invite her to do things:
That statement is quite paradoxical on her part because he did invite her to the beach in the hotel chapter, and she REFUSED. Just as he effectively said would happen in the previous chapter. Once again, you're taking too seriously the incoherent rants of a tsundere who, at this point, has irrevocably decided to break up with Yuu for reasons of strictly external locus —Ayami's mother.
Authorial intent - if it happened it would establish that Yuu made active attempts which would be an important piece of characterization.
Authorial intent doesn't need to be explicit or direct, even more so in a work that isn't even finished yet. The author has already said it between the lines and implied it reasonably clearly and several times. Not all authors push the envelope.
Muroto chose Yuu's only declaration of love to Aya to be an indirect "I've already done that" to Aya's "go fall in love" provocation. If Yuu was in the habit of telling Aya "I love you", that would be important characterizarion of Yuu and their relationship.
Because again, we don't have his POV, we have her POV —which focuses on her declarations. And she doesn't seem to complain or ever claim that Yuu doesn't declare his love for her or that she feels uncomfortable about it. On the contrary, she calls her time with Yuu "my heavenly days" in the WN, which should completely dispel any doubt.
And then again, "I have already fallen in love with you, OF COURSE" in PUBLIC and out loud is a pretty direct love declaration. This isn't indirect for nothing.
Cause it wasn't, which is why Aya went and immediately saved her? If Aya really wanted to pimp out Hikari, Aya wouldn't have monitored the situation and interceded. (This is not excusing her behavior).
That's how I wanted to see you, defending Yami. That's how I wanted to see you. After all the criticism you gave her. It's still a pretty ugly moment that Yami did to Hikari, and THAT SHE NEVER DID TO YUU. There must be a reason.
If you notice, there's a reason she always runs away from him. Because she's incapable of saying those hurtful things to his face, and it's clear that seeing him crying after the stolen kiss devastated her even more —and deservedly so, for being her a sexual assaulter. There's a reason Ayami couldn't even text him to tell him she was breaking up with him. There's a reason she's incapable of insulting or hurting him to his face like SHE DOES WITH HIKARI. Her best attempt at attacking Yuu, in chapter 40, is caresses compared to how she treated Hikari not only in chapter 41, but in the past, and several times.
Sure Aya gets mad, but Hikari's method works. Aya says her friendship with Hikari and the girls is the first time she feels like a normal girl.
You know she says that in the same chapter where she says she misses Yuu, that she misses her "heavenly times" with him, and that she feels like her present doesn't compare to those days. Even if she does feel genuine affection for Hikari, it's nowhere near the same love and affection she has for Yuu.
If Hikari's "method" of pressuring her (which, by the way, what a healthy relationship, with the supposed best friend from the FMC attacking her, insulting her, and trying to sexually assault her -chapter 5- or prostitute her -chapter 33-, pure and utter toxicity) really worked, a 5-minute dialogue with Yuu wouldn't have been enough for the girl to mentally collapse like she did.
Incidentally, "Aya-chan" mentally collapsed precisely because Yuu did what she told Hikari so many times: that she claimed to support her in her relationship with "Taa-kun" despite already knowing that he was Yuu. The poor boy was already leaving to find Hikari, and surely he would have found her in the hallway, but Yami-senpai couldn't resist at all.
How literal it was to see him, and they both automatically returned to their couple dynamic. Which proves that she does like being the dominant one (in fact, Yami best moments with Hikari are when Hikari is most docile and accommodating) and being the one who holds the reins of the relationship.
In 35.1 she wonders if Hikari will illuminate her darkness and in 35.2 she lets down her walls to genuinely tell Hikari she wants to be with her. In this chapter Hikari's friends note how close Aya and Hikari are.
Yes, Aya is so "close" to Hikari that she didn't hesitate for more than 30 seconds to betray her by kissing Yuu the moment she saw her at the window and decided that this was her moment to repeat Kazusa's "feat" at the airport in White Album 2.
It's quite obvious that Ayami's affection for Hikari is because she functions as a substitute for Yuu (and because she has similar virtues to his), but that she never, ever compares to the original, whom she clearly prefers. She prefers Yuu over Hikari, time and time again, and whenever she's had the chance, she's chosen him over her.
Sure, there are only so many possible endings, the point is every story is a different journey.
And when I said that each story isn't a different journey? I'm precisely offering concrete evidence that Imasara is a different journey from previous works, which YOU DID NOT DO.