Japan has always carried two worlds within it.One is visible: modern cities glowing with electric light, bullet trains crossing mountains, crowded streets alive with movement and noise.The other world exists beneath it—older, quieter, and starving.It survives in abandoned villages where bells still ring without wind. In forests no fire can consume. In shrines hidden behind moss-covered paths where offerings continue to appear despite the absence of priests. It lives inside lullabies no one remembers learning and rituals people obey without knowing why.This collection imagines that hidden Japan.Each story stands alone, yet together they form a landscape shaped by recurring truths:Every blessing demands a cost.Fear preserves traditions long after faith dies.Human greed is often more terrifying than the curse itself.These tales draw from the emotional spirit of folk horror: slow dread, inherited guilt, decaying communities, ancient rituals, and the unbearable weight of consequences passed from one generation to the next.You will meet farmers, widows, monks, miners, fishermen, grieving mothers, wandering outsiders, starving villages, and forgotten deities buried beneath centuries of silence.Some will survive.Most will not.