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Chuuya:
Chuuya:
Grabbing both Akutagawa siblings: "Mine."
Grabbing Kyouka: "Mine."
Grabbing Kenji: "Mine."
Dragging Atsushi by his suspenders: "I'll take this one too for good measure."
Kyuusaku, in the travel-sized child carrier strapped to his chest: :)
Her birthday was yesterday đ„șđ
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Hooo boy
Chapter one-eighteen. Where do I even đ«đźđ°đČđ·?
Unlike a lot of folks in this fandom (all more imaginative than I could ever hope to be), I had basically no solid predictions for this chapter (or⊠any chapter thus far, really, and I've been following the manga religiously since 103, so⊠yeah, there's a reason I'm a BSD analyst, not theorist, lmao). Needless to say, 118 is heartbreak and bombshells galore: Tanizaki and Kenjiâs Ame-no-Gozen-ing, the possibility that all of those âJun'ichirĆ and Naomi aren't really siblingsâ theories were just proven dead right, the protagonist and main villain finally meeting because it's about damn time â so on and so forth.
But because a) the fanbase is already abuzz with talk about those things + no doubt in the process of doing them analytical justice, and b) I'm annoying, Iâve decided to dissect the ever-loving hell out of the chapterâs three most innocuous pages: this interaction between KyĆka Izumi and Lucy Maud Montgomery.
Inhales
MY GIRLS ARE BAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACK (â â§â âœâ âŠâ )Â
Does a little jig đ¶
Sorry, had to get that out of my system
No, but seriously. KyĆka has been absent since chapter 91. Three whole years; definitely too long for a character of her importance. Lucy, meanwhile, has been out of the picture since chapter 81. Thatâs four whole years. So in other words, two significant female characters, sidelined for ages, are back. Thatâs kind of huge, IMO.
Of course, we have a vague idea of what theyâve been up to. Anne's Room has been shown more than once serving as the ADAâs safe haven and base of operations, and so per the rules of AOAR, Lucy must be nearby if not inside herself. KyĆka we see in silhouette form in Anne's Room in chapter 92. But this is the first time in a hot minute we've seen either of them in the flesh, let alone gotten dialogue out of them. I nearly choked on my cereal when I turned the page and saw their faces, lol.
So then, pray tell, what does this long-awaited appearance in the flesh entail? WellâŠ
Right off the bat, Lucy and KyĆka are seen in Anneâs Room (where theyâve ostensibly been this entire time), standing in front of the Exit Door (i.e., the door opposite the prison, which â unless linked to a surface in the real world â will cause those who leave through it to experience amnesia. Not relevant to the scene, just thought Iâd give a quick refresher.) The exit is blocked by rubble; the airport, as well as the surrounding buildings, have all been devastated. How to leave Anne's Room at this point is anyoneâs guess.
KyĆka suggests Lucy deactivate her ability, but Lucy shuts her down, pointing out that they'll be flattened by rubble if she does. In response, KyĆka does her signature knife-unsheathing and insists, rather ominously, that they'll just have to take a gamble then. Lucy grabs her wrist and tells her to stop, and when KyĆka asks her why, she replies solemnly: âBecause⊠if you died⊠it would crush him,â this followed by a picture of Atsushiâs smiling face.
YES. YES. YES.
Now THIS is what I love about Lucy and KyĆkaâs dynamic.Â
In essence, they're rivals. Thing is, they're not your generic âtwo girls fighting over the same guyâ rivals. KyĆkaâs feelings toward Atsushi arenât even romantically-coded. Their shared love for Atsushi doesnât divide them; it unites them. After all, following the Guild Aftermath arc, the ârivalryâ aspect of their relationship has had almost nothing to do with him, instead revolving around their clashing personalities.
There, they were only at each otherâs throats because KyĆka didnât like how Lucy, still angry about the Moby Dick, was treating Atsushi, and Lucy didnât like how KyĆka was standing in the way of her talking things through with him. But once a much-needed heart-to-heart was had between Atsushi and Lucy and the latter turned over a new leaf, there was no longer any reason for her and KyĆka to bicker. KyĆka didnât have the full context of Lucyâs actions, and was thus within her rights to assume she couldnât be trusted, but Lucy proved that she could be when she led them to the right boat.
Later on, Lucy showcased that she didn't resent KyĆka when she advocated for her, forcing Atsushi to leave her to her thoughts upon learning the truth of her parents' deaths.
