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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1 — The First Frame

Fuhito learned how to become invisible.

Not the kind from stories, the real kind.

The kind where people look at you and decide you don't matter.

He sat beneath the overpass with his back against cold concrete, coat pulled tight around his thin frame. Traffic thundered above him. The city moved. Laughed. Spent money. Made plans.

No one saw him.

That was fine.

Being seen meant being judged.

Or worse.

"Hey."

The voice came with expensive cologne.

Fuhito didn't look up.

"Look at him," another voice said, amused. "Is he even alive?"

Laughter.

Shoes stepped into his space. Polished. Untouched by dust.

A hand grabbed his chin and forced his face upward.

Cold fingers.

Mocking eyes.

"Pathetic."

The word wasn't shouted.

It didn't need to be.

Someone lifted a phone and snapped a picture of him.

Flash.

More laughter.

"Smile for the camera."

They let go. One of them shoved him backward onto the pavement before walking away.

Their laughter lingered longer than their footsteps.

Fuhito remained still until the sounds faded into traffic noise.

He didn't feel rage.

Not yet.

Just something hollow and familiar.

He stood slowly and brushed off his coat.

Later that evening, hunger drove him behind a closed pawn shop. The metal shutters were down. Trash bins lined the alley.

He wasn't expecting anything valuable.

He almost missed the bag.

Old leather. Torn strap. Heavy.

He opened it carefully.

Inside was a camera.

Not a cheap one. Not plastic.

Solid metal. Weighty. Cold in his hands.

Several lenses lay wrapped beside it, each protected as if someone had cared deeply once.

Why would anyone throw this away?

He checked the battery compartment.

Charged.

That didn't make sense.

He lifted it and peered through the viewfinder.

The alley appeared sharper than reality. Every crack in the wall, every stain on the ground, defined with unnatural clarity.

Strange.

He turned the camera toward himself without thinking.

Just to see if it still worked.

His own face filled the frame.

Unshaven. Hollow-eyed. Older than he remembered.

For a moment, he almost lowered it.

Then he pressed the shutter.

*Click.*

The sound was crisp.

Louder than it should have been.

He lowered the camera and checked the small screen.

The photo looked normal.

Nothing distorted.

Nothing unusual.

He gave a faint, humorless smile.

"At least you work."

He slung the strap over his shoulder.

Footsteps echoed at the mouth of the alley.

Fuhito stiffened.

One of the men from earlier stood there alone, pacing and talking into his phone.

"Relax, I told you it's handled. Tomorrow we finalize—"

He turned slightly.

His eyes met Fuhito's.

Recognition flickered.

Annoyance followed.

"You again?"

Fuhito didn't respond.

The camera felt heavier suddenly.

His fingers tightened around it.

The man scoffed. "You people multiply or something?"

Something surged inside Fuhito.

Not anger.

Not courage.

Just… a quiet decision.

He raised the camera.

The man frowned. "What are you—"

Their eyes locked through the lens.

For a fraction of a second, the air inside the frame seemed to ripple.

Fuhito pressed the shutter.

Click.

The sound echoed in the narrow alley.

The man blinked.

"…What the hell?"

Nothing else happened.

Just confusion.

"Idiot."

He shook his head and walked away, still muttering into his phone.

Fuhito lowered the camera slowly.

His pulse pounded in his ears.

That was it?

Just a picture?

He checked the display.

The photo looked ordinary.

Clear, sharp, but meaningless.

He stood there for a long time, staring at the screen.

Then he slipped the camera back into the bag.

"Stupid," he muttered.

He turned and walked back toward the overpass.

Above him, traffic roared.

The city didn't notice anything had changed.

Two days later, the same man stepped off the roof of his company's headquarters.

And as the news replayed the footage on every screen in the city—

Fuhito remembered the sound of the shutter.

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