"The theatre is a moving train. The actors are the people you once knew. And the truth arrives only when you least expect it."
Boron sits on a metro in Japan, heading to work in the early morning rush.
To the world, he is just another passenger.
Inside his mind, an entire universe begins to unfold.
As the train cuts through the city, Boron revisits the fragments of a past life-days spent in India or Vietnam, friendships formed in confusion, and a love story between Indica and Arron that collapsed under the weight of youth, betrayal, and a society that never cared to understand them.
Through Boron's voice-sharp, reflective, and painfully honest-the novel explores the silent tragedies of modern relationships, the illusions we build around ourselves, and the generations raised on noise instead of meaning.
But everything changes when a stranger named Tosido steps onto the train.
His presence twists the narrative, challenges Boron's memories, and forces the reader to question what is real, what is imagined, and what was forgotten on purpose.