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In the collective memory of Hirosato, the day the world ended did not begin with the expected theatricality of a tempest. There were no blackened skies, no jagged bolts of lightning, and no howling winds to signal the approaching catastrophe. Instead, the survivors remembered the morning for its eerie, suffocating stillness. It was a day of sensory contradictions: the air felt thick and unbreathable, as if the atmosphere itself were bracing for an impact, and the horizon possessed a clarity that was almost surgical. The most haunting omen, however, was the sea. The tide had retreated with a violent, unnatural speed, exposing a jagged seabed of kelp and stone that had not seen the sun in a thousand years. Then came the shudder—a deep, visceral vibration that seemed to originate from the very core of the planet, traveling up through the soles of feet and rattling the tea sets in the cupboards of every coastal home.
Within hours, the geographical identity of Hirosato was erased. The familiar labyrinth of narrow alleys, the weathered docks of the fishing harbor, and the meticulously tended gardens were overwhelmed by a churning, mud-brown surge. This was not merely water; it was a liquid battering ram, a slurry of earth and debris that moved with a relentless, predatory grace. To those watching from the hillsides, the physics of the disaster seemed impossible. Whole houses were lifted from their foundations with a sickening groan of timber, floating momentarily like hollow toys before being smashed against the concrete pilings of the bridge. Cars, delivery trucks, and fishing trawlers were tossed into the roiling current, spinning in the vortex like scraps of paper caught in a gale.
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