The Midnight Canvas
Prologue: Brush Strokes of Guilt
In rain darker than pitch, Minato Akasora runs down Ninth Avenue, splashing past flickering neon signs. Tonight there’s a crowd in the back alley near Midori’s old paint shop. White tape. Blue lights. Police buzz with words nobody tries to make sense of yet. Something’s gone wrong at the art guild. Do you feel every chill down your back when something sacred is desecrated?
Minato doesn’t belong there, but can’t walk away. Not tonight. Behind police tape lies his best friend’s mural, sliced, still dripping, a spray of black marks over Yui’s famous cranes.
Chief Tsugihira sums it up, low, tense: “Another message left in crimson.” Officer Kanna curses. “That free-run tagger again? He’s been everywhere, but it’s getting heavier by the night.” Minato thinks about Yui, gone missing a week ago. Is this connected to her, or just another urban ghost? This streets may hide more than skillful hands. Question is, who has the guts to face it?
Act I: A Trace of Vermillion
Morning. Minato meets Kanna at the Akasora flat. Still rain. She passes him a photo under plastic—the mural cut with strange runes, the floor spattered. A playing card stuck in the paint. The ace of clubs. Who leaves a calling card like that?
Kanna: “We checked shoe prints. No dice. This artist isn’t clumsy enough to get caught by cams—uses back entries, clever cuts. Think it’s related to Yui, Minato?” He doesn’t reply right away. Instead, he presses the card between his fingers. There’s something off in the corner. Embossed letters. A secret code? Have you ever missed a vital detail just because your mood blocked your focus?
Act II: City Canvases and Hidden Codes

Rain thins by midday. Minato tracks the card. What kind of gallery lists entries behind an ace symbol? There are four street artists nicknamed in police logs—all tied to the same style. Rikuro, “Red Lion,” famous in Kanda for smart mapping and parodies. A quick chat at the grind café gives more: Lion’s been locked up all Sunday, solid alibi. The next? Hanako, code-name “Cloud,” notorious for no fingerprints left. Her signs get hazy—no clear clue.
He meets Miyu, Yui’s shy old classmate. She clams up, but an envelope shifting in her pocket gives her away. She hands it in silence—a street map covered in paint flecks, a mark set by a single feather. He smiles and nods. She shivers. “Saw her on South Market Road, four days ago. She was talking to someone. Tall, long hair. Face in shadow. She looked scared, Minato.”
Around dusk, he goes to South Market. An old street cam caught a flash—girl running, man chasing—faces blurred. He zooms into coat markings. There it sits again—the ace card, peeking out of the pocket. Two marks beneath: double dots, side by side. Coded names maybe. Or a gang symbol. Buttons or eyes? Or a countdown?
Act III: The Pursuer Revealed
Tsugihira leads the night search. There’s a brief talk off-record: Kanna, the city fox, Minato, too stubborn for sleep.
“Yui got close to something. An auction,” she says. “Someone’s selling fake IDs and stolen works together—used to pay old debts from art-text crimes last spring. One buyer stands out. That new collector, silent, black shirt.”
“Mr. Madoka? Did you check out his place?”
She laughs bitter: “Try getting a warrant.”
Back in the midtown art club, the gang draws up a weak plan: get inside Madoka’s stash showcase. Minato offers to break in as decoy. Kanna looks worried, “If we get caught, you’re toast, Aki.”
He changes the plan. Half bluff, half hope, just like always.
Act IV: Double Motive

Shadow fall paints Midori street anew. A cloaked figure stands near the gilded glass. Madoka claims he’s got no rare works to sell, but everyone’s seen his new mural flash in private. Watch close—he always keeps his back turned when possible.
Minato creeps along an upper gantry. Gripped by memory, Yui loved flying birds in paint more than food or sleep. Sudden heel noise downstairs. Kanna’s whisper: “It’s him.”
Madoka approaches with phone in hand, gesturing quick. Out the window of view, Minato glimpses pale blue hair—Yui’s color. She’s alive?
Madoka talks to her in sharp syllables: “That last mural—erase it for me. It’s bait. You owe the auction.”
Yui, trembling, “I…can’t. That mural’s hope—for everyone who passes.”
Have you ever felt one painting carried your dreams?
The police pounce from hiding. Madoka slams the desk. Everything spirals. Minato leaps down, pins Madoka at the knees, Kanna cuffs him. “Lots of smoke, little fire, collector.” Yui runs but trips, hands streaked with oil black. She hugs Minato. “I’m sorry. I tried—just…didn’t work fast enough. Can you believe I still love painting after all this?” He doesn’t answer except with a grin.
Act V: One Card Remaining

A new morning. The stolen works are back in the guild. Kanna holds out the deck. There’s still a single card left. The joker. Marked, with a drop of red. The final clue?
“The whole deck’s a puzzle, isn’t it?” she asks.
“Looks like more crimes are coming.” Minato scoffs, nodding. “Who’s the joker in this crew?” For now, Yui’s safe, but everyone knows the city hides its wildest colors for another chase. Ever met trouble so sly, so clever you respect its style?
The rain returns, painting the city in streaks. Fade out as Minato gazes forward—the hunt, and the brush, never end. Next step is cloak and alley. Is the true mastermind still inside the guild?

End on a Razor-Edge Cliffhanger
A mysterious photo lands on Minato’s doorstep the next day. It shows the whole crew asleep, someone standing by the window, masked, with a bleeding joker in hand. “Next move is yours,” reads the scrawled note. An old rumor stirs about copycat hands in the city. Who plays by design, who follows by shadow? Cut to black.