%e3%82%b4%e3%83%bc%e3%83%ab%e3%83%87%e3%83%b3%e3%82%ab%e3%83%a0%e3%82%a4%2c%e2%80%93%2craw%2c%e3%80%90%e7%ac%ac210%e8%a9%b1%e3%80%91%2c%e3%82%b4%e3%83%bc%e3%83%ab%e3%83%87%e3%83%b3%e3%82%ab%e3%83%a0%e3%82%a4%2c%e2%80%93%2craw%2c%e3%80%90%e7%ac%ac210%e8%a9% Link

It solidifies Tsukishima as a tragic figure who chooses to live within the lie because the truth offers him no home to return to.

Koito begins to piece together that Tsurumi might have been involved in Hanazawa’s death to move the (South Manchurian Railway) expansion plan forward. More importantly, Koito suspects that his own kidnapping in Hakodate—the event that made him Tsurumi’s most devoted follower—was a staged "play". 2. Tsukishima’s "Mindbreak" It solidifies Tsukishima as a tragic figure who

Even in his absence, Ogata’s words to Koito in Russian ("bon-bon") are what triggered this wave of suspicion, proving Ogata is still successfully sabotaging Tsurumi from the shadows. It solidifies Tsukishima as a tragic figure who

This is the first time Koito openly doubts Tsurumi’s divinity, setting the stage for his eventual growth into a leader who acts on his own terms. It solidifies Tsukishima as a tragic figure who