91 Days: Episode 10
Corteo, Angelo’s only true friend—the brother of his soul, not of his blood—is trapped. Having tried to protect Angelo by dealing with Fango, Corteo is now branded a traitor by the Vanetti family. Nero, suspicious yet desperate to trust "Avilio," places the ultimate burden on Angelo’s shoulders.
As they drive together toward the end, the camaraderie they once shared—the jokes about pineapple on pizza and the narrow escapes—feels like a sick joke. Nero thinks they are escaping to a new future. Angelo knows they are driving toward a grave. 91 Days Episode 10
The gunshot didn't just end Corteo’s life; it severed Angelo’s last connection to the light. As Nero watched, satisfied that his "brother-in-arms" had proven his "Good Faith," he couldn't see that he had just created his own executioner. By forcing Angelo to kill Corteo, Nero had ensured that Angelo would feel no hesitation when the time came to burn the Vanetti legacy to the ground. The Long Road to the Sea Corteo, Angelo’s only true friend—the brother of his
The episode serves as the "Point of No Return." According to discussions on Reddit's anime community , this is the moment where the tragedy shifts from a mafia thriller to a Shakespearean downfall. The "Vanetti Family," as noted in the series credits, isn't just a name—it's a curse that Angelo is determined to break, even if he has to break himself to do it. The Aftermath As they drive together toward the end, the
Angelo looked at Corteo. The boy who had brewed "Lawless Heaven" was now a trembling wreck in a dusty warehouse. Corteo’s eyes weren't filled with fear of death, but with a tragic realization: he was the final obstacle in Angelo’s path to revenge. To kill the Vanettis, Angelo had to kill the only piece of humanity he had left. The Shot That Echoed
As Episode 10 begins, the endgame is no longer a distant whisper; it is a roar. The Vanetti family is under siege from within and without. The Galassia family looms like a vulture, and the internal rot of the Vanettis has reached its peak. But for Angelo, the political maneuvering is merely the backdrop for a more intimate execution. The Trial of Corteo