The next chapter, KyĆka calls Lucyâs coffee mediocre, but Lucy herself admits that she isnât much of a barista, and so the comment is more KyĆka not mincing words than actively trying to be rude. Moreover, Lucy is offended at first, but then concedes without any real hostility.
In the Cannibalism arc, KyĆka is shown bowing politely to Lucy while enlisting her help, even if she is just following Atsushi's lead (and later does the same for MushitarĆ).
Fast forward to the Sky Casino arc, KyĆka is miffed by Lucyâs hot-and-cold behavior around Atsushi, but thatâs not exactly unique to her...
... and besides, they agree without resistance to work together. In chapter 81 (i.e., the last we saw of Lucy until now), the Agency reunites and Lucy encourages KyĆka to join in on the celebration. Perhaps most notable is chapter 78, wherein the two are lumped into the same category by Ango. He recognizes them both as people who would choose Atsushi over the good of the world, and this nearly drives him to kill them on the spot for fear of what their loyalty could turn into.
In this latest chapter, however, itâs underscored that, while Lucy and KyĆka may be the same in their care for Atsushi on the surface, theyâre still â at the end of the day â foil characters.Â
Both are orphans. Both were taken in â and subsequently exploited â by criminal organizations for their abilities. Both found their place in the story by virtue of meeting Atsushi. Both are undyingly loyal to Atsushi because of what heâs done for them. Thatâs about where their similarities end.
KyĆka was introduced as a remorseful killer seeking atonement by death. Atsushi managed to save her (twice, for that matter) in the conventional hero way, cementing himself as her savior and playing into the reckless heroism by which he determines his worth.
Lucy, on the other hand, was introduced as a bitter villain who believed she was justified in lashing out. Atsushi tried, but he couldnât save her in the conventional hero way. Only his vulnerability managed to get through to her, and if anything, Lucy saved him. This utterly subverted the unhealthy philosophy by which Atsushi had begun to define both himself and his relationships.
Since then, Lucy has been trying at every turn to get Atsushi to see himself as more than just a hero. She reprimands him for his reckless heroism when she sees it. She stops him from inserting himself into other peopleâs plights uninvited. She confronts him when he fails to understand his relationships beyond the framework of hero and savior. KyĆka, meanwhile, has been doing more or less the opposite: sheâs passively allowed Atsushi to keep playing the perpetual hero, and this wouldnât be the first time sheâs taken on his credo of self-sacrifice herself.
All of this in mind, the girlsâ thought processes in this chapter are perfectly in line for them: KyĆka tries to push forward without care for what could happen to her, whereas Lucy emphasizes self-preservation.
One might perceive Lucy replying the way she does to KyĆkaâs question as callous, but I donât really think so. She isnât saying âthe only reason you shouldnât risk your life is because it would make Atsushi sad." Sheâs applying her philosophy of person > hero to Atsushi and KyĆka both at the same time. She's encouraging KyĆka to be more than just a hero by telling her to think of how it would affect Atsushi as a person if she died.
If Lucy is good at anything, itâs communicating what she wants from people in a way that she knows will get through to them. She did this with Atsushi on the Moby Dick when she bluffed about waiting on his salvation, knowing he would be more motivated to stay alive himself if he thought there was someone counting on him to save them. The same applies in this scenario. She communicates with KyĆka in a way that highlights the reason they get along; the reason theyâre both here in the first place. And if the way KyĆka re-sheathes her knife without a word is any indication, it works.
Lucy knows that she and Atsushi are close, but she knows that KyĆka and Atsushi are closer. Losing her would be the last straw for him. She recognizes their relationship as something beyond hero and savior â something precious. This is nothing out-of-character for her; on the contrary, itâs in keeping with who sheâs been all along. All thatâs different now is sheâs acknowledging it out loud.
When Lucy pictures Atsushi in her mindâs eye, she sees the spirit that would undoubtedly be broken if he were to lose KyĆka. This in and of itself is heartbreaking, but when you consider the greater implications, wellâŠ
In the Sky Casino arc, a huge breakthrough was made in Atsushi and Lucyâs relationship. Her elusive âimpossibleâ debt to him was finally repaid, though not in the way you'd expect.
At the time, all Lucy felt she could give in return for Atsushiâs turning her life around was conventional heroism â or in other words, many a close call and many a trip to Anneâs Room. This conventional heroism was a worthless currency in her mind; it wasnât the kind that saved her, after all. But on the other hand, the vulnerability she so valued in its stead she wasnât capable of giving; where she came from, being vulnerable was a death sentence, after all.
