What is the plot?

Yoshino tries to eat lunch at school in peace, but she is still actively avoiding Kirishima after his unsettling behavior in the previous episode. As she thinks to herself, she complains about the kidney she lost in Osaka, making it clear she still feels the consequences of what happened there.

Kirishima finds her anyway. He tells her he located her by putting a GPS tracker on one of her devices, which immediately shows how thoroughly he has been monitoring her. He acts unusually clingy and affectionate toward her, pressing close and talking to her with a possessive warmth that only makes Yoshino more uncomfortable.

Kirishima tells Yoshino that his grandfather has something important to discuss with both of them and that they need to attend a meeting after school. Yoshino goes with him, and when they arrive, Elder Miyama is not there yet. Instead, two associates handle the meeting in his place and explain that the daughter of Akaza Enterprise's president has gone missing.

The men make the situation sound serious and dangerous. They explain that Akaza Enterprise is one of the branches connected to the clan the Miyama group belongs to, so the disappearance is not just a private family matter but something that affects the wider yakuza network. Yoshino is also warned that she could become a target if the situation worsens.

The discussion turns darker when they mention that one of the men connected to Akaza Enterprise has been found dead. They explain that he had been running an underground gambling den and climbed the ranks as a racketeer boss, and that he had once gambled with Akaza Shiori, which brought him into contact with the yakuza family.

At school the next day, Yoshino and Kirishima continue talking in her classroom. The conversation makes clear that Shiori and her father have been expelled and exiled because of what Shiori did. Yoshino is more struck by the condition Kirishima is in, because he appears more badly beaten than he did the night before.

Kirishima reveals that he got into trouble with his grandfather for causing problems on Kirigaya-gumi turf, and that he was given a severe "talking to" for it. Yoshino sees that he was punished for his actions, but the episode does not show any softening in his behavior toward her.

Later, the story shifts to the aftermath of the confrontation involving Shiori's people. Yoshino has been hurt, and Kirishima reacts with immediate violence toward the men responsible. He decides none of them will be allowed to leave alive because they harmed her.

Kirishima attacks them brutally, beating them mercilessly and continuing even after one of them manages to lodge a knife into the back of his leg. He does not stop despite the injury, showing no concern for his own pain.

One of the men tries to seize the opening and attack Kirishima from behind, but Yoshino grabs her new hairdryer and smashes it into the back of the man's head and neck, stopping him cold. Afterward, she coldly tells him to die, and then, with irritation, complains that her new hairdryer is broken.

Kirishima is far more focused on Yoshino's bleeding than on the knife still stuck in his leg. He keeps going after one of the men, punching his face repeatedly, while Yoshino stops him by striking the back of his head. The confrontation ends with the men defeated and Kirishima still fixated on punishing anyone who hurt her.

What is the ending?

Yoshino and Kirishima end the episode with their relationship still tense and unstable, but the immediate crisis is over. Kirishima has taken care of the danger tied to Akaza Shiori, Yoshino has walked away from the fight bruised but standing, and the episode closes on a quiet moment that is interrupted by someone noticing them from a distance.

In the final stretch, the episode follows a chain of events that begins with the trouble around Akaza's people. Kirishima tells Yoshino that one of the Akaza Enterprise men has been found dead, and he explains that the man had been involved in an underground gambling operation and had risen into the yakuza world through racketeering. This leads into the reveal that Akaza Shiori had known him through gambling, and that she and the dead man had been cheating in games, which eventually caused a massive loss of five hundred million yen to the Filipino mafia. Because of that debt and the fallout from it, Shiori and her father had gone into hiding.

Yoshino and Kirishima then track Shiori down and listen in while she talks with her friends. When Kirishima steps in and announces that he will take her to the Miyama office, the situation turns violent immediately. Shiori's men move against him, and the scene becomes a fast, physical clash in which Yoshino is caught in the middle and is injured slightly. Kirishima reacts sharply to Yoshino being hurt, and he cuts through nearly all of the attackers himself. Yoshino helps him in the fight, and the episode makes clear through the action that she is not helpless even when she is frightened or outmatched.

