Over the next weeks, Kenji regained some strength. His body bore deep scars the one across his face a jagged reminder of something he couldn't remember. The doctors said his survival was a miracle, but Kenji doubted it was anything divine.
One day, while exploring the hospital gardens in his wheelchair, he overheard two nurses talking about him.
"Three years, and no one's come to visit him anymore," one said. "Not even the girl who used to cry by his bedside."
"Maybe they moved on. Poor boy, he doesn't even remember her," the other replied.
A flash of pain struck Kenji's chest. He didn't know who they spoke of, but the mention of abandonment felt like a stab.
Kenji clutched the folded crane in his pocket his only possession. He began to piece together fragments of his identity. A face, a name, a purpose. Shadows flickered in his mind. He wasn't just abandoned; he was left for dead.
The absence of visitors gnawed at him. The girl who used to visit, whose face he couldn't quite picture but whose voice brought warmth, had disappeared. Her absence left an emptiness even deeper than his memory loss. He overheard the doctors once murmuring about her. "Her father forbade her to return... He doesn't want her involved anymore." It hurt, though he didn't fully understand why.
The nights were the hardest. In the silence, when sleep evaded him, strange sensations crept into his awareness. The shadows in the room felt... different. He tried to ignore it at first, dismissing the feeling as a trick of his restless mind. But they moved in ways that didn't align with the stillness of the room.
One night, he stared at the wall for what felt like hours. The corner of the room seemed darker than the rest, the shadows pulsating faintly. He blinked, thinking his eyes were deceiving him, but they persisted. Then came the whispers barely audible and incoherent, but undeniably real. They filled his mind with fleeting emotions: anger, sadness, longing.
His senses sharpened in these moments. Kenji could hear the distant shuffling of feet down the hallway, the squeak of a nurse's shoe, and the faint hum of the hospital generator. He felt overwhelmed, his mind struggling to comprehend what was happening.
He tried to tell himself it wasn't real. But as he reached out with his trembling hand toward the darkness, the shadows recoiled ever so slightly, as if alive. He pulled back, his breath quickening. What was happening to him? Why did he feel more alive in the night, even as fear gripped him?
Kenji closed his eyes tightly, willing the sensations to stop. But the whispers persisted, soft and haunting, carrying fragments of words he couldn't yet understand. For the first time since waking in this sterile cage, he felt something stir within him a strange connection to the dark, a feeling that this was only the beginning of something far greater.
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