The streets were silvered with mist. Shops just stirring open. The air smelled of rising dough and burnt soy—bakeries humming to life between crying toddlers and distant radio static.
He stood beneath a flickering streetlamp, frowning at the motorcycle. The engine had died three blocks back. Not the chain. Not the battery. Something more slippery. And he didn’t like that. He liked this neighborhood even less. Too lived-in. Too soft. Too many signs of people who hadn’t been broken yet.
He left the bike by the curb. The bell above the bakery door gave a flat little chime.
“You again,” the girl behind the counter said. Not annoyed. Just… unsurprised.
He paused. The bike—a matte-black BMW S1000R—sat behind him like a threat nobody understood. Scratched, but kept. The kind of machine that looked stolen even when it wasn’t.
She spotted it through the window and lit up. “Wait—that’s yours?” She came around the counter like a wave cresting too fast. “That’s a beast. What year?”
He didn’t answer. Just took the usual seat: back to the wall, eyes on the door. Gloves off. Coat damp from the fog.
“Silent types always eat weird things. Must be a rule.” She grinned. “Today’s experiment is weird even by my standards. Want to try?”
No reply. She returned with a plate. “Rye, earl grey, candied orange. With lemon butter.” She set it down gently. “You probably won’t like it. But worse things exist.”
The bread looked like something a geology student might misclassify—cracked, dense, accidental. He stared. Then took a bite. It was strange. Sharp. Soft. Alive.
She glanced over, careful not to seem like she was waiting. “How’s the bread?”
He didn’t blink. Just said, “Orange fights the lemon.”
Nami nodded once. Not defensive. Not agreeing either. “Balance is boring.”
She sat down, not facing him, and pulled a paper towel from her apron pocket to wrap another slice. “Besides,” she added, almost to herself, “they were meant to clash.”
Then she started humming—quiet, tuneless, maybe familiar. Something old. Or made up. The kind of melody that didn’t ask to be heard. He didn’t say anything else. But he didn’t stop eating. The light shifted behind the window. Fog lifting. A quiet gold edging into the blue.
For a second, he thought— maybe the mission could wait. Just a little longer. But that kind of thinking got people killed. So he pushed it down. Didn’t look back.
The organization had gone quiet lately—still licking its wounds from the hit six months ago. Cicada said it was strategy. He figured it was weakness. She still wore the mask like it meant something. Believed in the cause—topple the system, reclaim identity, whatever it was this year.
He hadn’t joined for ideology. He joined because they had Stabilin. No one else had called. Now they didn’t need him as much. So he took side work. Quiet jobs. No Kamuy. No signature. Because his wasn’t the kind you used for free. The more he tapped it, the faster the burn. The higher the dose. The worse the crash. He wasn’t gifted. Just tolerable—until he wasn’t.
The job was a half-dead courier who owed the wrong people. He didn't run. Didn’t scream. Didn’t matter. By the time it was over, the sky had turned the color of steel smoke. The blood was gone. So was the courier. Just another name that wouldn’t be on any wall.
When he got back, the dark had thickened. Wind pressed sharp around the corners. A loose sign rattled above the diner next door. The S1000R was parked clean and perfect near the side door, glinting under the streetlight like it had never failed him.
The door chimed. She was by the window, cross-legged, slapping flour off a dried apron with one hand, biscuit in the other. “There you are.” She beamed. “Your snarling gremlin is safe. You’re welcome.
He froze. “You moved it?”
She raised an eyebrow. “Would you rather I left it stranded in the street? I wheeled it to my dad’s old mechanic. Guy said it was fine. No issues. Started first try.” She said it like she was reporting good weather.
He stared out at the bike. “It shouldn’t have moved.”
“But it did.” She bit into her biscuit. “Maybe it got sick of being ignored.”
No response. She brought over two mugs. Set one in front of him like a ritual. “Least you can do is drink. I babysat your metal demon.”
He looked at the cup. Didn’t touch it. Then, quietly: “Thanks.”
She blinked. “You said that word. Incredible.”
He didn’t answer. Just let the steam curl into his face. The mug was chipped near the base. Washed, but not dried. A human detail. He realized, with a chill he didn’t want, that he’d never let anyone touch that bike. And now this girl had walked it across a district and smiled like it was nothing.
“Places like this don’t last forever,” she said suddenly, tone softer. “You should stay next time. Past the third bite.”
He didn’t smile. But he didn’t leave, either.
She stood. Paused halfway to the kitchen. Glanced back.
He didn’t move. But something tightened in his chest. This place was dangerous—not in the way that gets you killed, but in the way that makes you stay. The kind of danger that didn’t hurt loud, just made you forget how to leave.
She tilted her head. “You remind me of a waterbird. In Japanese, it’s mizutori. ”
He blinked once. No reaction.
“I’m Nami,” she added, smiling faintly. “You don’t have to remember. I’ll still call you that.”
He stayed after she left the room. Long after. The coffee went cold. The light faded. He didn’t say anything. But he didn’t deny it either.
For a moment, it felt like the world had nothing left to ask of him. That was the lie he liked best.