Outside the Lines: The Gyaru and the Table Tennis Club
Prologue: Shadows in the Gym
The gym’s red sunset light raked across silent tennis tables. Out back, weeds pressed up to glass, tossed there by wind and time. Sakura Morishita, her nails painted a bright, defiant blue, looked through the worn doors and frowned.
“Buncha ghosts. Didn’t think the sign-up sheet for table tennis was just for me,” she grumbled.
Have you ever joined a club just to kill time?
Our Hero: Sakura Morishita
Sakura was twelve hours late signing up. After sharing viral vlog dances all night, getting called out for non-participation didn’t surprise her. Still, the teacher’s penalty stuck: Sakura had to help rebuild the nearly dead Table Tennis Club—or else get zero club points and face summer makeup classes. Motivation? Pure motivation by threat. Fellow gyaru Riko cackled in the hall on hearing it: “You, in seifuku shorts? They want a disaster!” Sakura’s jaw hardened. Nobody poked her pride like that. “Bet. I’ll make that club legit. And I won’t break a nail.”
Casting Call: Clubless Strays
Wandering club fair day, Sakura scouted strays across crowded lawns and fancily lettered booths. She met Shu Abe, quiet, pricey glasses, ears always hidden by black hair. “Uhm. You like table tennis?” Abe shrugged. “I guess I watched championship clips once.” Kiyo Yukimura, selfie pro, only cared if she could post while playing. Yasuo, runner banned for school mischief, just wanted to sweat out tension. Every club needs odd pieces, right?
Awkward Start
First meeting: table, two paddles, ball. Simple. But nobody could hit double digits bouncing. Kiyo kept posting to friends, yelling, “Hold on, got a like!” Yasuo missed shots, smacking his paddle on edge every other play. Sakura kicked a broken serviette. “We have to be better than this!”
Sakura’s frustration built. But she didn’t give up. “Practice tomorrow, my house. Four p.m. No skip.” Would your parents care if you hosted secret club drills?

Real Training Begins
Dinner at Sakura’s meant glow-in-the-dark shoes, games in narrow living rooms, cheers, knocks, shouts. Mr. Morishita eyed the crew: “Try not to break more vases.” Her mother served onigiri beside Matcha Pocky—arms crossed but grinning. By nine they’d crashed: Shu sprawled on the beanbag, Yasuo sketching strokes in the air, Kiyo up late recording one-arm lobs.
The club was alive now, a crew joined by weirdness, energy, a bit of rebellion. “This is progress?” Sakura texted Riko with a clip. Riko’s call snapped loud in response: “It’s wild. Admit you love it now.”
A Real Challenge: The Monthly League
Mr. Oda, PE coach, strolled in unannounced midday, his eyes sharp under faded ball cap. “You backing out, or is this team for real?” Sakura stood tallest—pride on the line. “We’ll win a match. You can count on that!” Oda snickered—a sound like popping tires.
The first league: their club caught the lowest slot. Round one, the Rugby Club. All laughter and muscled bravado. “You can still drop, darling,” joked the Rugby captain to Sakura, licking his lips. Sakura coolly planted nails on the serve. By volley two, her coin-sized earrings flew out in a sharp twist. “Don’t talk. Play.” The cheers grew.

Upsets, Doubles, and Pressures
Abe, for once, grinned after scooping a block, surprising himself. Kiyo paired with Sakura, moving sudden-fast, grabbing flashes for social posts between taps. Still, points dropped.
Yasuo botched serves out of nerves. Sakura called a timeout. “Look—forget them. Play wild if we must.” Was that confidence… or just Sakura faking it?
Pressure can choke a team, right?
Flashbacks and Hidden Skills
Flash to Sakura’s middle-school failure in gym: double-faulted, erased from rankings, humiliated. Even now, wrists trembled. This time, though, people had her back. Suddenly, Abe called a spin-break serve he’d seen on YouTube—did he just wink?
Unexpected result: THE GYARU SLICE™, a flick ending round-one victory. Nobody cheered louder than Kiyo, who dove for a post-win TikTok.

Momentum, and Real Enemies Arrive
Win equals new problems. Rival clubs complained about racket colors and skirt lengths. Yasuo punched a bench after a judging call. “Guess we made them mad,” Sakura joked, tucking a stray blue hair behind her ear. But later at a ramen shop, sorrow stuck. Sakura’s reflections came out low, off-camera: “Did we do enough as a team?” Kiyo’s reply was sharp: “Come on! All the likes, all the DMs—they believe now. Why don’t you?”
Clashed Strategies and New Goals
The next arc follows tremendous progress in the ranking league. The Scientific Club trains for strategies, even winds up recruiting Shu in a test game. Riko offers backhand tutelage. Sakura learns to use footwork, adding pop hits from dance practice. Her nagging self-doubt presses in after each game—this had started with a punishment, right?

Cliffhanger: School Tournament Qualifiers
Days before school tournament qualifying, Sakura’s old rival from elementary school, Emi, shows up. She’s the new president of the elite Badminton Club, fierce and mocking. One twist: Emi is hiding that she played on a national table tennis team last year. “I’d heard you’d quit clubs forever … ‘princess of dropouts.’ Feel like joining a grown-up’s sport now?”
Sakura straightens her club jacket, group behind her. “Bring your fancy grip, Emi. See you on the other side.” Cut to black before the toss. Do you think the underdogs can strike gold? Are odds for real?