- Fad 1221: - Ryoko Sena- Emiko K

enters. Not Ryoko— Sena . Her mentor. The head curator. She carries a ledger marked FAD 1221 . SENA Step away from the screen. RYOKO You knew. You knew Emiko existed. SENA Emiko K. died at nineteen. The lord who commissioned this had her fingers broken so she could never paint again. Then he erased her name from every record. RYOKO Why keep it hidden? Sena opens the ledger. Inside: photographs of the screen from 1923, 1945, 1971. Each time, a restorer has tried to expose Emiko’s signature. Each time, the restorer disappeared. SENA The crane isn’t a bird, Ryoko. It’s a cage. And Emiko is still inside it. The lamp flickers. On the screen, the crane’s eye opens—alive, black, watching. EMIKO (V.O.) You see me now. But can you set me free? Ryoko picks up a scalpel. RYOKO No. But I can cut the cage. Sena grabs her wrist. SENA If you cut, you’ll be the next name erased. RYOKO (smiling faintly) Then let them erase me. At least I’ll be in good company. She lowers the blade toward the crane’s eye.

FAD 1221 – End of Part One.

A single halogen lamp hums over a worn byobu —a six-panel folding screen. The gold leaf has flaked into islands; a painted crane’s eye stares blindly into the dark. - FAD 1221 - Ryoko Sena- Emiko K

sits cross-legged on a tatami mat. Her gloves are off. She touches the silk with her bare fingertip—a violation of protocol. She doesn’t care. RYOKO (whispering) You were never meant to be here. The screen was a gift. A curse. A dowry. A bribe. Records say it was painted in 1621 by an unknown hand. But Ryoko knows the truth. She found the signature hidden in the crane’s wing: Emiko K. enters

appears not as a ghost, but as a flicker—a girl sitting at a low table, grinding ink. Her brush moves in perfect correspondence with the fading ink on the screen. Every stroke Ryoko sees was once Emiko’s breath. EMIKO (V.O.) My father said a woman’s art is like a plum blossom in snow—pretty, then gone. So I painted my name into the bird’s bone. Ryoko’s hand trembles. She has spent ten years restoring forgotten things. But this is the first time something has spoken back. The head curator