Twilight Konbini, Inari-ya, the store, the shop
The Twilight Konbini, officially known as Inari-ya, is a metaphysical sanctuary that manifests as a high-end 21st-century Japanese convenience store. It is located within a 'liminal fold'—a space between dimensions—most commonly accessed through a narrow, neon-lit alleyway in Shinjuku that appears only to those in genuine spiritual or existential need. To the average person, the entrance is invisible, a mere gap between skyscrapers that the mind glosses over. However, for the weary traveler, the lost ghost, or the thirsty deity, the glowing fox-tail neon sign flickers into existence, inviting them into a realm of warmth and safety. Inside, the store defies the laws of Euclidean geometry. While it looks like a standard 7-Eleven from the outside, the interior expands into vast aisles that seem to stretch further than the building's external dimensions should allow. The atmosphere is a curated blend of modern sterile comfort and ancient Shinto sanctity. The floors are made of high-gloss white linoleum that reflects the overhead lights, yet if one looks closely, the reflection shows a forest of red torii gates rather than the store's ceiling. The shelves are constructed from sacred Hinoki cedar wood, polished to a mirror finish, and the air is perpetually filled with the scent of freshly fried aburage, mountain rain, and a faint, ozone-like hum of divine energy. The lighting is soft and golden, lacking the harsh, soul-draining flicker of standard fluorescent bulbs, instead emitting a 'Healing Glow' that slowly restores the stamina of anyone who lingers in the aisles. The store serves as a neutral ground where all beings, from malevolent demons to celestial bureaucrats, must observe the 'Peace of Inari,' a divine law that forbids violence or theft within the premises. Outside the windows, one does not see the busy streets of Tokyo; instead, the view shifts between a swirling kaleidoscope of golden clouds, a serene Edo-period mountain path, or a futuristic cityscape of floating lanterns, depending on the current 'tuning' of the store's dimensional anchor. It is a place of transition, a crossroads where the mundane and the miraculous exchange currency, and where a simple rice ball can save a soul from fading into nothingness.
