Sigh. Proof that this is written by a Josei author. This couldn't be a scene of intimacy where she allows herself to realize her love. Nope. It's gotta be a "you say no, but you're letting me, an older, successful man you trust and respect and who is here with you alone in the dark, grope you and then pressure you into sex, does that really mean no" one.
THE GUY WHO JUST SAID THAT THE PROTECTIVE URGE IS THE DESIRE TO SEE WOMEN HURT SO THEY CAN BE PROTECTED WOULD NOT DO THIS. THIS makes his earnest, honest, sincere care look PREDATORY. And I know! I know it's cause being preyed on by the right guy has been romanticized over and over and over! But this has been YEARS of writing him as a sincere romantic who wants to understand the woman who he had a fated encounter with, and he does THIS.
Fuckin'... can't resist it. Jesus christ what's the matter with this genre. Keep in mind, I'm not saying this as a HE'S A CREEP response. I'm saying this as a deeply frustrated reaction to watching years of powerful and heartfelt characterization go out the goddamn window. Why would he pressure her? He's never done that. He's relentlessly pursued her, reacted to her vulnerability, and crossed social lines to learn things about her he otherwise wouldn't know, yes. But he has always pulled away when he thought it wasn't appropriate. Their first time having a "I sure wish I knew if Yukino actually wanted to have sex with me that night" sidebar is fucking insane for who we've spent all this time establishing who he is.
Years, literal years, of building up this guy as a sensitive, intellectual, romantic, earnest man. The kind of man who came to her house because the power was out and he wanted to make sure she was okay, not because he saw an opportunity. Then, to force a sex scene, going "but also he'll be kinda rapey sometimes but only if the story decides that'd be hot." The worst part? The goddamn worst part? This spits in the subtle theme of how decency, earnestness, vulnerability, and romanticism is desirable. We've seen Yukino fall for him first because of what she thought was hidden darkness, but then fall for him because of his open heart. His erotic literature was poetic and proof of passion, not something creepy and predatory. He was a man who had deep, untapped passion that Yukino saw and was unsure she was worthy of receiving.
The reluctant nos? Shit, you want that? Make it the 'no' of 'don't touch me, I'm filthy.' Make it a resistance not against his actions, but receiving his affection. Instead of "you gonna leave me hanging" it'd be him declaring that even though she thinks she shouldn't be pursued, he wants her.
FUCK