TV-Series
Description
Taiyō Mitsuboshi, a high school student, initially worked politely alongside Satō Matsuzaka at the Princess Imperial restaurant. After developing romantic feelings for Satō and facing rejection, the restaurant manager kidnapped, imprisoned, and sexually assaulted him for days. This trauma left him with an intense fear of older women and a persistent feeling of being "dirty."
Seeking purification, he joined the Cure á Cute maid cafe, where he reencountered Satō. His psychological instability surfaced through panic attacks when touched by older women, triggered even by a manager’s shoulder touch. His fixation shifted upon discovering missing person posters for Shio Kōbe; convinced her innocence and purity could cleanse him, he obsessively collected her flyers and built a shrine in his room.
After a chance street encounter with Shio, he begged her to heal him, misinterpreting her head pat as purification. When thugs attacked him during his attempt to take her home—causing Shio’s breakdown and Satō’s violent intervention—his delusion of Shio as his "angel" intensified. Satō exploited this obsession, promising access to Shio if he manipulated her brother, Asahi Kōbe. Mitsuboshi lied to Asahi, claiming Shio left the city and presenting her sock as false evidence. Asahi later threatened him violently upon uncovering the deception.
Mitsuboshi located Satō’s apartment to take Shio but mistakenly entered her aunt’s unit. The aunt offered help accessing Satō’s locked apartment, then restrained and raped him. During the assault, he called Asahi for aid but was abandoned due to his earlier deceit. He escaped before a fire spread through the building but failed to find Shio.
His conclusion diverges across media: the manga depicts him running from home, smiling at his concerned mother while declaring himself "cleansed," hinting at recovery. The anime shows him broken and despondent amid Shio’s posters in his room, implying possible suicide, and alters the aunt encounter to an assault in the wrong apartment. Throughout his arc, his relationship with Satō decayed from friendship to manipulation, ending in her indifference; his obsession with Shio remained a one-sided delusion of purification; and his interactions with Asahi deteriorated from kindness to mutual hostility after betrayal.
Seeking purification, he joined the Cure á Cute maid cafe, where he reencountered Satō. His psychological instability surfaced through panic attacks when touched by older women, triggered even by a manager’s shoulder touch. His fixation shifted upon discovering missing person posters for Shio Kōbe; convinced her innocence and purity could cleanse him, he obsessively collected her flyers and built a shrine in his room.
After a chance street encounter with Shio, he begged her to heal him, misinterpreting her head pat as purification. When thugs attacked him during his attempt to take her home—causing Shio’s breakdown and Satō’s violent intervention—his delusion of Shio as his "angel" intensified. Satō exploited this obsession, promising access to Shio if he manipulated her brother, Asahi Kōbe. Mitsuboshi lied to Asahi, claiming Shio left the city and presenting her sock as false evidence. Asahi later threatened him violently upon uncovering the deception.
Mitsuboshi located Satō’s apartment to take Shio but mistakenly entered her aunt’s unit. The aunt offered help accessing Satō’s locked apartment, then restrained and raped him. During the assault, he called Asahi for aid but was abandoned due to his earlier deceit. He escaped before a fire spread through the building but failed to find Shio.
His conclusion diverges across media: the manga depicts him running from home, smiling at his concerned mother while declaring himself "cleansed," hinting at recovery. The anime shows him broken and despondent amid Shio’s posters in his room, implying possible suicide, and alters the aunt encounter to an assault in the wrong apartment. Throughout his arc, his relationship with Satō decayed from friendship to manipulation, ending in her indifference; his obsession with Shio remained a one-sided delusion of purification; and his interactions with Asahi deteriorated from kindness to mutual hostility after betrayal.