Moths in the Silent Sky
Synopsis – Moths in the Silent Sky
Kai Fukami didn’t plan to be a hero. No one did after The Stillness wiped the city into emptiness, snuffing out every machine and almost every soul.
People ask: What would you hold onto after the end of things?
Kai has one answer. Find his missing sister, Riko. Even under the looming shadow of the strange White Quiet that drifts over broken streets, that’s enough to pull his boots on every morning. His hope is small, stubborn, almost hungry. That’s his spark.
He’s not alone for long. Sato, who always has his cat with him, says the smiling streetlights know when you lie. Yui can fix almost anything. Give her wire and an old radio, she cycles the static until a real song gets through. The last to join is Nakamura. Her eyes see cracks the Others hide within. Do you think faith matters when the world breaks down?
The city aches with odd sounds. Shadows gather at dusk. There are moths: they move in blue waves above flooded trains, never landing, always writhing. Kai notices—his ragged breath, wide eyes, hard grip on his toy knife from before. Can he save anything at all?
Tonight, a broadcast rasps from a hacked kiosk, mangled but clear: “BELOW THE REST STOP – RECORDS IN THE DARK ROOM – WATCH THE WING.” Just static after. Is that a real lead?
“That voice!” Yui jerks close to the speaker.
“It’s Riko. I know it… I’d know my sister,” Kai stammers. Yui’s grip goes white-knuckle. Sato drops chips at his toes, uneasy.
They start down rumpled alleys, thick with a wet hush. Past shattered glass towers, past motionless rows of people graven in salt, eyes buttoned shut with threads.
What will be left for them at the old rest stop?
Kai fears the Others will find them; pale bodies, eyes blacked, whispering inside the walls. This journey isn’t for secrets. He knows each wrong step could cost everything. Yet his foot falls steady on the wet ground.
The group is quiet as they reach the ancient cafe crammed below street grade. Down rough steps, the roof damp where water drips, drafting letters on plaster. Every sound crackles. Tomorrow hangs heavy in the air.
Yui sets down her bag. She flips shimmering radios open, their panels cut with insect wings. Nakamura hums a prayer; moths beat at the windows, restless, in slow coded waves. Does anyone else see shapes between radio noise? Maybe you would.
The basement is a swamp of memory. In thick dark, dust catches every scare. Kai brushes by ghost mirrors scribbled with rotten ink. They’re here, promised by static.
Below, nine doors. Not doors, not really—holes edged by wire and something black, cool to the touch. For Riko, he’d open every one.
Behind the last, nothing at first. Then a hum, and a blue light spills in sharp slips over records stacked on a child’s chair. Sato whispers, shuffled cards back in his hands.
Kai tenses—are these all that’s left of hope?
The second he touches an envelope marked “For Kai. “, a chill slides over his spine. The walls gather and flicker. He pulls the note with care. Folded pages seem alive. There’s a moth-wing pressed warm-flat inside, like fever, like sun.
Riko’s voice begins in the hush: “If you find me, don’t look up.”
A siren spins. Each light in each crackle-blue device swings to thin yellow. Steps above them—someone outside? Maybe the Others. Or maybe just a taste of what’s next.
Kai holds the note. Yui backs to the far wall with a gasp. Shadows in moths dance like stories all around them, patterns scrawled on skin. Will any of them hear the answer in time, or is this final truth? If you had to pick—go through the last door, or hide until the sirens fade?
In the end, everyone must face the silent sky. That’s where Kai stares as the hatch monkeys open and moths pour in, covering everything in velvet dark.
Next episode: Riko’s message. What does it mean not to ‘look up’—and what lives above the city, watching in all that White Quiet? 