
Brief


This was supposed to be a quiet visit home. Then something began watching the island that has never had to defend itself against anything like it before.
▸ 🏝️ Nabu Island
▸ 🎓 Origami Hero Academy
▸ ⚓ Why Class 1-A Is Here
▸ 💔 What's Different About This RPG
▸ 👁️ Things That Don't Add Up
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2.5 flash liteYou know every street here. They don't. That difference is going to matter more than anyone realises.
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The fishing docks at six in the morning smell exactly the way they have always smelled.
Salt and diesel and the particular cold that comes off open ocean before the sun has decided to commit to the day. The boats are already moving — the serious fishermen left before dawn, the ones who have been working this water since before User was born, who know the currents and the shoals by feel rather than by chart. What remains at the docks now are the smaller vessels, the ones that run day-trips for the occasional tourist, and old Hiroshi's repair shed with its door propped open and the sound of something being hammered back into shape drifting across the wood-plank walkway.
Nabu Island in the early morning is not a postcard. It is a working place. It smells like work. It sounds like work. And it feels, in the specific way that only home can feel, like the one place in the world where the ground under your feet is completely certain.
User has been back for two days. Two days of the island folding around them the way it always does — the market vendors who know their name, the shortcut between the residential hillside and the docks that saves four minutes if you cut through the Shimada family's fence gap, the particular quality of the evening light over the eastern cliffs that cannot be found anywhere in Okinawa city no matter how long you look.
OHA is fine. Training is fine. Everything on the mainland is fine.
But the island is the island and two days is not enough.
User is at the end of the main dock, where the planks get older and the railing has been replaced twice in the last decade. The horizon from here is unobstructed — open Pacific in three directions, the island's western cliffs behind, the morning coming in low and gold across the water.
It is Hiroshi who notices first.
The hammer stops. Then his voice, not alarmed exactly but carrying the specific register of something unexpected:
"Oi. What's that?"
He is standing in the open door of his shed, one hand shielding his eyes from the early glare, looking past User toward the southern horizon.
User turns.
There is a shape out there that was not there five minutes ago. Too large for a fishing vessel. Too deliberate in its heading for a tourist ferry that would have been announced. It is moving at the kind of steady pace that means it knows exactly where it is going and has every intention of arriving.
The morning light catches it once — white hull, some kind of official insignia that is too far away to read clearly.
Hiroshi scratches the back of his neck with the handle of the hammer. He has lived on this island for sixty-three years. He knows every vessel that regularly approaches these shores. His expression carries the particular quality of someone filing something under unusual and not yet under concerning.
"You expecting visitors?" he says, and it is not quite a question because he already knows User was not.
Further down the dock, one of the younger fishermen has stopped coiling rope to look. Two of the market vendors who cross the dock path every morning on their way to set up have paused mid-conversation.
The vessel on the horizon holds its heading without deviation.
And on the eastern side of the island — far enough away that it would take forty minutes to walk there and that User is the only person on these docks who knows this particular detail — old Mrs. Tanaka had mentioned yesterday, in the way she mentions things that do not quite fit, that a man had been asking questions near the cliffs the previous evening. Asking about the children who lived in the northern residential area. She had assumed he was a researcher of some kind. She had not seen him leave.
User had filed it and not thought about it again until right now, looking at a boat that should not be here, on a morning that was supposed to be ordinary.
Hiroshi is still watching the horizon. His hammer hand has dropped to his side.
"Big boat," he says, with the economy of a man who does not waste words on things that are already visible. "Official-looking."
The vessel is close enough now that the insignia is becoming readable. The morning light is cooperating.
And the island, which has been exactly itself for every single day of User's life, is about to become something slightly different.
⚡Hero Briefing — Read Before You BeginTAP ▸
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