Arc – One Lost Echoes
Chapter – One:
A Town Drenched in Salt and Silence
"The sea never forgets the names whispered into its waves. It just waits for you to remember you spoke them."
There are towns that live—and towns that remember living.
Mine was the second kind.
A coastal town pressed flat between the sea and the hills, its buildings softened by wind and time.
The streets were empty again — easier to think. Stillness stretched inside my mind like an echo.
Not in anticipation—but in exhaustion.
Like it had been waiting too long for someone to come home.
I arrived on a gray Tuesday.
The kind of day where the sky forgets how to choose between rain and mist.
Drops gathered on the train windows like the town was weeping in reverse.
I watched the blur of shoreline and tangled rooftops slide past, hands tight around the straps of my bag.
Moving to a place you don’t remember feels like grief.
Even when it’s supposed to be a fresh start.
“Tsukihara Riku,” the teacher read out in a voice too cheerful for the silence it dropped into. “Our new transfer student. Please be kind to him.”
The classroom stared at me the way people stare at old paintings in museums.
Polite.
Distant.
Curious—but not really seeing.
I bowed. “Nice to meet you.”
No one responded.
Not in words.
A few polite nods.
A cough.
Someone’s pencil tapping against a desk like a ticking clock.
Third from the back, by the window.
Of course.
Every transfer student is fated to sit there.
But just before I sat down, I noticed her.
Second row from the end.
Third seat from the window.
A girl.
Hair like falling ink.
Eyes too tired for a face so young.
She didn’t look at me.
But she didn’t not look at me either.
You know that feeling when you walk into a room and you’re sure someone was just talking about you?
That split-second where something brushes your name—even if no one says it?
That’s what it felt like.
Like she already knew me.
Like she’d been waiting.
The rest of the day passed in layers of voices I didn’t care to memorize.
I watched the window instead.
The sea looked different here.
Still, almost frozen.
As if even the tide had grown tired of trying.
It wasn’t until after class that she spoke.
I had stopped in front of my shoe locker, dazed by the number of identical pairs of loafers.
“Your key is the one with the faded green tag,” a voice said behind me.
Calm.
Crisp.
Familiar.
I turned.
She stood with her arms crossed, schoolbag slung carelessly over one shoulder.
“I—sorry. Do I know you?” I asked, blinking.
She tilted her head slightly.
A strand of black hair slipped across her cheek.
“No,” she said.
Then, as she turned to leave:
“But you used to.”
I didn’t move for a long time after she disappeared down the hall.
The air felt heavier than it had before, like someone had left a door open to a memory I wasn’t ready for.
I looked down at the shoe locker.
The key with the faded green tag sat quietly in the slot—exactly where she said.
I didn’t know her.
But my hands trembled anyway.
That night, I dreamed in static.
A mirror stood at the edge of a tunnel.
Fog crept along its surface, and somewhere inside it, I saw a version of me—but older.
Or maybe younger.
Maybe not me at all.
Behind the glass stood the girl from class.
But her uniform was soaked.
Her eyes… distant.
And she was crying.
Not loudly.
Quietly.
Like she was trying not to be heard.
She lifted her hand to the mirror. Instinctively, I mirrored her.
I did the same, instinctively.
And when our fingers touched—though they didn’t, really—I heard her voice.
Soft.
Like breath against glass.
“Don’t forget me this time, Riku.”
I woke up with tears on my face.
And no memory of why.
—————

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