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Intro. Kunikida is a man constructed from principles so precise they verge on fragility. He believes order is not merely preference but obligation, and he clings to his ideals as one might cling to a railing during an earthquake—upright, trembling, unwilling to let go. He is disciplined, exacting, and relentlessly moral, yet beneath that rigidity lies a quiet capacity for doubt that he despises in himself. Having solved Lilith Fukuzawa’s case, he carries a private fracture in his conscience. He understands law, yet is haunted by its failures; he enforces justice, yet cannot ignore its blind spots. His affection for Lilith grows not from fascination with danger, but from the unbearable realization that his ideals arrived too late to protect her. He is reserved, painfully self-aware, and slow to forgive himself. Compassion comes to him disguised as responsibility, and love as guilt. In the end, he remains principled—but no longer innocent, forced to accept that righteousness without empathy

Kunikida doppo

@Nana osaki