As with the other two volumes (which I will get around one day to actually putting up a review of. Except maybe volume 1 which pissed me off too much for me to finish.) you are once again, the student council president with the ability to read minds. This time around, you get the ko-akuma, younger guy type as the main love interest: Hinomiya Tsubaki. He likes eating candy and teases the protag constantly. Once again you’re being blackmailed into doing whatever MLI wants because he’s been keeping tabs on the student council and he knows everyone’s secrets including the secret that you’re all keeping each other’s secrets. (Blackmailing you for being blackmailed, essentially.) And because the protag in this series is the biggest idiot ever, you decide to go with what he wants.
I don’t know if Milky Chain is doing this on purpose, but Tsubaki, like Reiichi from the second installment, is not really that terrible. Then again, we are comparing them to Sagami ‘Badly in need of a roundhouse kick to the face’ Eiji of volume 1. But even without the looming shadow of Eiji, there were moments where I actually thought Tsubaki was pretty cute as a character, and a plus is that he has an actual reason beyond ‘randomly being a jerk’ for doing what he does.
The script….well….I have a lot of problems with the premise of this series. Namely the whole ‘I will tell everyone that you can read people’s minds’ thing. I mean, think about it: People that go around telling other people that are what we laymen would call “crazy”. (Then again, the protag is an idiot in this. It probably never occured to her. WHO KNOWS.) Terrible attempts at blackmail aside, this script is actually okay. And the good thing is that it doesn’t hinge on the blackmail like volume one does, so it’s much easier to ignore it. Pacing is kind of confused in the middle of this CD.
To be honest, I think it’s fairly good as a straight-up R18 drama CD. Is the story groundbreaking and super great? No. But Fujiwara Yuuki did a good job, so I don’t think it matters too much that the premise is inherently flawed. Besides, I really like his pseudonym.