The Clockmaker’s Shadow: Night Whispers in Fukagawa
Prologue: Late Autumn Rain
The rain fell thick and dark across Fukagawa as streetlights blurred behind cold glass. The hour crawled closer to midnight. Seiji Tanaka sat at his battered desk, flipping a silver coin between his knuckles. Old habits die hard, right? He used to despise silence. Now, it’s company.
He pressed the weathered wooden radio. Static popped, then faded. The new case was one he shouldn’t take, yet here he was, alone past midnight, a ‘supernatural consultant’ for those desperate and brave enough to call. What would you have done?
Part 1: The Client Arrives
Glass shattered in the rain-lit hall. A slim form hurried inside. She wore stiff hospital slacks, thin hair pinned back, shoulders tense. Her voice came brittle, like wind through a cracked door.
‘You’re Tanaka-san? You solve unusual things?’ His nod made her sag, her grip on the mystery deepening.
‘My name’s Natsume. Something’s in my brother’s shadow. It’s strange, but I can’t explain it. People think I’m mad. But you solve… these things. Please.’
Seiji spun the coin. Trusted his gut. ‘Maybe. But what if you really are?’
Her eyelids fell. ‘Then at least I’ll know.’
Her tale came out one piece at a time. Daigo Natsume, ICU nurse, hasn’t left home in two weeks. Windows all covered. Screams at mirrors. Even his own shadow. But no one else sees a thing.
‘Shadows moving on their own… That’s what you mean?’
She nods. So softly you almost miss it.
Part 2: Ghosts on Anago Street
They walk the wet streets, lanterns bobbing past faded grocery booths. Seiji leads, voice kept low between thunder taps. ‘Anything?”’
Ayumi, his silent apprentice, rides close at his back. Pale-eyed, book in hand. Only answers in gaps: ‘I smell white camellia. But that flower died here, again and again.’ Creepy, yeah?
They reach the Natsumes’ home. The smell hits first: old damp cloth, lemon and metal. Locked rooms, flicking shadows, and something watching the glass from below. Daigo hides upstairs, sharpening a bone-handled razor against his windowsill. Tanaka studies his face in trickling gray. Daigo’s shadow wavers apart from the shape of his body. Viewers at home—do you see it too?
Part 3: Consultation and Revelation
Night weaves slow. Rain stops. ‘Daigo?’ Tanaka leans in from the hall. ‘I’m here to help. Don’t bite.’
No answer from the gloom, only grinding steel on steel.
‘It’s been there six days,’ Daigo croaks. ‘Every night when I sleep, it grows bigger. Yesterday, it whispered my name.’
Tanaka kneels near. Taps carefully with the silver coin.
Ayumi’s waterglass starts to frost as Daigo panics aloud, his shadow creeping along the wall, growing cold black roots into the cracks above.

‘Shadow yokai?’ whispers Ayumi. Tanaka shrugs. ‘Or an echo of grief. Yuri’s Guide—page 87. Banished only when someone remembers daylight.’
Someone outside cries, a rabbit torn by a stray cat, and Daigo covers his ears, rocking fast. For a while, no one moves. Even the air tenses around them all.
Is the shadow devil, or something lonelier? What do you think?
Part 4: In the Flickering Light
The next day, Seiji returns, Ayumi with a stack of old case records. They set up a trick: candles in six corners, deer bone one side, seawater another. The goal is to cast the shadow in front of every eye, to pin it so it slips. Yet the shadow slits and swims.
‘Speak your safe day,’ Seiji urges.
Daigo tries, voice rough. ‘I sat outside a train station five years ago with her… We laughed while children kicked autumn leaves.’
The shadow creeps, but slows.
Ayumi flips pages in her book. ‘Remember sun. Use it.’ She nods at Seiji, who tilts an aging metal mirror until pale, low sunlight slides in. The shadow on the floor shudders, lines ripple. For one breath, no one blinks.
Part 5: The Breaking Point
Natsume (the sister) pushes inside, tears cut at her cheeks. ‘Can we help him, not just burn ghosts?’
Tanaka stands, gaze tired. ‘Saving means not letting go until shadows trust you. That doesn’t always go well.’
Natsume sits next to her broken brother, reaching through shadow to touch a real hand. Her fingers pass through cold wet. The yokai flops and arcs upward, starting to speak drifts of human words. Its shape is Daigo’s, but wrong. Eyes like obsidian, mouth a stitched wound.
Case File: Fudo Yokai
Ayumi reads: ‘Fudo shadows form in deep loss. They heal by returning true things: warmth, a story, shared bread.’
She puts down the book and tries—quiet comfort, no spells. She nods, hopes any word sticks. Do you think kindness will do what force can’t?
Part 6: Seiji’s Gamble
The group gathers for the last try. Ayumi starts a cleansing chant, Natsume whispers tragedies and her brother’s names.

Seiji talks over it all. ‘Let the shadow stay as long as you’ll feed it light, not gloom. If you run, it eats more. If you listen closer, some monsters sleep.’ Kind advice or risky foolishness?
Faces blur beside candles. Slowly the living, the shadows, begin to blend. The home’s walls shudder with heat. Daigo sobs, but the shadow lifts from the floor in a loop of ghost-smoke. It shifts, turns small, then falls like a soft cloth beside him. A shape almost forgotten, but peaceful. Light from dusk pours over all. No more screams. Not yet.
Cliffhanger
Natsume thanks them as the three leave. ‘How do we know it’s gone forever?’ she mouths.
Tanaka doesn’t answer at once. The rain has stopped, but new screw-shaped shadows corkscrew up behind him, licking the emptied path back home.
‘Nothing supernatural ever goes for good,’ Ayumi sighs, eyes tight. Seiji just grins, coin bright in the blue streetlight, his own shadow a little longer than his frame. Is every mystery really solved, or do the curious just rest for a while?

Epilogue: Glass and Echoes
Back at his desk, Seiji reads notes and breaks a smile. He records the date: November 14. Another file full. Yet, from the street, someone stares at his office again… and their shadow’s all inky teeth.

Think they’ll make it through the next case?