Next, Mia pushed a stack of manga volumes toward him. "March Comes in Like a Lion."
"Your turn to recommend something to me," Mia said on day four. Leo, feeling confident, grabbed his own favorite: Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood .
They watched three episodes. Leo was grinning non-stop. When Anya gave her signature "Waku waku!" (the Japanese onomatopoeia for excited fidgeting), he rewound it three times. parasited hentaied
"Shut up and listen," Mia commanded. "It’s about Kōsei Arima, a piano prodigy who can’t hear his own playing after his mother dies. Then he meets Kaori Miyazono, a free-spirited violinist who plays like she’s running out of time. Spoiler: she is."
"The very same," Mia said. "It’s the Cold War, but make it cozy. Loid Forger has to pretend to be a father to get close to a target. Yor Briar needs a fake husband to avoid suspicion. They adopt Anya, a little girl who can read minds—and she’s the only one who knows everyone’s secrets. The plot is ridiculous. The action is slick. The comedy is sharp. But the heart ? It’s about found family. About choosing to be together even when you don’t have to." Next, Mia pushed a stack of manga volumes toward him
They binged the first ten episodes that night. Leo found himself rooting for Light, then hating himself for it. When L, the eccentric detective, ate a strawberry while declaring Light his friend, Leo whispered, "They’re the same person, aren’t they? Two sides of the same god complex."
They watched the final five episodes together in silence. When it ended—with Edward Elric giving up his alchemy to get his brother’s body back—Mia whispered, "Equivalent exchange, my heart." They watched three episodes
"Dead as a doornail," Leo muttered.