Ashes of Tokyo: Upon Braided Wires
Synopsis
An iron sky holds the strangled light. Smog draws lines across Tōkyō, turning everything gunmetal. The year is 2185. Scraps of flags stuck between buildings speak about protests lost long ago. Have you ever wondered what makes someone risk the last bit of hope left in a city eager to eat its own?
The story fixes on Naoko Kirisawa, a restless coder barely past sixteen. Her brother was taken by Ordinance last year. Since then, sleep comes slow. She clings to an old radio—not because she believes the whispers, but because on some nights, it’s all that stops her from giving up. In this wrecked city, wires hang down like roots.
Doubt lives beside anger inside Naoko’s chest. With friend and hacking partner Yori, who’s all edge and nervous jokes, she follows rumors about ‘Ghostwalkers’: a hidden network pushing back against Mitsukai Corp’s city-wide CCTV mind net. Mitsukai’s eyes, everyone calls it—they see blinks, breaths, the simple shake of a hand. They don’t see courage. Isn’t that strange?
As the episode unfolds, Yori brings news: Site-12, deep under District Echo, will get a firmware push tonight. If anything’s real, Ghostwalkers will strike. Yori asks, “Why did you say yes to this?” Naoko’s answer is a grunt. “Don’t you want your family back?” she adds, low.
The pair inch through shadow by metro rails lined with graffiti no one remembers painting. Every voice shushed, even rats jump at their steps. Have you felt that pounding in the ears, when you’re so scared you talk just to hear something? 
Down near Machinery Row, Nanju waits—a Street-clerk at the edge who scouts drone loops for would-be rebels. Her arms are marked: small, pink lines dodge the big grey ones. Bandages slip as she types. Naoko catches Nanju’s quiver but says nothing. In dystopia, even smiles become secrets.
“You’re late,” Nanju mutters. Naoko palms a square chip, holds it out. Quiet click—debt paid. They slip through fencing lashed with plastic, crawl down, boots finding rungs. Each movement heard above ground becomes just another ghost-blip here. Site-12 creeps open, cables pulse blue.
Inside the terminal room, dozen-server pillars hum. Ghostwalkers’ logo—a snapped circuit—lives on both main screens, wavering. Gear-check time. Naoko meets Shin, ‘the Old Man’, hunched over code and bitterness. Is it fear, or just another mask?
Security sirens! No introduction. Mitsukai’s wardens are late by nanosec, yet fast enough. Everyone steps in. Engaged in banter sharp as glass. Yori: “Bet ten credits, I’m first out.” Naoko: “I’ve only got documentation on hope.” Odd thing, dark laughter echoes louder here.
As chaos blooms, Shin hands Naoko a ribbed data stick—key to a control core higher up. He says, “See the truth for yourself. Don’t let them own your name.” There’s no warmth in the way he smiles.
Outnumbered, the rebels split. Nanju leads Mitsukai’s crew on wild data noise—sharp hacks hold out seconds. Naoko, alone now, gropes straight up a grease-lined shaft, knuckles bleeding in the dark. Her radio dings alive. It’s her brother’s old tune—just two stifled notes. Is it a clue? She gasps, tank-empty, then grits teeth and climbs. Hello, dear reader, would you chase a ghost if it sang from somewhere beyond reach?
Sunrise never cuts the dust here but hope does. Naoko hits the hatch as boots thunder below. She wrings open the vault, ready to load the full truth. One screen knows her mother’s birth name. Another lists every face the network’s marked: infants, old, and the gone. Her own eyes meet hers on the last line.
Before the data uploads, Naoko turns. Door clangs. Warden chief Yu stands framed by blinking reds. Razor-voice: “Were you quick enough, girl?” The air goes tight.
Naoko looks at the room. She tosses the data-stick into the relay. Lights flare, screens begin to spit images across the ruined city. A countdown starts. Fade to black, just as Yu raises his stun baton. Will truth spill wider or snap short in fear?