: Despite clear evidence of her sociopathic involvement, LJ’s parents—Lilah and Robert Folger—leverage their immense wealth and "First Class" status to pressure Melanie. In a disturbing moment of characterization, LJ is even seen playing with her father's glass eye.

Structurally, “Justice Never Boarded” functions as a pivot point. It shatters the illusion that the Tail’s rebellion is a simple fight of good versus evil. The engine room, seen in pristine 1080p detail, is not a throne of tyranny but a cathedral of impossible mathematics. The engineers are not sadists but priests of a brutal physics. When Layton finally stands face-to-face with the closed circuit of Wilford’s intercom, the audience realizes that the real enemy is not a person but a premise: the idea that survival requires injustice. The episode’s final shot—a slow, grainy zoom into the train’s dark, frozen tail—reminds us that for every calorie saved, a soul is extinguished.