Wild Nightfall: The Disappearing Path
Wild Nightfall: The Disappearing Path
Miyu Shimada pushes back wild hair, feet bare against leaf-litter. She glances at the map, frowning. Is it north? Or is compasses lying here? ‘Scout Team, regroup at oak marker! Now!’ she calls. The order is clipped, nerves showing even though she hides it well.
She isn’t alone in these silent woods. Kei, her boldest friend, huffs. ‘Path’s not here, Miyu. Weren’t we just at that weird boulder?’ Saki stares at tracks in wet earth. ‘This isn’t right. Everything looks scarier after dark,’ she whispers, shaking. No one laughs. What would you do, stuck where signs twist and vanish as the sun slides away?
This isn’t dropped-off city punks: they all chose this trip. The Survival Club trains for weeks to camp, climb, take on the wild, and prove themselves. Miyu signed up hoping to shake her parents’ doubts after failing her entry exams. Her pride burns below every word. She drags the group slower as the last pale sun slips behind pines. ‘Stay close,’ Miyu mutters. Yet the trunks all look grayer, less like shelter. Where did those chalk marks vanish?
The woods start to shift, or do they? Steps crunch dead leaves behind the group when no one should be there. Is it just nerves? Toma, silent as always, meets Miyu’s eye as he scans around. ‘Something’s wrong, chief. We circled—but it’s not the spot we’d marked.’ How long since they saw their campfire light?
Nobody confesses fear, not at first. Each one quietly counts supplies: almost-empty canteen, one dim flashlight, spare rice ball. Would you risk extra shouting to call for help? Or move ahead with the squad?
Miyu frowns—her dad’s voice from last week rings in memory: ‘If you see a path, make sure you can also find your way back.’ Paths don’t just walk away. Looking past roots, she spots it. A boot print. Deep. Isn’t that Saki’s left boot? But they haven’t gone this way before. 
Kei shoves forward. ‘Fine, you convinced me. Something is off. Gimme the flashlight.’ Saki squeezes Miyu’s arm tighter. Her breaths are short and loud. Toma edges ahead, calling, ‘Better stick together.’ But their phones flicker out the second screen is raised higher into the cool, black wind. Every trick fails. No bars. Even the compass flips, twitching in crazy loops.
Minutes crawl by in a quiet struggle. Miyu tries to mark an oak with her own scarf, tying it tight so the fabric flaps. She’s already lost one marker. Washed away? Or did it walk off with the shadows? Kei stomps in a wide arc, searching. Do you ever get the feeling someone is watching right behind your ear?
Sudden thump—a branch falls close enough to sting. Saki muffles a scream with both hands. ‘It’s fine,’ Toma says, tone clipped. He doesn’t really believe it either. Leaves flutter again, yet air hangs heavy, tasting almost sour. Is the wood itself resisting their hopes? Or is there a logic here she needs to see?
As night deepens, each tries to guess what’s hiding among the trees. Are those shadow figures moving? Miyu starts to count distant bats, or are they hands? The line between sense and panic dizzies her. Her mind drags up an old tale an uncle once told: disappearing trails, old spirits punishing trespass, places where the woods themselves decide who leaves.
When wind picks up, something changes. The flashlight cuts a dying loop across cedar trunk. Carved. Something fresh, jagged. Three slashes in the bark, and then a spiral. Not one of theirs. Toma points: ‘We didn’t make that. It wasn’t on the tree before.’ 
Questions pile. Saki sniffs back tears and tries her phone, to no use. ‘That’s not how phones die, right? It was fine before we left the ridge,’ she says, half argument, half plea. Kei whispers sharp: ‘Has anyone else heard footsteps out there?’ He doesn’t mean animals—they all know that chill.
They dare not rest. As midnight settles, hungry, aching feet move forward. Step, pause, stare, spin. Trees look even less like cover; odd shapes latch onto every branch, moonlight slicing through. Yet they have no better plan. Miyu calls sudden halt. She forces her voice solid. She grabs a small stick. It helps just to hold something.
‘Let’s make a real fire, right here,’ she says. The shadow things, if they’re there, don’t seem to cross flame. Kei and Saki nod. Toma finds a dry stand of moss. Why do little rituals soothe fear so well? Have you felt safe around fire after fear seeps in? 
In fire’s flick, faces harden. Saki’s hands shake as she sets kindling. Kei alerts: ‘Miyu, should’ve brought extra lighters. We’re down to one.’ There’s silence as the flame winks on, flickers, wavers — catches at last. Light and shadow clash. From distance, crackle resumes. Do those tree markers shift closer?
Voices start — faint, between flame pops. A girl’s laughing cry? Or just wind? Toma readies a stick for defense. Kei tries a weak joke about haunted woods, gets nothing but glum. Should they sit together for dawn, or watch for help that never comes?
Miyu tries to pull herself out of a spiral. Her goal now: get her team through the night alive. Her dream about school seems far away. But is the biggest threat: hunger, darkness, or the change in woods? Skeptic in her insists it’s a trick of fear; her mind keeps wondering. How can path after path vanish behind them?
Creeping light edges up through leaves. After endless hours, hope lands. Or is it just more trickery? Up near an old fallen cedar, someone has left a clean, fresh plastic bag hanging. Brand-new. With a note. Who could—who would—leave supply drops out here, with not a foot of cell service, no tracks but their own? 
They freeze. Miyu reaches for it, but Toma holds her back. ‘What if it’s a trap? Or poison, or some test?’ he says, voice dead serious. Saki, still shivering, steps behind the rest, almost crying. There’s no answer yet—just a pale dawn and a plastic promise. Miyu’s hand wavers. When she finally moves, her eyes focus: inside, something glints, wrapped in foil. There’s writing on the bag. It’s her own name, in neat marker.
Just as Miyu breathes sharp, a new sound tears from behind. Crack—then a man’s sung voice, deep, near, laugh beneath breath. Branches rustle. Clay mask, featureless, appears above brush in the faint light. He steps forward, calm. ‘Lost your way, Miyu?’
Cliffhanger cuts—team frozen as the dawn traps them, forced to ask: who knows their names, who marks paths, and what happens next time they try to leave?