Threads Across The Silent Void
Prologue: Distant Light
It’s always darkest just before the new day. Or so tutors would tell Eita Shiomi, night after night atop the cold domes above Lunar Colony Six. He waited for the sky’s faint blue-shadows, asking why the stars never answered.
Act One: The Unbreaking Code
On his sixteenth cycle, Eita unlocks the blind filter that screens citizen signals. Why shouldn’t he be allowed to decode stray whispers beyond Earth and Moon? It’s against the code, but have you ever wanted to disobey just to feel seen?
His friend Neri, starship data-hacker and member of They-Who-Chase-Storms, dares him one late work watch. Neri taps rough code, eyes bright: “You want to meet aliens? Let’s fish some signals. Idiot.”
He laughs it off—until graphic splines slip alive across his feed like rain on glass. The numbers loop in rhythms, all sharp with intent. No background drone, no natural burst. Neri freezes. Then, she mumbles: “That isn’t moon reflection, Eita. Are you serious?”
Act Two: Signals in Glass and Flesh
Eita hides the data, his hands cold. He’s just a citizen, right? His dream’s not worth the patrol breaking down his door for breach of Exo-contact Law. Yet every scrap of him aches to reach back—to send a word, an image, a proof to show we’re not alone.
Akito, older and smarter, calls their hopes reckless: “What, you’ll tell your grandkids how you started a war? You know protocol.”
Neri disagrees. “If they’re talking, they know us. Isn’t this history in the making? Or’s it about keeping tight lines for those with shiny uniforms?” She pushes. “Change comes from the small—it’s always like this. Or are you too scared?” Eita thinks. Are you?
Act Three: Patterns and Eyes
The trio pick apart the rhythms. They spot structure. Echoes suggest living minds at the source—right down to familiar primes, order stacked in waves. The code grows until it feels like a pressure wrapped round Eita’s brain.
He can’t tell if the shiver at his skin’s edge is hope, or doom.
Days blur into lightless watches. Leaks hit the local net. Users claim more signals. Officials warn the lunar youth against “extraterrestrial daydreams.” Are you listening past the noise?
Act Four: Out of Eclipse
Without warning, new sequence. Face-like; lines curl into what could be writing. Neri overlays it with Eita’s sleep drawings—he sketches the shapes before dawn each day. They’re a match, detail for detail. Neri grins: “How’s your old nightmares linking to this?”
Eita panics. Before he can answer, the cluster’s shield drains as an unknown beacon burns blue above craters. Hundreds across the colony witness first contact unfold in swirls of prime light.

Conflict: What Brings Change?
Officials fence off feed from the masses, declare deception by unnamed parties. But Eita can’t erase the alignment with his own mind. Is there something inside him shaped to answer them—shaped by them, or for them?
Neri refuses to hide. With Akito relaying shadow messages, they stream to quiet, encrypted corners. Kids in ice mines, patched bot-ships, and ruined makeshift rad arrays tune in. They see the signals. They see hope.
Tensions Build
Security closes on their hiding spot; drones flit glass wings under moonlight, night cut with red pin eyes. Neri sets one hand on Eita’s shoulder. “We keep this real. No one locks real away. When they get close, we air the truth—to everyone.” Eita shakes. “Could you do that? Flip the switch, even if we’re first in the crosshairs?” Akito grabs a wrench and a battered comms chip. “Real heroes run last. But maybe we’re third in line? Ladies first?”
Close by, a fresh batch of code bursts in, speaking in two dialects: one, the rhythm of music Eita’s mother played; the other, metallic, remote, tight as wire. Symbols flicker again, just like those in Eita’s head.
Climax: Meeting on the Edge
Under night’s glare, they sprint outside. Colony alarms echo. Pale mist swirls within the main venting yard. Neri’s grip locks round Eita’s wrist. Overhead, the beacons pull into view. Lights hang above a ruined broadcast dish, shivering, as if expecting someone.

Neri shouts into her cobbled transmitter, her breath white: “If you can hear us—show us you’re here!” The answer’s not a signal but a ripple: a shape gliding low behind glass wind. It’s nothing human, but the eyes fix on Eita. He hears static in his teeth, dull and rising: It knows him. He knows it.
Twist: The Missing Years
Eita’s memories sharp: his dreams every year, symbols scored into sleep. The thing carved patterns only a few recall—those marked before birth, past kinfolk lost to plague. Akito speaks soft: “D’you think we’re—call signs, not mistakes?” Are you meant for more, or just in the loop by chance?
Decisions: Truth Unveiled
The alien voice is sudden, deep. No mouth moves—it isn’t like anything seen in books, but the feeling’s there. It says: “Your threads called us, now we bind you too.” The glow pulls closer. No time to run before tremors close round the yards.

Cliffhanger
Sparks crack the scaffold. Neri throws the transmitter. The ship’s pale light cuts a circle below them. Akito shouts: “Eita! Your hand—look!” The lines that match the signal are lighting his skin. He can sense his body filling with unknown presence, alien data fusing deep, burning new pathways through thought and nerves.
Eita reaches toward the light—something answers, not with terror, but calm. Will he let it in, or fight what’s coming? Will Neri or Akito break him free, or must he face it solo?
You ever dream that your whole life’s the start to someone else’s story? What would you do if the truth calls your name?

End Arc: Choose
The episode closes with Eita paused by alien eyes, power crackling along his arm, service drones flocking in panic, officials too late to stop fate. The message is clear. Some doors open—you don’t get to pick what comes through.