Snow White is defined by a rigid, self-fashioned justice that fuels her crusade to resurrect fallen Masters through violent purification. Her declarations—"My blade is Justice itself" and "O white light, purify my path"—frame her deeds as divine mandate, yet cracks in this resolve surface when she mourns bloodied garments or the mental burden of slaughter, exposing a rift between her ideals and their bloody execution. Her past orbits a loop of remorse and determination. The Act of Reality unearths her inaugural kill, a memory that claws at her psyche like a recurring phantom. This guilt intertwines with her job story’s snow-blanketed realm, where drifts cloak the aftermath of her violence in transient purity. Here, she justifies her path as righteous, even as she braces for the thaw that will lay bare her sins. Loyalty to her Masters anchors her every choice. She pledges her life for their revival—"I seek only to revive my Masters"—a vow unshaken even amid the Act of Elimination’s irreversible deaths. Though she allies with others against shared enemies, her single-minded pursuit of justice often leaves her isolated. In *Ichiban Saigo no Monogatari*, she joins forces to defend the Library from existential threats, collaborating with allies whose goals diverge from her own. These narratives cement her duality: a zealot straddling idealism and the visceral fallout of her choices, her evolution a taut wire between unyielding faith and the price paid in flesh and spirit.

Titles

Snow White

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