I write psychological horror that explores the moment fear decides who we become. I’m drawn to thresholds — the fragile instant between endurance and collapse — and the unseen forces that linger in silence. My stories focus less on monsters and more on the human mind under pressure.
The Girl Who Was Lost is a reflection of that fascination: a story about fear, resilience, and the choice not to break.


In the quiet town of Kurotsuki, Aika Hoshino and Ren Mizuno enter an abandoned school on a dare and encounter Sora, a young girl trapped in the memory of her final moments. Years ago, she died not by violence, but by fear overwhelming her body. In the corridor stands a distortion — a presence ...