Gothic crime · AI-illustrated · English · Paris, 1840

Paris, 1840. A mathematician is found dead the morning after a duel. Auguste Dupin is not convinced it was a duel at all. The victim is Évariste Galois — and the proof he left behind may be the most dangerous document in France.

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Auguste Dupin is not so sure.

For Dupin, this is not just a crime; it is an enigma that insults the order of things. Where others see only chaos, he perceives a dark logic—a chilling rhythm that is transforming the capital into a theater of calculated violence.

As he delves into the intellectual underground of Paris—navigating elite salons, secret societies, and the dark alleys where the city whispers its deepest secrets—Dupin must decipher a language that no one is willing to admit they understand.

Il Teorema del Confronto is the first episode of the series. A gothic psychological crime story where logic is not used to bring justice, but to survive the depths of human cruelty.

Poe’s detective, reimagined. Aristocratic, reclusive, pathologically rational. Lives by candlelight and logic. He doesn’t solve crimes as a service — he solves them because an unsolved pattern is a kind of pain. He is not easy to be around.

Evariste’s brother and Dupin’s closest friend, he accompanies him and acts as his right-hand man during investigations. He guards Dupin’s dramatic secret—one that Dupin himself is unaware of, and that Alfred shares only with his mother, Adelaide.

She appears in Pinocchio’s memory — or imagination — as a figure of impossible perfection. She is never prophetic. She never guides. She is a narcissistic absence that shapes everything, visible only in what she makes impossible to grieve.

The only cold case, Dupin’s ultimate obsession. His best friend executed in a duel—the mathematical genius who died far too young. Ma il segreto custodito è più drammatico dell’immaginazione