Because of this, how she could ever come close to repaying Atsushiâs ultimate favor was a mystery unto itself. All she knew was that she had to do it one way or another, and thatâs where her most glaring flaw â her quid-pro-quo mindset â came into play, eventually driving her so far as to override her own philosophy and embody the reckless hero she so discouraged Atsushi from being.
But when Atsushi saved her from Nathaniel â thereby repaying her for her acts of service as heâd promised so many times he would â she realized that, just as her care for Atsushi doesnât depend on his being a hero, Atsushi's care for her doesnât depend on her being vulnerable. The illusion was shattered.
From this point forward, Lucy is no longer helping Atsushi out of a sense of indebtedness. She's doing it because she wants to â because she genuinely cares. Not the artificial care that comes with repaying a debt, but the kind she showcases when she stays by Atsushiâs side after he faints, pressing a cold towel to his face. The kind that involves refusing to hurt Atsushi in any way, even to jog potentially vital memories.
Lucy considering what KyĆkaâs death would do to Atsushiâs psyche is a perfect continuation of this new leaf sheâs turned over, but it also goes to show that her shared arc with Atsushi is far from finished.
Lucyâs development has always been structured rather uniquely. Each arc sheâs appeared in has worked either to establish or address her current most glaring flaw, more often than not in unexpected ways. Her appearance in the first half of the Guild arc established her villainous façade as just that â a façade â by having it crumble as she realized the kind of person she was up against in Atsushi. The second half addressed her unhealthy attachment to the Guild by having Atsushi dissuade her from villainy via empathy. The Guild Aftermath arc added the finishing touch to all of this â the last little push needed to propel Lucy into her new role â by addressing her and Atsushiâs âpromiseâ on the Moby Dick. The Cannibalism arc subtly established her quid-pro-quo mindset, which the Sky Casino arc would then go on to address.
Another great subversion of the tropes usually involved in these dynamics is that, despite Lucy being the closest thing to Atsushiâs âlove interest,â only heâs managed to bolster her development â not the other way around. This isnât for lack of trying, of course; Lucy tries. But Atsushi is a tough nut to crack. The fact that sheâs still, nearly 15 chapters later, trying to steer Atsushi away from heroism and toward personhood â albeit indirectly â is testament to this.
If she could reach him now, sheâd no doubt be trying even still. Sheâd be conveying to him that none of his friendsâ deaths so far has been his fault â that he canât be expected to carry the burden of hero to all when the world is going to hell in a handbasket. But she canât reach him. Sheâs trapped, and so is KyĆka. Thus is the cruel irony.
Anne of Abyssal Red has played a key role in pretty much everything plot-related up to this point. To that end, itâs only appropriate that its owner finally appearing alongside it would grant it extra significance.
Lucyâs last line in this chapter is as follows: âSo the enemy⊠even took this into account.â Sheâs right: Fyodor had countermeasures against her ability. That said, I donât think this is attributable solely to Fyodor being, well⊠Fyodor.
AOAR is in the same ballpark narrative-wise as, say, For The Tainted Sorrow in that itâs overpowered to the point of detriment. Itâs Lucyâs playground; the product of an imagination run wild due to crippling loneliness. This in and of itself is scary. An ability having rules that malleable is automatically dangerous, as it means that, while its wielder can bend and exploit said rules, so can an enemy. In both major fights Lucy has been a part of, the rules of Anneâs Room being molded to favor her opponent has spelled either victory or loss on her end: Atsushi used the prison room loophole against her, and she indirectly used the transportation loophole against Nathaniel. Hell, her capture by the Guild following her betrayal was thanks to the loophole that, while Anne couldnât be defeated, she could be restrained.
So basically, for as powerful as AOAR is, underneath that power lies a shaky foundation. Power doesnât always mean stability, and this is underscored by the fact that, at the end of the day, Anne is only infallible in terms of strength; she could only do so much to alleviate Lucyâs loneliness growing up (which is honestly a pretty clever mirror to her conflict of strength vs. vulnerability with Atsushi).
With Anneâs Room nullified by Fyodor, Lucy has truly nothing at her disposal. She's not physically strong (sheâs 165 cm and weighs 44 kg, so⊠yeah Ëâ Ë), and while by no means stupid, she doesnât say repeatedly in this chapter that she doesnât know what to do next for no reason. Anneâs Room is all sheâs ever had. While at the orphanage, it was her only comfort. While in the Guild, it was her only value. With Atsushi, it was all she had to offer in return for his ultimate favor.
