Inside lay not letters or photographs, but a single handscroll, brittle as dried leaves. She unrolled it slowly. The calligraphy was elegant but strange — half-finished sentences, crossed-out words, and in the margins, sketches: a mountain with two peaks, a crescent moon split in half, a child holding a spool of thread.
In the ink-dark hours before dawn, a young woman named Saya found a box in her late grandmother’s closet. Not a shoe box or a jewelry case, but a lacquered wooden chest bound with frayed red silk. On its lid, in faded brushstrokes: Zenpen — "the previous chapter." mago zenpen
Saya lifted the lid.
(The Grandchild’s Foreword)