Echoes in the Neon Rain
Echoes in the Neon Rain
Night spills into the city like paint down glass. Miru Sakamoto, rookie detective, stands by her office window as red and blue lights creep along worn streets. Half of her dinner is barely warm. No one sleeps much in Hitokage District. You ever wonder what keeps a person up?
Miru’s dead brother, Daichi, taught her everything—how to hide fear, how not to blink at ugly facts. Last thing he gave her was a riddle scrawled on a train map before someone made sure he’d never talk again. She wants the truth. Or at least the right name. Half the gang says she’s digging a grave for herself.
A call comes in just before midnight. Koh moves behind her, donut in hand, face already tired. ‘It’s her?’ Miru asks fast, no hello. The lieutenant draws in close. ‘Watanabe Ken, found near Dock 17. Same cards as before. Maybe this one ties up?’ But it’s all just lines and memory again. Everything ties, until it unravels in front of you.
The body’s cold. There’s a coin over each eye and blue marker circling each wrist. Miru scribbles notes with one hand, tracing thin bruises with gloves. ‘Serial’s got a taste for games,’ Koh says. She nods. Daichi’s case files had these odd marks too. Lie or link?

City rain soaks the stone, but Koh lifts a faded sticker under a gutter. Hannya ink, grinning in green. ‘Old Ikeda clan mark,’ he guesses. ‘That outfit fizzled years ago—why leave a ghost sign?’ Miru’s pulse skips. Did her brother follow this too? She turns, lips tight. ‘Anything can stay down till someone wants it pulled up.’
Back in the station, Miru spreads file after file. Lines from Daichi’s riddle loop in her mind: “Doors to nowhere open twice: sunrise, ruins, fraud in plain sight.” Koh gets jittery; caffeine fingers, crowded files. Their analyst, Mayu, strolls in with tea and slides a screen over. ‘Decrypt on the tag. Got a rogue scan—I’d place odds on a fixer using old clan IDs to move stuff that shouldn’t move.’
‘You got a name?’ Miru asks.
‘Maybe not yet. But traffic from the old clan facility spikes every two weeks. Last one was the night after your brother died.’
Her hand draws back like a spring. Should she chase a ghost or trust stats thicker than blood?
Koh tosses her his badge. ‘Don’t go alone. Rules exist for a reason, boss.’ She ignores his warning, pockets Daichi’s riddle, voice harder. ‘This isn’t just stats—whoever left Daichi bleeding by those tracks wants me to find them.’

They slide past silent alleys, between neon and bar shadows. Within a knock-down noodle shop, word comes easy when money slides under the table. Regulars mutter—Ikeda turf shifts twice a month. Blood runs where turf gives.
An old barman gives another shuffle. ‘Girl, Daichi meant well, but tracked something tighter than mob turf. Don’t bottle truth, let it spill. They’ll stop before you want them to.’ She sees tape on the man’s scarred fingers, half his story left unsaid. Has crime ever grown out of rain-soaked cracks? It blooms under the boots that stomp on old dirt.
Miru follows new hints to the old clan base, razor wire rusted out, doors swinging open on empty wind. She feels her brother’s shoes on cold ground. Dust on busted screens turns every footstep into razor questions. Shadows sketch nightmares on cracked windows, and spiders tangle old badges up top.

The lock clicks open with barely a hiss. Inside, evidence piles high as bones, papers under yellow light. Miru snaps photo after photo, adding virtual pins to maps—all leading back to stats lost and names erased. But the tallest chair in the center is still warm.
Voice rasps behind paper screens: ‘That’s far enough, detective. Looks like you know ghosts keep their own doors open here.’ Out steps a boss heavier than crime itself—smiling, undisturbed. Light cuts across Miru’s badge as she steps between paper and truth.
On her phone, Daichi’s chaotic riddle screen now glows bright blue: code flips, unlocking brittle files about paybacks, timelines, city officials with too much dirt on both hands. Too late to run now.
‘So, Miru Sakamoto, how much do you care about the truth?’ the nameless man claims. Violence’s hush tips in, thick as the storm outside. Koh, panicked, is calling on the police net. But Miru shakes her head. She presses record, thumb half trembling.
Cameras outside cut out with soft beeps. Heavy boots shuffle closer. Is this how the truth ends, or does it get written in rain?

The episode closes on Miru’s stunned face, neon light stuttering on a file marked “Project Harrow”—her brother’s last case, and the gang boss’ private ledger. Drops hit the windows. Sirens beg in the mud. Can the dead ever really whisper back?