Junior high school student Matusnaga Ami (Makita Aju) is on her way home from a cultural festival when she is stopped by a middle-aged male stranger (Watanabe Ken) at an overhead bridge. The man says he saw her dance on stage at the festival. It was beautiful and the best. This unexpected praise gets Ami ecstatic. But her mother Akie (Itaya Yuka) becomes very concerned after hearing this and even makes a fuss by calling the police to the house. Several days later, Ami happens to see the same man again and learns that he works part-time at a small bakery called Kokodake no Panya along a desolate shopping street. It seems that this man Kizaki Shuji had been hospitalised for a compound fracture for almost six months and moved from his hometown to this town in Tokyo at the invitation of an acquaintance Hanamiya Kyoko (Ichihara Etsuko) to work for free as social rehabilitation. Ami does not think he is a bad man like her mother suspects. She gradually begins to open up to him through their conversations. Then one day, she hears about Kizaki’s circumstances from the bakery owner, Ueno Hiroshi (Takahashi Katsumi). In fact, Kizaki lost his family of eight in the tsunami caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake five years ago and his emotional scars have still not been healed. This is the story of the aftermath and rebirth through the unlikely interaction between a middle-aged man and a teenage girl.