Upham

Upham (アップハム, Appuhamu) is one of the Lemures who hijacked the Flying Pussyfoot' in December 1931. '''

On the train, Upham is captured briefly by Jacuzzi Splot and his gang, and freed by Elmer C. Albatross. He and Elmer head to the conductor's cabin, and he is stabbed by Lebreau Fermet Viralesque. Elmer saves his life.

In the aftermath, Upham is one of only a few Lemures who are not dead or arrested. Free of the cult, he eventually finds work at Fred's poorhouse by 1935 and befriends coworker Roy Maddock there.

He has a crush on Chané Laforet.

1931
Upham is among the Lemures who double-cross Nader Schasschule, and he is present when Nader's rebellion fails on December 29 in an abandoned warehouse.

During the Flying Pussyfoot incident, Upham is captured by Jacuzzi Splot's gang and tied up in one of the freight holds, where he fills them in on the Lemures' siege strategy.

He is freed by Elmer C. Albatross and accompanies him to the conductor's compartment. Arriving after them, Lebreau Fermet Viralesque stabs Upham for standing in his way. Elmer tends to Upham's injury and introduces Fermet to him, refusing to give Fermet Upham's name. After speaking with Elmer for a while, Fermet attempts to kill Upham. Elmer thwarts Fermet and throws him off the train. Upham saves Elmer from falling onto the tracks, and ends up as one of the few Lemures who survive the night.

1932
Upham is duped by Fermet into recounting his experience aboard the Flying Pussyfoot to someone Upham believes is a reporter from the Daily Days. The reporter is actually an actor who Fermet has fooled into believing he is helping a playwright with his script.

1935
By 1935, Upham is working at Fred's housing facility alongside Roy Maddock. There, he encounters Nader again, whom he believed was dead. Nader attacks Upham with a fork, but is stopped by Raz Smith. Nader later apologizes and tells Upham that he has dropped his grudge against him.

From Fermet's thoughts, it seems that he has plans for Upham - though what those plans are are currently unknown.