The business card is simply to tell the readers that Ms. Kameido is really Yuki, Takeh's wife from the 1st and 2nd case.
My current theory is that all three work together to kill Miura yeah, and now that Toyokawa is a nuisance, Yuki and the granny are trying to pin the murder on Toyokawa...
If Miura's wife is granny, she can simply revert to her old surname and make Takeh follow suit. That's a thing in Japan. Tho having to imagine Yuki and Takeh meeting each other because Yuki and the granny are accomplices and while Yuki is like 17 and Takeh 11 is a big yikes.
It's impossible lol. Takeh is married to Yuki in 2007. 12 years after this case. And Yuki is 6 years older than Takeh as well as being an ex-illustrator. If anything, if any of the suspects are characters we have seen before, then most probably Kameido is probably Yuki and Miura's wife is the...
I still think the 3 suspects are red herring. If Uketsu is keeping their style from Strange House, then it's possible that the murder motive is simply something completely irrelevant to Miura himself. Kumai posited two reasons why Miura was mangled badly, either to hide his identity or because...
Time to wear my tinfoil hat again. Tsama has generously given us a timeline of events, so thanks Tsama.
First of all, I think we can strike Miura's wife being Yuuta's granny. As we know now, the grandma's existence is hidden by Ren/Takeshi, so if she committed a crime to do with her husband's...
To be fair it's been shown that his son is really just that strong, what with him killing hunters left and right. I won't say he is right, but Sogou is not wrong in thinking that his son must be killed no matter what in order to protect the people. But at the same time, the fight between Sogou...
It can be that the target is Yuuta himself rather than the woman specifically, or maybe just both of them. Reminder that if Take is Ren, then Take pretty much died soon after posting his last blog post, that's a big red sign that whoever targeted Yuki might now target Ren/Take and the rest of...
Like Tsama pointed out, the twist I think is that Take is her son, and Yuuta is Take's son (so her grandson). She is totally disguising herself because for some reason her real identity is probably a criminal or something, so this is the only way she can care for her grandson.
We see flashback...
It's more about teaching Takeru about ways he can help people while also helping himself. Takeru has a very bad habit of unconsciously making himself solitary out of trauma from being betrayed and not wanting to drag others into his problems. All the adults rightfully see this problem as a...
I am more saying that it's a term of endearment from someone who logically should be older than the Take in question. And thus my current deduction that she is said Take's mother than his widow.
Right. Time to wear my tinfoil hat and get some deductions on the ground.
First, Ms. Konno is obviously not Yuuta's blood mother. Some people think she is Ren in disguise in the previous chapter's comment thread, but I believe Ms. Konno isn't Ren even if she is related to Ren.
The repeated...
Keep in mind that all this bullying stuff so far is kept within the school. And given the existence of dorms, it seems the 'outside' pretty much leave the students to do whatever they want within the school's vicinity all they want within certain limits. It's pretty much a boarding school, with...
Ah, but that requires there being officials who do know what holy magic does. Like this is ironically a real problem in real world as well. Let's take ye olde Polish dictionary for example. In old Polish dictionary, a horse is defined "everyone knows what a horse is", and dragon as "it is hard...
Looking at the chapter again, it's not mentioned that the fact Elses is Fine's sponsor is known by public.
Based on this current circumstancial fact, Fine enrolls to the school by the patronage from the royal family due to her being a "Holy Magic" user, but under no explicit individual...
From how I see it, the holy magic is seen as just a label. It's like how any organisation can label something as illegal or dangerous based on subjective standard. For example, a country can list opium as a medicine, while another country puts it as illegal narcotics. Another example can be...