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Searching For- Remu Suzumori In-all Categoriesm... Official

I didn't have a CD drive. I had to buy an external USB one from a Don Quijote at 2 AM. I sat cross-legged on my tatami mat, the drive whirring like a trapped insect, and then—sound.

I turned and walked back down the mountain. I didn't look back. But I kept the CD-R. And when people ask me what I'm listening to, I just smile and say, "You wouldn't have heard of her."

I spent the next week trying to find her. The phone number was dead. I found a former bandmate on LinkedIn—a bassist who’d played on two tracks. He replied with a single message: "Remu doesn't want to be found. She's not lost."

Then, on the seventeenth night, a new result. A small, independent record store in Nagano had listed a "mystery box" of unsorted CDs for auction. Lot #47. Description: "Miscellaneous indie material, includes handwritten liner notes, possibly self-released. One item marked 'Suzumori, R. – Demos 1999-2001.' Condition: Fair (jewel case cracked)." Searching for- remu suzumori in-All CategoriesM...

It began as a flicker of impulse, a late-night thought that burrowed under the skin like a splinter. The search bar glowed on my laptop screen, a cold, expectant rectangle in the dark of my apartment. My fingers, acting before my brain could veto them, typed the words:

It was not beautiful. Not in the clean, mastered way. It was the sound of a person alone in a room with too much reverb. A guitar tuned to a secret chord. Her voice: low, almost whispered, as if she were afraid of waking someone in the next apartment. But the songs—there were seven of them—told a different story. Lyrics about elevator shafts and 4 AM convenience store lights and the way snow absorbs sound. It was the kind of music that made you want to lie face-down on the floor and feel your own heartbeat.

But I was lost. That was the thing.

I opened my mouth to explain—the flyer, the CD-R, the search bar, the empty categories. But no words came. Because she was right. Remu Suzumori wasn't lost. I was. And standing there, in the dusk, with the sound of her guitar still humming in the air between us, I felt, for the first time in years, a little less so.

My heart performed a strange, arrhythmic stutter. I bid. I bid more than I should have. I won.

When the song ended, she finally raised her head. Her gaze passed through me like I was made of window glass. She didn't smile or frown. She simply said, "You walked a long way for something I stopped being a long time ago." I didn't have a CD drive

The search became a ritual. Every evening, I’d pour a glass of cheap shochu, pull up the same empty results, and click through the digital bones. The "All Categories" filter was a lie. She wasn't in Music. She wasn't in People. She wasn't in Blogs. She existed only in the spaces between—a rumor of a person.

Not nothing. That would have been merciful. Instead, there were fragments: a two-paragraph review on a Geocities-style archive from 2003, praising a "haunting, percussive guitar style." A blurry black-and-white photo on a defunct music blog—a woman with cropped hair and a hollowed-out stare, cradling a Martin 0-15 like a life raft. A single, unplayable RealAudio file link. A forum post from 2008: "Does anyone have a decent rip of 'Underground Rain'? My cassette ate itself." The last reply was from 2010: "Her uncle told my cousin she moved to the mountains. No one knows which ones."

I started to understand that I wasn't searching for Remu Suzumori. I was searching for the part of myself that still believed in undiscovered things. In a world where every street corner was geotagged and every stranger could be reverse-image-searched, she was a locked door with no handle. She was proof that mystery still existed. I turned and walked back down the mountain

On the last night of summer, I took the train to the final stop on the Chuo Line. A town tucked against the mountains, the kind of place where the convenience store closes at 11 PM. I had no plan. Just a printout of that blurry photo and a heart full of delusion.

I walked up the path. The air changed—cooler, wetter, smelling of moss and rot and ferns. And then I heard it. A guitar. Not a recording. Not a ghost. Live, wavering, a melody I recognized from the CD-R: "Underground Rain."