Starfall Drift: The Shadows of Tadashi Gate
Starfall Drift: The Shadows of Tadashi Gate
Genre: Space Adventure / Shonen
Protagonist: Kaoru Hoshino, Age 17, Space Cadet. He’s longs to see his missing older sister again, no matter what. Driven to find answers even when it scares him.
Supporting Crew: Yoshinobu (pilot, loyal), Eira Sato (tech, sarcastic, secretly anxious), Jin Lee (ex-pirate, wildcard, heart of gold), Yuzu (AI, dreamy voice, loves riddles). Allies, but each their own mission too.
It’s deep night on the bridge of the ISS-Arcus when Kaoru jerks up from a dream. The same vision keeps hunting him—his sister Emi signals from a dark rift, her face flickers, lost. Odd, isn’t it, how dreams seem real when space is silent? Kaoru won’t let go now. Yoshinobu gripes, ‘If you stare long enough, the void stares back.’ Yet Kaoru asks, ‘But what if someone’s staring from the other side?’ Do you think he’s right to worry, or nuts?
High command gives orders: map out the uncharted Tadashi Gate stretch, map it, make it routine, ‘Leave ghosts for poets.’ But Eira intercepts rogue signals with fragments of a child’s voice, dead for seven years. It’s Emi’s. Jin chuckles, ‘You sure this isn’t a prank, Boss?’ Kaoru shakes his head, tugging on his late sister’s bracelet. ‘If there’s a chance… even small… we take it.’
The Arcus enters Tadashi Gate, scanners warbling as space clouds swirl. There’s a sudden dark pulse. Rivets scream, alarms whine. Everything shudders, and the ship tugs sideways, like a hand drags it. Yuzu’s voice is a tangled code: ‘Unknown mass. Shapes…everywhere.’ What’s worse, Kaoru is face to face—with a blue ghostly echo, calling his name from the hull’s glass. Would you freeze, or chase the shadow?

Screen flashes: a map of the rift. It warps, then Emi’s face glitches in. Her last real message appears— coordinates, riddles, something about a ‘Door inside Fracture Point, when the stars slip red’. Tension rises. Eira, hands shaking, begs Kaoru: ‘Just—don’t do anything dumb alone.’ Kaoru, stubborn, pulls squad suits as outside hull breaches grow. Shadows slip between the brightness. Yoshinobu armors up, slaps his helmet: ‘Odds this is bad? Like, pirate bay bad, or demon-gate bad?’ Jin smirks: ‘Don’t worry. I brought knives. For ghosts.’
The team splits—Kaoru and Jin spacewalk for data from the bridge panels. Eira stays to stabilize power. Yuzu, terrified but unreadable, works to decrypt the message. Kaoru’s suit cam shivers with ghost-static. Panels near the gate light up: numbers spin, rift grows. Suddenly, all lights go blind-red. Kaoru’s lifeline snaps—his suit spins clear off-ship.

Alone, spinning through rift-haze. Kaoru sees figures—dozens of them—lost crews and fragments of old ships welded with shadow. Emi is there again, her echo closer: ‘Slow down! You’re drifting!’ His breath fogs. ‘You left me last time. Don’t do it again.’ Is it guilt, grief, or unused hope? Eira’s voice goes static—’Kaoru come back!…’ Cut out. Only Yuzu flickers, like a soft lullaby, tracking him on near-lost comms: ‘Look for the green flare. Door inside Fracture Point’. Kaoru stares—riddle clicks. There’s still a way.
Jin, back at Arcus, deploys hooks, counting seconds by heartbeat. Eira tears up at the console, pushing Yuzu’s core till it sparks— ships dying as the rift chews their tail. ‘We’re losing him!’ Yoshinobu curses leadership for sending kids here. The system rebuilds itself by chance—and finds Kaoru’s microbeacon way off map. Jin takes the risk, cuts into suits—cursing—fires line, drags Kaoru in slow, all or nothing.

Inside, Kaoru coughs hard, barely upright. Eira hugs him without speaking. Yet their room looks changed — fractal shadows along every wall. Emi’s child signal is back, instructing next move: ‘Follow the red—find the Sun Heart’. Mission just spiked from scouting to lost rescue—are they chasing a person, or chasing a memory? The ship’s AI can’t tell: what do you think, is she real, or a wish shaped by grief?
In orbit outside, Tadashi Gate twists open into blinding color. ‘One hour until full collapse,’ Yuzu calls soft. No more rewinds, no backups past here. Yoshinobu puts a hand to glass: ‘We make our stand, or no one comes back. Either way, it’s by choice.’ Kaoru faces the crew, jaw set. ‘If you want out, get to pods. But I’m going through that rift.’ Shadows sneak closer, the clock hits halfway, and wild static chaos takes the screen.

Cliffhanger: A transmission bursts through at the final moment—it’s Emi’s true voice, but older, maybe not what Kaoru remembers. ‘It isn’t what you think. Don’t trust the—’ Cut. The screen fizzles, and an explosive shockwave launches the Arcus toward Tadashi Gate’s depths, spinning time, place, and dream into broken glass and starlight. Something’s wrong with Kaoru’s bracelet; there’s signal from inside it no tech can name. The last line: Who, or what, do they rescue past this point? And who comes back the same?