Moonlit Secrets: The Camellia Case
Synopsis
Takeshi Yagami doesn’t look like a tough guy. He’s slim, always lost in a book, and goes out of his way to skip crowds. Still, he’s the ace of Mitsuba High’s oddball Detective Club. Even teachers don’t know what to do when Takeshi is loose in the halls. He solves lost cats, hauntings, pranks—whatever pops up. What drives him? Four years ago, he lost his big sister to a hit-and-run. No one found who did it, and every riddle reminds him that he might, if he just keeps searching, someday get answers himself. You ever feel that, when people lie, they want someone to challenge them? Takeshi finds it almost every day. Even honest folk mask pain, and he has a soft spot for that.
Tonight, a new job comes down. There’s a Camellia Society event at Tamagaki Shrine. Rumor says that something was stolen—then given back—and now someone’s blackmailing the shrine folks. Can you picture the red camellia petals all over the floor, sharp against the night?
Sachi Genda, quick, sharp, and never afraid to say that Takeshi’s plan is dumb, points at three footprints in the mud. Night breeze rolls her hair across her eyes. “You don’t see this often, Yagami. No pattern to them. It’s like they were dancing, then got caught.” Sota, the youngest of their crew, tugs at Takeshi’s sleeve. “Why bother stealing something and giving it back? That’s weird… what’s the point?” Takeshi just shrugs. “That’s the whole thrill, Sota.
The thief never wanted the thing—to them, it’s about having a secret. Makes you wonder: what secret would be worth it?” Sound odd? Sachi shrugs. “Around here, secrets wear out fast. Only thing sharper than camellia thorns is gossip.” The group goes deeper in, finding kanji scratched under one of the shrine roofs: 椿灯火. ‘Camellia by Lamp-Light.’ Why here? Who would bother?

Up steps a nervous new player—Rei Noro, shrine maiden-in-training, long sleeves tugged almost over her hands. She legs it toward them when she sees Sachi. “I… I don’t know how it happened. I followed the rota as always. I checked if the offering bowl had coins, then—there it was, a packet nearby. Inside? My own childhood scarf, thought lost. With a single camellia stuck in the fold.”
It stops Takeshi. “Return, not theft. Either they’re telling you something, or they want you afraid. Why recall a thing someone lost, just to give it in front of everyone?”
Night unravels. The club works the gossip network—texts from classmates, tiny taped notes under desks, a bit from the snack shop lady. Three nothings turn into a path. Takeshi keeps dreaming of old stories—about the camellia’s first bloom after frost, old tales from the shrine that his sister used to tell.
Back at the shrine, Sachi grins. “People don’t like their histories, but these flowers love them. Over the years, this place isn’t what it was.” You think shrines hold secrets? Takeshi studies the illicit kanji in the rafters and lets this settle. “Someone wants a certain secret outed, but for the right eyes only. They left a sign for those who might care—like us. But there’s another step—they’re waiting for someone to speak up, but what for?”
Sota, chewing hard-candy, snickers. “You looking for the meaning, or you just want sweeter answers?” Old-fashioned candy wrapper flutters down—on it, a scene from Setsubun, demons chased by kids with soybeans. That’s when Takeshi freezes. “Demons wear many faces, Sota. Sometimes they’re not even bad, just lost behind everyone’s legends.”

They review shrine logs, thumb through group photos from before, pin notes and times on classroom corkboards. When they put everything together—who stepped where, which locks were picked, old favors begged for—they find each suspect had some reason. Friends covering for friends, a deal gone sour, new faces shy and worried about old sins.
With each twist, everyone gets their guessing game wrong. Turns out the heart of the story is older pains resurfacing—the Camellia Society only formed around people who suffered recent, quiet loss. Takeshi realizes the thief wasn’t after money, or attention, but forgiveness. They engineered this event to make people talk, open wounds and heal. Does that add up in your school?
The real blackmail is subtle, letters sent to council members—but phrases hint at shared experience. Sachi spells it out, late under dead camellia bushes. “No normal kid comes up with that level of empathy on their own.” Takeshi remembers Rei’s odd silence; she seems trapped by her role.
The crew faces one last twist. Takeshi goes to the one spot nobody visits aside from shrine staff. There, under an old tree, he stumbles into Rei—holding not just camellias, but a list of other ‘lost’ things, all matched to past Society members. This is about more than one loss. As she looks up, eyes wet with worry, he asks, “Tell me—if you could heal one old story, which would you start with?”
The moon throws stripes of light over both. But before Takeshi can press further, a shadow stirs—the one person everyone trusted but never thought to look at: Tamagaki’s priest, stricken and holding a small torn charm. Curtain falls before he says a word, as both Detective Club and shrine staff hear quiet footsteps behind them.
How many secrets can one school—even one town—hide in its long shadow? Who really runs the Camellia Society, and what sacred error are they all still paying for?

The episode ends as Takeshi breathes out, fingertips bleeding from bare camellia thorns. Questions press in, but it just means he’ll be back tomorrow—chasing other mysteries behind the neat facades of small-town life.