Kaoru runs after him in the mist.
"You could have let him burn," Saito says.
Kenshin stumbles into their lives when he stops a gang of opium thugs from seizing Kaoru’s land deed. He does not kill them. He simply redirects their strikes—using the sakabatō to break wrists and knock men unconscious. One thug slashes his back. Kenshin does not flinch. He smiles, says "oro?" —and ends the fight. The Rurouni Kenshin
In the final moment, Saito arrives—not as an enemy, but as a witness. He does not help. He simply watches Kenshin pull Kanryu from a burning room and drop him at the police commissioner's feet.
"Kenshin!" she shouts. "If you become the manslayer again, Tomoe's death meant nothing!" Kaoru runs after him in the mist
"Wherever there are people who need help that no one else will give."
The opium lord—, a wealthy industrialist with samurai roots and Western cannons—sends a former Shinsengumi captain named Saito Hajime to eliminate Kenshin. Saito does not work for money; he works for order. He sees Kenshin as a feral dog who should have been shot after the revolution. He does not kill them
Two figures walking east, toward the rising sun. One carries a reverse-blade sword. The other carries a lunch box. Behind them, a small boy waves, then picks up a bamboo shinai and begins to swing. Thematic Note: This draft emphasizes rehabilitation over revenge , compassion over justice , and the idea that a peaceful era is not something you kill for—it's something you wake up to, every single day, and choose to protect.