“The only case you have tonight is the case of the missing pillow.” Dali pointed. “Solve it. In your dreams.”
Only Dali’s eldest, Raphael—a boy of seven with his father’s sharp eyes and none of his patience—was quiet. He sat in the corner, not sleeping, but watching. A leather-bound journal lay open on his knee. Inside, he had sketched not childish doodles, but symbols. The same symbols that had been found at the last TRUMP crime scene. Delico-s Nursery
If you are tired of the same isekai power fantasies or shonen tournament arcs, Delico’s Nursery offers something rare: maturity without cynicism. “The only case you have tonight is the
Gerhard Fra’s character arc is a direct critique of traditional masculine ideals in military structures. He initially believes that holding a baby is "beneath a knight." Through forced proximity, he learns that vulnerability and caregiving are not weaknesses; they are the ultimate acts of strength. Watching this 500-year-old warrior learn how to hold a bottle without crushing it is both hilarious and moving. He sat in the corner, not sleeping, but watching
The team’s intelligence officer. Enrique is pragmatic, sarcastic, and deeply annoyed by the chaos of children. He represents the exhausted modern parent—barely keeping his own child in check, surviving on coffee (or blood-equivalent), and wondering where his life went wrong.
In the ever-expanding universe of anime and manga, where high-concept premises often clash with gritty realism, Delico’s Nursery arrived as a breath of fresh—albeit aristocratic—air. At first glance, it seems like a contradiction: what do you get when you cross a bloody power struggle among vampire elites with the chaotic, heartwarming, and utterly exhausting responsibilities of parenthood?