Veiled Strings: Shadows of Shinjuku
Veiled Strings: Shadows of Shinjuku
The cold rain falls in Shinjuku. Neon lights flicker. Below them, Tomoya Mizuno, a quiet high school junior, moves among the crowd carrying a torn blue umbrella. His older sister’s sudden vanishing changed everything. People said she ran off. Tomoya didn’t buy it. She’d left a strange black feather in his room, sharp at the edges but light as air.
He didn’t know it yet—he was drawn into something deep. Can’t shake it. Would you keep searching if everyone called you foolish? Tomoya’s drive came from family. If he didn’t push ahead, who else would?
At his side is Hina, childhood friend. Glasses, soft violet hair, loyal to the point it scares Tomoya sometimes. She hides her own scars. On the roof at school, she murmurs, “Are you sure about this, Tomoya?” He gives half a nod. They’re both scared. Is it right to drag friends into secrets that might eat them alive?
That evening, they start stakeouts. Down by a bar called The Bell, Hina’s lens catches a shifty figure. Odd hat, polished boots, black suit out of time. Tomoya scrawls notes in a battered pad. “This man…remember last week? Same symbol by the back door,” Hina whispers. Questions swarm. Who is he? Something sticks out and it isn’t fear. It’s hope wrapping itself in doubt.
Back home, Tomoya can’t sleep. He plugs in an old recorder, flips through recordings his sister once left. Static. Then, a soft voice: “Don’t trust the music box…they watch.” His pulse pounds. Had she tried to warn him? Who’s ‘they’? A dead ringtone hums against his window.
Next day at lunch, Akio—a long-faced kid with jokes for armor—joins. Shadow games aren’t his taste, but he won’t leave his friends in a dark place. Always smiling, Akio mutters, “If we find ghosts, I’m out.” But he grabs his granddad’s camera anyway. Akio wants one thing: to keep laughter in Tomoya’s life. Is light enough?
When classes end, Tomoya, Hina, and Akio slip out early. They tail the man in the black suit to a bookshop he vanishes into. Hina tries a photo. The frame’s empty. That’s no mind trick. Only dusty paper shows in her print. Tomoya sighs. “I bet they know,” he mutters. “Someone or something wiped him out of view.” Images show lost information. Powers far past ordinary rules. 
Things grow tense. Soon, the trio finds signs left just for them: a note in Hina’s locker, drawn in blue ink. ‘Decide by midnight.’ Underneath, a bird pin rests. Some message, warning, or trap?
Hina’s resolve cracks just a bit. “What do they want from us? Why are we worth their time?” Akio fakes a grin. But his hand shakes. Facing the unseeable isn’t what he’d hoped for. Not when boundaries have faded and things hide where you think they’re not.
The team digs deeper, tracing secrets through rainy alleys and fire escapes. Clues tie to more odd groups—soft words spoken in the jazz bar, silver needles sold under the counter, rumors of masked meetings. Are these barely a web that binds all unseen things in Shinjuku?
Space grows thin between new trust and frayed nerves. A public festival starts. Tomoya spies the Black Suit by the lanterns, whispering to a granite-plated phone. Hina says, quiet, “We’re not meant to see this.” Akio pulls away, camera aimed. What’s hiding within the normal crowd? They follow.
They hear weird code words swapped behind a banner: “Strings tied, promises burned.” A clue, maybe. Tomoya slips in behind a tent. Hina mouthing, “Careful.” He brushes past a man, catches the words: “Reformation needs seeds…” Every rule the city runs by feels like it bends.
Night deepens. Lanterns fade out. Then, police at every gate—only not real police at all. Their uniforms seem off. Face masks cover their features, but near the right edge, small, detailed embroidery: black feathers. Hina points. “Is this them—The String Handlers? The group everyone’s scared of but won’t admit exists?”
Tomoya steps forward. Challenges the disguised guard: “We’re looking for Rika Mizuno—five foot four, black hair—it matters!” The masked officer turns, voice smooth, untouchable: “Kids play many games. Some lead to dark woods where not everyone returns.”
Does he sense the threat behind every calm nod?
The Shinjuku alleys twist. Hina drags Tomoya to a side stair. Quiet breath, pounding heartbeats drown out the city noise. Akio curses—rare for him. They aren’t sure if this is panic or a point of no return. 
They get one shot at a guarded hatch behind a waste processing plant. It’s stamped with the same feather the police wore. Akio and Tomoya share a look. “All the clues end here.” “Yeah. You ever feel like turning back, Akio?” He shakes his head, wearing a grim smile. “Better to look dumb with friends than get haunted by guilt.”
The hatch creaks. They slip into darkness, Hina’s flashlight flickers. There, a carved corridor reveals what appears to be an old office room, binder stacks, torn schedules. On the far end, a glass screen rises. Words glow—”Decision makes the Hand.” And spooled wires hang like nerves from the ceiling.
Suddenly, Rika’s voice echoes through small tin speakers. Broken, but there: “Tomo? Don’t follow. Go ho–” Static eats the rest. Tomoya sprints toward the sound, slamming the glass—not breaking it. Anger flipping into dread. He can’t find her but she’s real, trapped in a maze he can’t crack alone. 
At that last moment, monitors flick up. Grainy black-and-white feeds show Rika cuffed to a chair, a woman in dark robes speaking to her. “The new Strings awaken, the old are clipped.” The String Handlers knew Tomoya was close all along.
Lights spark above the group—sessions alarms trip. Doors hiss. Red eyes watch from balloon cameras. Now the trio won’t just chase mysteries—they’ll fight to not be cut loose from the chain forever.
The episode closes on Tomoya’s wide, shaking eyes. “Hina—Akio—promise me,” he whispers, making desperately forced smiles, “no one gets left behind. Not again.” His friends just nod, bathed in the strange red light. 
Will they get out or fall to the game that shapes Shinjuku’s fate? These threads pull at more than lives. What would you do if the unseen city wanted you silenced?