Veil of the Lotus Court: Shadows Beneath Sakuragaoka
Synopsis
The arc starts on a humid night in Tokyo. Riku Itsuki, a 17-year-old with sharp eyes, slips from his tiny rooftop into a shadowy street. He stares at a strange glyph etched in soft, chalky lines. He leans closer, whispering, “You’ve been waiting for me, right?”
Riku has always known there’s something hidden behind the comfort of daily life. For weeks, odd marks keep popping up near his school. He wants to know why he’s the only one who notices. Isn’t that weird to you? Who decides what we’re allowed to see?
The city air pulses with rain. Riku’s friend Mika chirps over his phone, “You watching for spooks again, Riku-kun?” She laughs, but Riku sounds so sure now. “It’s not a ghost. Someone leaves these signs for a reason. The Lotus Court, Mika. I read it on an old blog post.”
She snorts. “A fake cult, right?”
Riku frowns. “Maybe. But spooky things started the same day Fujihara-senpai vanished.” He missed that lively upperclassman. Most kids still guessed Fujihara just skipped school, but Riku heard something that night, down near the train crossing.
Looking for clues, he teams up with Hack, an odd but clever classmate who’s nuts about puzzles. Hack claims there’s code hidden in the markings, if anyone knows how to break it. At lunch, Hack stirs his soup, muttering, “That’s standard Vigenère. Run it as kana, though.”
Shu, the quiet new transfer, watches with sad, dark eyes. He never joins in at first. But it feels like he’s always listening, taking extra notes. Why does Shu carry that tiny notebook?
That week, they crack the final cipher. The message points beneath the old Komure Shrine. It’s not a normal shrine—no one ever prays there. Why?
So at dusk, Riku, Mika, Hack, and Shu go together. Thunder cracks as lanterns rattle below the shrine steps.
“Promise me—if it’s really dangerous, we leave,” Mika says.
Riku answers, “We always do. Besides, Hack’s got escape routes.”
Inside the dark wood, candle flames show a symbol: three lotus petals curling up from a circle. It’s the same sign—the mark of something people learned to ignore. Is there fear in what gets hidden?
From the screens, from under old paint, silent eyes seem to follow them. It’s gone now: the line between their old world and this other place. They follow the secret stair to a stone room. Walls glow with chants scratched in five languages.
Out of a torch’s soft glow, a woman stands, her old kimono marked the same as the shrine.
“You sought truth,” she says, her voice steady and calm. Shu grips his bag. “All of you did. I watched Riku since childhood—always peeking at secrets. The Lotus Court dislikes being watched. We only let the worthy see.”
Mika steps back. Hack mumbles, “Who are ‘we’? What happens next?”
The woman pulls a scroll. Lotus seeds scatter in her palm. “You gamble with memory if you want to belong. Only one who can let go of each answer moves forward. Is that you, Riku?”
He weighs her words. They’re nothing like threats he saw on screens. Just facts. His voice is rough. “I need to know why you hide everything. Someone’s stealing kids—in plain sight.”
She sighs. “Look deeper. It’s not a kidnapping. It’s a test. Those names? They’re gone. But they passed through kaseitai: the half world. It reaches into dreams and banishes doubt. Would you stay or return if reality failed you?”
Riku’s hand is cold. He tries to push back. “I won’t walk away if people are vanishing. I pick the tougher road. Keep your offer.”
Shu whispers, gaze sharp now, “Isn’t the price too much—your own feelings, your mind? How do you rebuild after?”
Uneasy, Riku looks at his hands. They tremble. He won’t show fear, but he’s not calm, either.
Power flickers—red vines snake across the floor. Their leader holds the scroll out. “True entry isn’t forced. Cross over if you trust your own limits. If you doubt, turn now.”
The others tense as if they’re on a cliff, night sliding down Tokyo’s forgotten roads.
Which would you pick? Safety in not-knowing or open doors into the dark where some truths cost you everything?
Nothing’s smooth. Voices overlap. Hack shoves his codesheet into his sleeve. Mika snaps, “I’m not a pawn in some test! Shu, what do you choose?” Shu grips that notebook tight; his own tears seem close. So many layers, none easy to peel.
In the last instant, a distant bell chimes. The light shifts. The woman stoops close—only Riku holds his nerve as roots and seeds flicker at his shoes.
Blackness. Then noise: a door cracks open, heavy and slow.
New light shows another space, colors run in lines, unknown writing crawls over ancient screens. Through the haze, someone steps forward. It’s Fujihara, alive—and different, like dream and flesh don’t quite match. She looks at Riku.
“Welcome to the Court, Riku.” Her voice is sad, but her smile’s real.
Do secrets matter if the price is yourself? What would you pay for truth?
On the soft edge between two worlds, the veil won’t lift. The episode stops there, trembling with new questions, shadows near every step.