This, I feel, could be the establishing point for the next portion of her arc. She could strive to find a way out of the rubble, working together with KyĆka, and in the process learn to break away from her ability as what defines her role in all of this. One thing's for sure: something has to be done sooner or later â otherwise, they'll starve.
I dunno, maybe thatâs wishful thinking given how much is already going on. But either way, Iâll hope against hope that this isnât some one-off return, because Lucy has proven time and time again that she has a lot to offer to the story, both plot-wise and thematically.
Thanks for reading :)
1/?
ORGANIZATIONS
Armed Detective Agency
President:
1. Yukichi Fukuzawa - human
Members:
1. Akiko Yosano - half vampire (made - [REDACTED])
2. Atsushi Nakajima - werewolf
3. Doppo Kunikida - human
4. Junichiro (Jun'ichirĆ) Tanizaki - human
5. Kenji Miyazawa - human
6. Kyouka (KyĆka) Izumi - half vampire (made - Kouyou)
7. Osamu Dazai - [REDACTED]
8. Ranpo Edogawa - human
Clerks:
1. Naomi Tanizaki - human
2. Kirako Haruno - human
3. Agency Clerk 1 - human [no pic]
4. Agency Clerk 2 - human [no pic]
5. Agency Clerk 3 - human [no pic]
Former Members:
1. Katai Tayama - human(?)
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Hey, so, do you guys like the Dazai Chronicles? I might make more, but honestly I'm not sure what other characters to do. I already have Chuuya's in the progress, but everyone else is kinda...blank. So, I have a few ideas on people to put in the series, but I'm not sure who you'd like to come first and stuff. So, I'm holding a poll.
(Omg I'm so stupid I accidently picked Fyoder and can't unpick it)
Guys, if you pick other, you're gonna have to tell me who, or else I won't know who you mean lol
I would love an animatic or fic with Dazai and the Agency with the song 'It's Alright' by Mother Mother. This would be where they find out about what his crime list in the mafia is and they don't treat him like a demon or and monster for what he did, but like a kid who grew up in the wrong place and had traumatic past. And while it goes on Dazai slowly starts to realize that they don't see him as he sees himself, but they see a kid that didn't have a childhood.
I just need to see this found family welcome him for he is like they did for everyone else. I want them to see him as a kid who didn't get to grow up like a normal teenager, going to school and not like the Demon Prodigy that killed others, abused Akutagawa, and many other crimes. I want the Armed Detective Agency to be able to see that even if he did Akutagawa, that's what he was probably taught to do in the Mafia, he was just doing what he was taught to do to his subordinate. I want them to tell him that he is human and that they care about him.
I want them to give a big group hug with Dazai in the middle. I want them to just realize he was a victim of Mori like Yosano was. I want them to just realize that he was too young for any of this to happen to him.
I want Dazai to realize that he can trust them, maybe not as much as Oda (and Ango) during his last years in the Mafia. To realize that being in the light, being a good guy is more beautiful than being in the dark. That having people there for you that care for you is much better than not being able to trust anyone in case of betrayal.
I want him and Yosano to talk sh*t about Mori and also vent each other when they remember what he put them through.
I want Kenji to talk to him about farming, how to do it, what the best time of year to do it is, stuff like that.
I want Kyouka and him to have simple conversations that have nothing to do with the Mafia.
I want Fukuzawa to just slowly embrace him and tell him it's okay if he needs to cry (albeit in an awkward, but caring way).
To Kunikida to verbally make sure he's doing okay and be a sorta therapist to him.
To Atsushi to willingly turn into his tiger to see if that'll help him sleep because of the fluff.
To have Him and Ranpo talk about absolutely anything that sounds idiotic to the others, but actually sounds logical to them.
I want Junichiro to notice if Dazai is pretending his emotions (Junichiro probably took Theater in school and could notice things like that) and talk to him when they're alone.
I want Naomi to ask for more tips and tricks from him.
I just want them to see him as Dazai Osamu, not the Demon Prodigy. I want them to treat him like his feelings are valid and he shouldn't keep them to himself. I want them to be there for him when he's having the su*cidal thoughts.
I just want them to comfort him like he is a part of their little found family. To just be glad he's trying to turn over a new leaf and change from when he was in the Mafia. Treat him like he didn't murder like they do with everyone else in the Agency.