Gleam of Pale Resin: The Symbiosis Parade
Synopsis
Akira’s days in Cheharu City used to be slow. On quiet days, you’d hear the air siren and footsteps on wet asphalt. But since the rains started—this nonstop spring, thirty-one days now—the shape of life is changing. Have you imagined what you’d do if your body stopped being your own? How do you act if your skin is a map of something else, and you’re lost somewhere deep in it?
Akira Hajime is seventeen. Mom holds two jobs, dad left ages ago. Grandmother mutters about the past and Duvals—fake animals, made from flesh and resin. Akira’s right arm’s got strange marks, half scars, half shiny like glass.
His best friend Kanon has been sick a week. Doesn’t talk, just stares, body shaking sometimes. At school, Miss Sora, their science teacher, covers their lessons in thick makeup. Do you think it’s to hide wounds or out of habit? What would you ask her, if you saw bits of her skin cracking, shining dull orange?
The Conflict Starts
The incident begins during third period. Lights go out. All body comms drop dead except for Akira. He feels heat in his fingers. Crack. His skin opens at the knuckles. His left hand rearranges, fingers split in twos until he counts ten. Someone starts screaming. Kanon’s at the front—the same thing is happening to her. Silver shapes pushing through her inner wrist. Is pain like this possible?
No one can move, can’t scream, can’t stop it. Deputy Fukuda grabs Miss Sora as her mouth comes apart. Something moves inside, blunt and pale. Akira wants to run, but his feet clamp down, toes fusing, root-like. One question keeps twitching in his skull: how much can you bear before you go mad from touch and change?

Development and Body
The episode keeps its grip on the bodies. Students fall, bone and skin slipping, melting, and rebuilding wrong. Blood streaks the floor and walls in oil slicks. Akira’s mind flicks in and out—he sees through resin-colored eyes. Through those, the hall is a tunnel. People transform: some thin and long, others fuse into one, crawling. Kanon’s eyes hit yellow. She speaks—not her voice: “March in resonance. Give way to the parade.”
Miss Sora is left in a split shape, her arm flaming into branches, while Deputy Fukuda’s hands fuse into masks.
What is the source—disease, sentience, a weapon? Readers and watchers know these bodies aren’t simple cases. The resin gives new life but steals self-control.
Akira alone feels an echo, old words distantly heard from grandmother. In the darkest wrinkle of fear, he calls out with his new hands. “Kanon, you hear me!?” She snaps toward him—a faint, busted smile stays glued to her cracked jaw.

Revelation and Survival
The ‘Symbiosis Parade’ awakens: join or break. Akira sees memories split from inside his eye-sockets. Does he give in, walk with this odd ghost train? Could Kanon’s voice survive behind her altered skin? Each body violation reads as prophecy.
A fight with Kanon ends in a standoff. Akira tears resin branches from his palm—fluid clings honey-sticky. At the last possible moment, Akira sees his ruined eye reflect a word: “HOME?”
Students left still moving join together, words spilling out through new holes in them, the odd verse of the parade.

Unanswered
The last shot comes quick—a cracked mirror, Akira staring into the lens smear of his mangled face, lips half-fused. School still shudders. Is body identity an illusion once the shell gives way? Sirens start up again—unknown squad branches enter. A voice through the broadcast: “Surrender to the resin and you won’t know pain.”
The episode closes as Akira, part himself, part resin, stares down the empty hallway. Did he save himself or lose the fight by holding on? On the wall, red words: LET US IN.

End
Did the city see this infection happening, or did they look away? Who’s in control, and can Akira even claim a name?