Whispers Beneath Girasagi Marsh
Prologue: Marsh Secrets
Natsuki Sawa doesn’t sleep well in June. Each night, frogs croak under her narrow attic window, mixing with the low tremor of the fog. This small lakeside town, Girasagi, looks quiet to passing travelers, but the locals have their own old advice. Never step to the edge of the marsh at dusk. Why do rules like this last so long, even in our era?
Natsuki, nearly sixteen, tall for her age but still hiding sadness from two years ago, often hunts alone with her camera at dusk. She shoots swaying grass, ghost-light, and, rare as wind, the Girasagi Heron—ancient symbol of this place.
.That evening, the town’s current has a hush. Natsuki’s best friend, Jun, sneaks by with stolen snacks as the fog thickens. “Found another hollow bone by the water,” Jun says. “Like always. Wanna see it?” It’s clear something’s wrong—he clutches his jacket, and there’s fear in his eyes, the kind that sticks.
Episode 1: Awakenings
The girls head to the fringe. Silver frogs vanish from their path, leaving muddy tracks. A bitter smell cuts through cold damp air. Natsuki glances left. Shadows sway in ways real shadows shouldn’t, almost reaching. Jun snorts. “You scared? She’s always jumpy.” Natsuki pushes on. Her hands sweat holding her camera.
They find the bone. Odd ridges, strangely fresh. Jun pokes it with a stick. They both jump as a shift moves under the grass—a hoarse breath, a ripple, almost laughter. Natsuki’s camera snaps, and they’re sprinting before she can focus with Jun yelling, “Just the wind! Go, go, go!”
That night, Natsuki can’t stop picking at her memory. The photos show thin dark shapes at the marsh rim. Are they just branches? Why does her skin crawl each time she stares at the stillness of the image?
New Fears Surface
The next day, their teacher tells them a boy disappeared after bathing in the river. It isn’t the first time, but most adults don’t say that. Only Natsuki’s uncle, a fisherman missing two fingers, mutters, “Swamp got hungry again.” Jun shrugs it off. “Places eat idiots; it’s the story all towns tell. Want a Coke?” But Natsuki can’t let it go. Are you drawn to dark places—or do they draw you in first?
Monsters Emerge
Dusk again. Jun wants to prove it’s just fish, so they wait at the marsh one more time. Their new classmate, Yuuto, shows up. He’s pale, eyes older than his years. He tells them, “Your phone light doesn’t scare these away. They move underneath words. Especially children’s words.” Natsuki bristles but is silent. What would you have done?
Grass rustles. When the shape rises from the dark, it parts water with no sound. A pale-white skin, strange ridges like a shell. Sharpened fingers. Eyes missing—black caves. Jun gasps. Yuuto reaches out, never blinking, and the air thickens like syrup. 
Fight or freeze? It’s another kind of question. Jun asks, “Is anyone seeing this?” Then every sound gets stripped from the world except their own forced breath. The creature takes a step—limbs folding at wrong points. Natsuki grips the camera, but it won’t click now. What lives in old water doesn’t always want to be seen.
Old Lore, New Resolve
Next school day, Yuuto has a bruise on his arm. He sits alone at lunch. “You want to know its name, don’t you?” he asks quietly. Natsuki hesitates. Old fears, fresh as June’s dew. But she nods. Jun’s face is pale, quiet for once. “I think it whispered to me . . . but not with words,” she says. Later, in the library, Yuuto opens an ancient book with damp curled corners—layers of town scribble stacked on slow yellowing paper. The oldest tale tells: ‘Ken-me-no-o, the eyes-within-a-frond.’
The Investigation Deepens
Over the next four days, the trio hunts more clues. At dusk, Natsuki finds a pendant in the mud—a coin shaped with scratched symbols. It makes her teeth ache to touch it. She brings it to Yuuto. He backs away. “That keeps their hunger close,” he says. Jun? She slips, falls hard on wet rocks, face streaked with slime. Later she gets sick, but doctor says only a common cold. If you’ve ever found a real relic, did you keep it—or bury it again?

Night of the Marsh
The trio sneaks out. Crossing the marsh is like crossing a memory halfway between dream and waking. Ghost-fog hangs so thick they can’t see their shoes. Natsuki leads, Jun follows clutching a broken chain, and Yuuto carries salt taken secretly from home.
The monster rises—this time its jaw unhinges. Shapes roil underneath it; almost faces. Natsuki freezes. “Why us? What’s it want?” Jun’s teeth chatter. Yuuto sprinkles salt—at first nothing, then the fronds shudder. The wind howls without warning, and the fiend shrinks back, but only a little.
Natsuki, voice raw—”My brother disappeared here. Two springs ago. I think I saw him, just for a blink.” The others stare at her. The swamp thing gestures, a curl of pale reeds, and three small shadows—child-sized—cling to it. Natsuki raises her coin, trembling. 
The thing tips forward, its head almost touching the water. First words, strange as the gulls—“Come home quiet, leave loud, or stay forever…” It isn’t a voice; it’s a tangled rush of sound. The friends grab hands. Jun starts to pray, Yuuto climbs to the old dock—and Natsuki throws the coin into the monster’s chest. There’s a flash like ice breaking, then all three are falling, their vision drenched with sound and cold, the world gone slantwise.
Cliffhanger: The Below
As echoes fill their ears, they awaken—not in Girasagi, but below the marsh. Light above turns thin green. All sound’s bent and warped now. Alone on a tar-flecked raft, they’re adrift in a new, wet nightmare. The monster’s shadow skims the water, just out of reach. Footsteps shape ripples—are they alone, or are more lost children trapped down here? Natsuki clutches the battered camera. It shows a heron’s wings marking the way forward, but only if they dare chase the shade.
Are monsters what we see, what we are, or what we fear we might become?
