The rain in Yomiyama never feels like water; it feels like weight. Mei Misaki stood on the rooftop of North Yomi Middle School, her black hair whipping against her eyepatch in the sudden gale. In her hands, she held a sketchpad, though the page remained blank. âYouâre still looking for it, arenât you?â
âThe class thinks ignoring you will keep them safe,â the voice of the sister she lost whispered from the shadows of the doorway. âThey think if you don't exist, the Calamity won't either.â
She adjusted the white patch over her left eye. Beneath it lay the glass eye her mother, Yukiyo, had craftedâa dollâs eye that could see what others couldn't: the Color of Death . Lately, the hue wasn't just clinging to people; it was seeping into the very architecture of the school, pooling around the empty desks of Class 3-3. Misaki Mei
She lifted her eyepatch just a fraction. The world shifted. The vibrant green of the distant mountains turned into a bruised, sickly purple. She saw the "extra" person clearly now, standing in the middle of the schoolyard below. They were laughing with friends, unaware that they were a hollow shell, a dead person who had forgotten they had died.
The following is an original story inspired by the atmosphere and lore of Another . The rain in Yomiyama never feels like water;
Mei didnât turn. She knew the voiceâit was light, melodic, and shouldnât have been there. It belonged to her twin sister, Misaki Fujioka, who had been gone for months. But in this town, "gone" was a relative term.
She closed her eyes, letting the eyepatch snap back into place. Tomorrow, the deaths would begin again. For now, she would just be the girl who wasn't there, drawing pictures of dolls that couldn't feel the rain. âYouâre still looking for it, arenât you
Mei finally looked back, but the doorway was empty. Only a single, stray feather from a crow drifted onto the wet concrete. She thought of Kouichi Sakakibara, the transfer student who had broken the rules by talking to her. He was the only one who saw her as more than a ghost, yet his kindness was the very thing pulling the thread of the curse tighter.