Shadows in the Mirror: The Curse of Hanako Station
Prologue: Whispers on the Rails
The late-night wind brushed through the cracks of Hanako Station. The last train rumbled by, then silence. Most in the city knew about the train girl ghost, but few spoke of her aloud. Mina Hikaru, a 17-year-old student and urban legend devotee, stayed behind. Why chase myths? Mina’s brother, Sato, vanished here last May. So, for her, these were not mere stories—she wanted answers. Do you believe urban legends ever become real if you believe in them enough?
Mina stood by the cold tile, glancing down where the faded fifth yellow line broke by the pillar. Her best friend Kenji yawned, already pulling up streamers on his smartphone camera, their mutual friend Hana rolling her eyes but following anyway. If there’s a thrill in calling out spirits, you don’t always notice something watching from the glass behind.
Chapter 1: The Rule of Three
Mina started filming. Her voice quivered, but not with nerves—she had rehearsed the Hanako Station Ritual a dozen times: close your eyes, step back while counting to five, keep your hand on one mirror panel, and whisper the girl’s real name. Three appease her, one sets her free. ‘Is this for your blog or…for Sato?’ Hana asked. ‘Both,’ Mina muttered. She showed the faded cherry hairpin she’d found after her brother disappeared.

You ever risk a real answer when asking an urban legend for help? Kenji joked, trying not to look spooked. Empty carriages, the shifting wind, distant thumps—it felt set up or not quite right. Hana folded her arms, suddenly grave as Mina placed her palm on the mirror and called the name last written in the forums: ‘Hanako Yumeno.’ A brush of air, dizzy shadows, the glass shook under Mina’s touch.
Chapter 2: Bleed Through
The lights snapped as red as a fever dream. Reality and memory twisted together, and a tunnel faintly shining blue split open beyond the platform. Sato’s voice echoed faint, pleading: ‘Don’t follow her.’ Everyone but Mina went cold as she slipped, snapped forward into the half-lit doorway. Kenji barely grabbed her bag in time. ‘Let go, Mina!’ he called. Hana grabbed his sleeve, steady, whispering: ‘We move together.’ Everything pulsed, the old tracks now leading to a world out of step—a surreal shrine built of train parts and mirrors.

The trio found their hands tangled by the red chiffon ribbon that fell from nowhere. The wind shifted, flitting laughter at their backs. Does every ghost story protect a pain so sharp it still seeks listeners?
Chapter 3: Faces in the Reflection
Deeper in, the trio faced countless statues—all modeled on the missing, eyes covered by painted glass. Spotting Sato’s sweater on one, Mina tugged, but the glass burnt her palm. A girl’s laughter—the tone old, not mocking. Hanako’s real voice? An old school cassette played from nowhere: boys’ feet, sobbing, the thud of something thrown beyond the tracks.

Kenji fumbled for his lighter, feeling a chill as his own face flickered over the sculpture’s cheek. When Hana called to Sato, the air rippled and broke—the shrine melting back towards the station as alarm bells wailed in broken rhythm.
Chapter 4: The Fare Collector
A flicker, a train horn. In the fogdrift, a monstrous shadowed conductor hunched along the rails—face obscured by lacquer mask, paper fare slips hanging from his cuffs. He croaked: ‘You invoked, you’ll pay. One soul stays each crossing, always.’ Mina’s grip on her brother’s pin turned white. Kenji and Hana stood fast. If you had to risk yourself for one pulled away by a legend, would you step forward?

Mina bargained for Sato’s release, offering up her knowledge—and her memory of Sato’s laughter. But Hanako intervened. The girl with tragic eyes begged: ‘Is there no forgiveness? Must each story consume a new sorrow, again and again?’
Cliffhanger
A shudder through the glass, the whole barrier between alive and taken breaking. Mina reached through—just as Sato’s outstretched hand caught hers. Lights flashed. Kenji screamed. Blood streaked wordlessly along one mirror panel. A name, half-written, sizzled between. Somehow, one had to remain behind, but who would choose?