Outwardly, she is the unshakeable ace. Inwardly, her internal monologue begins to fray. The cracks appear as small things: forgetting a friend’s birthday, snapping at an ally for a minor mistake, a hand that trembles slightly when she reaches for a cup of tea. The aegis (her emotional shield) grows heavier, but she refuses to lower it. This is the brittle phase—strong until sudden pressure.
This is the raw, terrifying bottom of the breakdown. The silence is deafening. There are no enemies to fight, no missions to complete, no atonements to make. There is only Mikoto, stripped of her aegis, her pride, her purpose. And in that silence, something unexpected happens: she hears her own heartbeat. Not as a drumbeat for battle, but as a simple biological fact. She is still alive. Mikoto-s Four-Year Breakdown.14
The most deceptive stage. Year three looks like recovery, but it is actually . Mikoto throws herself into a single, impossible project: fixing a past mistake that no one else remembers or blames her for. She convinces herself that if she can undo this one error—save this one person, prevent this one disaster—then all the pain of the last two years will have meaning. Outwardly, she is the unshakeable ace
The breakdown begins not with a bang, but with a static crackle . The aegis (her emotional shield) grows heavier, but
The final year is not a dramatic climax. It is a whisper. The powers that once defined her flicker erratically—too strong one moment, absent the next. She finally stops running. Not because she chooses to, but because her body and mind simply refuse to move forward. She sits on the floor of an empty room (or an empty train car, or a forgotten rooftop) and for the first time in four years, she does nothing.
What makes Mikoto’s Four-Year Breakdown resonate is that it does not end with a cure. It ends with a pause . The breakdown leaves scars: trust issues, a wary relationship with her own abilities, a permanent fatigue that never fully lifts. But it also leaves a new, fragile wisdom. She learns that strength is not the absence of breakdown, but the willingness to sit in the wreckage and sort through the debris.
At the start of the period, Mikoto is still recognizable: coiled energy, sharp tongue, a reluctance to rely on others that borders on pathological. The first year is characterized by . When faced with escalating crises—political, personal, supernatural—Mikoto doubles down on the only coping mechanism she trusts: control. She sleeps four hours a night. She takes on missions meant for teams alone. She tells herself that exhaustion is a sign of strength.