After the confrontation, the story moves to the next day at school. Kirishima says he was punished for causing trouble on a rival group's turf, and it is also revealed that the Akaza president was exiled because of his daughter's actions. As part of the aftermath, Kirishima receives ten million yen as compensation connected to recovering Shiori and the stolen money, and he offers that money to Yoshino. Yoshino refuses to take it. Instead, she asks him to go with her to buy a new hair dryer, because the one she had was broken during the fight.

The episode ends on that quieter note, with the two of them together in the aftermath of the violence. Kirishima then notices someone watching them, and the person seems to recognize him as well, which leaves the ending open and uneasy.

Yoshino's fate in the ending is that she remains with Kirishima, injured only slightly, refusing his money, and continuing forward with him after the fight. Kirishima's fate is that he survives the confrontation, takes punishment from his own side, receives money tied to the incident, and then ends the episode with a new mystery attached to the person who spots him. Shiori's fate is that she is forced back under control as Kirishima takes charge of her situation. The men who attacked are mostly beaten down during the fight, and the episode leaves the broader conflict unsettled rather than fully resolved.

Is there a post-credit scene?

Yes. Episode 2 does have a brief post-credit scene: after the main events, Kirishima is shown the next day at school, where he explains that he was punished for causing trouble in a rival group's territory, and he also reveals that he received ten million yen as compensation tied to the Shiori situation and the stolen money, which he offers to Yoshino.

The episode listing also confirms the episode's premise and runtime, which matches the standard 2024 TV episode format where this scene appears as an extra tag after the credits.

In episode 2, why is Yoshino trying so hard to avoid Kirishima at school, and what specific moment makes her realize he can still find her anywhere?

Yoshino spends the episode trying to carve out a pocket of normal school life away from Kirishima, but that effort is undercut because he keeps showing up wherever she goes. The question most people ask here centers on how his persistent presence turns an ordinary school day into a constant reminder that she is trapped in the engagement, and on the exact scene where her attempt at quiet lunch or solitude fails because Kirishima tracks her down again.

What happens in the school lunch scene with the boys who target Yoshino, and how does Kirishima respond when they hurt her?

A major plot-specific question is about the attack on Yoshino and the violent way the confrontation escalates. Kirishima responds with extreme brutality, beating the attackers so badly that he seems to disregard his own injury, while Yoshino herself jumps into the fight and strikes one of the men with a hairdryer before snapping at him to die, showing that she is not helpless even when cornered.

Why does Kirishima become even more dangerous after Yoshino is hurt, and what does he mean when he says he will give the attackers 'Hell'?

People often ask about the scene where Kirishima's behavior shifts from unnerving to openly murderous after Yoshino is injured. His reaction is not concern alone; he is enraged that someone dared hurt her, and he keeps hammering one of the men without restraint until Yoshino stops him, which makes the episode's violence feel tied directly to his possessiveness over her.

What is the significance of Kirishima getting punished by his grandfather after the incident, and how does Yoshino react when she learns he was beaten more than expected?

Another common plot question focuses on the aftermath of the fight, when Kirishima turns up the next day looking far worse than before. Yoshino is surprised to learn that his grandfather disciplined him for causing trouble on Kirigaya-gumi turf, and this reveal is important because it shows Kirishima is not fully untouchable inside his own family structure.

How does episode 2 develop Yoshino and Kirishima’s dynamic in their classroom conversation after the violence?

Viewers frequently ask about the post-fight classroom exchange because it shows the relationship changing in small but important ways. Yoshino notices Kirishima's injuries and the discipline he received, while he continues to act fixated on her welfare despite his own condition, reinforcing the episode's central tension: she wants distance, but his attention keeps pulling her back into his orbit.

Is this family friendly?

No, it is not especially family friendly. This episode is part of a yakuza crime romance series with mature themes, and it is best suited to teens and adults rather than young children.

Potentially upsetting or objectionable elements may include:

  • Yakuza/crime content and discussion of organized crime, threats, and dangerous situations
  • Violence or the expectation of violent confrontations, including aggressive behavior
  • Sexual tension and adult romantic undertones, which may be uncomfortable for some viewers
  • Psychological intimidation or creepy/sadistic behavior from a main character, according to the series description
  • Bullying or sexism, which are listed among the story's content warnings in fan reviews

Because your request is specifically about episode 2 without spoilers, I've kept this limited to broad series-level content likely relevant to that episode's tone and audience fit.