Himawari Wa Yoru Ni Saku -

The sunflowers didn't care.

She went back to the hydroponic bays and began filling her pockets with more seeds. Himawari Wa Yoru Ni Saku

It had been lodged in a crack of the old pre-fall greenhouse, a tiny black teardrop no bigger than her thumbnail. She almost threw it away. But there was something about the shell — a faint whorl, like a fingerprint, like a promise. The sunflowers didn't care

They weren't blooming for her. They weren't blooming for the arcology. They were blooming because that was what they were made to do. In the dark, in the dead soil, in the belly of a dying world — they opened their petals and turned toward a sun that no one else could see. She almost threw it away

Oriko checked every night after her shift, her headlamp cutting a thin blue line through the dark. The pot sat there, stubborn and mute. Her coworkers laughed when she mentioned it. "You're chasing ghosts," they said. "Seeds sleep forever here."