Goro E — Inga

That night, the door to his penthouse splintered open. It wasn't the police. It was a parade of faces he had forgotten: the waitress he’d driven to sell her kidney, the student whose fingers he'd broken, the mother who lost her home. They weren't violent. They were calm. And in their hands, they held a new ledger.

That evening, Mika left him. She took nothing. But as she walked out, she whispered, "The man I married died fifteen years ago. You just wore his skin."

Goro was alone. But the ledger wasn't finished. He flipped to the final page, the one with his name at the top. Under Effect , it didn't list a broken bone or a lost possession. It simply said: A lifetime of choosing cruelty. Effect: You will become the victim of every man you ruined. He laughed—a broken, thumbless, lonely sound. "And who will punish me? Ghosts?" goro e inga

At 6:01 AM, as the sun bled orange over Tokyo, his left foot cracked . Not a sprain—a clean, surgical snap of every metatarsal. He collapsed in his apartment, screaming. The doctors were baffled. "Spontaneous fractures," they called it.

His favorite victim was Old Nakamura, a baker whose wife had fallen ill. Goro loaned him ¥500,000 at a rate that ensured he would never climb out of the pit. When Nakamura was late for the third time, Goro didn’t break his legs. He took his thumbs. "No thumbs, no bread," Goro laughed, pocketing the man's wedding ring as a "late fee." That night, the door to his penthouse splintered open

He opened it. Inside were two columns: Cause and Effect . Most entries were faded. But fresh ink bled across the page: Kicking the shrine guardian. Effect: Left foot will shatter at sunrise. Goro laughed and tossed the ledger into a puddle. "Stupid superstition."

Terrified, he tried to cheat. He found the page where he had stolen the wedding ring. Stealing a vow of love. Effect: Your own love will turn to ash. Goro had a wife, Mika. He ignored her, spent her inheritance, and treated her like furniture. But he thought, I don't love her. So no loss. They weren't violent

Goro Tanaka believed the world ran on a simple principle: takers win . He was a loan shark in the neon-drenched back alleys of Shinjuku, a man whose smile was sharper than his knife. For fifteen years, he broke knees, shattered families, and collected debts with a cruelty that bordered on artistry.