TV-Series
Description
Haru, a dwarf rabbit with snow-white fur, jet-black eyes, and delicate features, defies societal labels of fragility tied to her species. Her early life, marked by others’ perceptions of her as vulnerable, drove her to reclaim agency through promiscuity, seeking equality rather than pity. This defiance led to ostracization at Cherryton Academy, where peers like Mizuchi weaponized rumors to isolate her.

Central to her growth are volatile relationships. A bond with Louis, a red deer, blossomed in the gardening club into a clandestine friends-with-benefits arrangement, severed by his politically arranged marriage. Her connection with Legoshi, a grey wolf, ignited after he saved her from the Shishigumi lion gang’s abduction. His protective instincts and internal conflicts destabilized her self-image and societal expectations, forging a relationship fraught with mutual insecurity. Haru insisted on autonomy even as they navigated taboo interspecies attraction and violence-laden norms.

Her resilience emerges in calculated risks, like venturing into the Black Market despite herbivore endangerment, and stoic pragmatism toward systemic brutality—such as her detached composure at a rabbit meatery. Yet emotional vulnerability surfaces in intimacy: she rejected Legoshi’s marriage proposal over his controlling impulses, only reconciling after both confronted fears of loss and prejudice.

Raised in a family hyperaware of dwarf rabbits’ perceived helplessness, Haru initially internalized caution. A pivotal encounter with a black-tailed jackrabbit who engaged her as an equal sparked adolescent rebellion, channeling sexuality into empowerment. Though this defiance deepened her isolation, it cemented her resolve to live unapologetically.

Later trials—confronting Melon, a hybrid crime lord targeting her, and witnessing interspecies bloodshed at university—tested her convictions. These hardships sharpened her commitment to self-determination. Her journey culminates in a guarded but earnest reunion with Legoshi, symbolizing her enduring pursuit of autonomy within a prejudiced world.