On the second night of the bloom, he climbed the hill with his sketchbook and a battered tin of watercolors. The moon hung low, bleeding silver through the blossoms. And there she was.
“You draw me as if I’m already gone,” Yuki observed, sitting on the stone bench beneath the sakura tree. Her voice was soft, with a static hum beneath it—like a radio playing a song from another decade. sakura novel
Kaito had seen the bloom only twice in his life: once as a boy clutching his mother’s hand, and once as a teenager who pretended not to care about magic. Now, at twenty-two, he had returned to the town to bury his grandmother—and to finish a painting he could never quite complete. On the second night of the bloom, he