TFN C88
by berryChapter 88
Before they had even arrived, a brief call had been enough for his mother to prepare everything.
By the time they reached the gate, the charcoal brazier was already burning bright, its orange glow flickering against the twilight. Cheongmun, for once, looked hesitant. His expression didnât betray much, but his energy did.
âIf you jump over the fire, any impurity that clings to you wonât follow,â Wonhyo explained casually before hopping lightly over the flames.
Cheongmun lowered his gaze halfway and crossed in one long stride.
âThis must be the person you mentioned? The one who helped you before?â
His sister asked softly as she closed the gate behind them.
âYes,â Wonhyo replied. âHeâs the head of the Special Investigation Divisionâthe one in charge of the vengeful spirit case from before.â
Though she had heard the story countless times, this was their first meeting in person, so an introduction was necessary.
Turning toward Cheongmun, Wonhyo gestured toward his sister. âThis is my nuna. Sheâs also a disciple of my motherâs.â
Not family by blood, though in age she was closer to his motherâs generation; still, in the formal hierarchy of their faith, they were equals.
âPleased to meet you. Iâm Lee Cheongmun,â he said politely.
âNice to meet you. Iâm Hyoryeong,â she replied, using her spiritual name instead of her given oneâa true shamanâs greeting.
Her lips curved into a graceful smile as she motioned inward. âCome into the inner shrine. Mother is waiting.â
Even the Celestial Lady might have descended, Wonhyo thought, noticing the faint red fabric swirling behind his sisterâs head like a spiritâs skirt.
He gestured ahead. âThat building over there.â
Crossing the gravel courtyard and passing through a small wooden gate, they reached the inner hallâits black-tiled roof shading a garden decorated with curious charms and carved stones.
The energy there was palpable. The kind that made oneâs skin prickle; this was indeed the dwelling place of spirits.
His sister led the way, sliding open the inner door and stepping carefully inside. Wonhyo followed, with Cheongmun bringing up the rear.
It was only a few steps from outside to in, yet it felt like entering an entirely separate world.
âThe interiorâs a bit unusual, isnât it?â Wonhyo asked.
âNot really,â Cheongmun replied. âThis is closer to what Iâd imagined a shrine to be. More fitting than your place, Mr. Yoon.â
Wonhyo shot him a look, one eye twitchingâbut he had to admit, the man wasnât wrong.
Still, few homes displayed halberds and spears so casually in the courtyard. Even the ritual blades, used during trances, had been laid out deliberately in a lineâforcing anyone walking through to step carefully around them.
Every time he visited, Wonhyo wondered if his mother wasnât a bit too militant for a shaman. Yet Cheongmun seemed unbothered, which was surprising in itself.
Wonhyo crossed the courtyard, removed his shoes at the stone steps, and stepped onto the wooden floor.
âIâm here,â he called softly.
âCome in, child,â came the gentle reply.
His sister nodded and slid open the shrineâs inner door.
The fragrance of burning incense rolled out in a warm wave.
Unlike the dazzling, colorful paintings on the walls, his mother was dressed in a pure white hanbok, her hair neatly coiled. She turned with a serene smile.
âPleased to meet you. Iâm Lee Cheongmun,â he said before Wonhyo could introduce him.
Her kind face brightened. âIâve heard much about you. My son tells me you do fine work.â
At that, Cheongmun glanced at Wonhyo with a faint, almost teasing smile. âIt seems Mr. Yoon spoke very well of me. Iâm just a government worker, really.â
âI see. Well, donât just stand there, both of youâsit down. You too, Team Leader Lee.â
At her gesture, Wonhyo quickly fetched a couple of cushions and set them out, motioning for Cheongmun to sit first.
âI was about to bring something to drink,â his mother said. âWe have juice, tea, and coffee.â
âShould I help?â Wonhyo asked, half-rising.
His sister waved him down. âNo need. Sit. Youâre having coffee?â
âNo, juice for me.â
âAll right. And you, Team Leader Lee?â
âWater is fine.â
âUnderstood.â
She gave a brief, assessing look before nodding with a smile and stepping out.
As she left, Wonhyo stretched his neck, easing the stiffness that came from the shrineâs heavy, charged air.
Their motherâs eyes moved between the two men. âIt sounds like things went rather rough this time.â
Wonhyo grimaced slightly, recalling the detention center. With Cheongmun sitting right beside him, it felt awkward to recount everything in detail, so he kept it brief. âSomething unusual came out of the suspect. It was⌠mixed.â
âYou mean that spell registered in your system?â she asked.
âYes, something like that.â
Frowning thoughtfully, Wonhyo opened his system window again. He realized heâd never checked the results after the long search delay earlier.
ăKnowledge from Ten Thousand Laws of Spirits has reacted.ă
ăSimilar talisman forms detected.ă
At last, the results appeared, a cluster of translucent panels hovering in his vision. It was reminiscent of the time heâd analyzed that cursed artifact before.
ăDetected: Household Misfortune Prevention Talisman (15), Universal Transaction Seal, Evil Energy Repulsion Charm (7)⌠Household Barrier Series.ă
âHuh?â
The list made no sense in context. What did those have to do with animal spirits? The long delay had been for this? There was one oddity among them, but nothing groundbreaking.
He relayed the information to his mother.
âThatâs quite a combination,â she murmured. âSomewhat similar to your own talisman methods.â
âI guess so,â Wonhyo admitted.
It wasnât unusual for him to use purification charms in new environments or to shield people during relocations. If one considered the human body as a house, then applying such talismans directly made sense.
âBut the Transaction Sealâwhatâs that about?â he muttered.
âWhen we discovered the item connected to that vengeful spirit, the system paired it with the Rebirth Talisman,â he continued. âIt reversed its purposeâto keep the soul from moving on instead of helping it pass peacefully. If the same logic applies here, maybe these protective talismans were inverted too, letting spirits enter more easily.â
âStill, reversing a transaction charm would onlyâŚâ
âPrevent the sale of goods?â Cheongmun interrupted, puzzled.
âNot exactly,â Wonhyo said, scratching his brow. âLet me explain it this way. When an animal spirit possesses a body, we say itâs building a house.â
âThatâs right,â his mother confirmed.
âAnd not just any body will doâit has to be the right fit. If someone used a charm to make that process easier, theyâd be preparing the âhouseââthe bodyâfor entry.â
âSo youâre suggesting they werenât blocking transactions, but inviting them,â Cheongmun said.
âExactly.â
âBut what about amplification? Thereâs no mention of reversing the charmsâ purposes in your system, only that they were used together.â
âWellâŚâ Wonhyo frowned. âMaybe they used them that way intentionallyâto boost the effect. Hard to say.â
He normally wouldnât have thought so, but perhaps Cheongmun was right.
If the charms were invertedâto make possession smootherâand the Transaction Seal was empowered to strengthen the bond, thenâŚ
âThey must have used something truly foul to achieve that level of control,â his mother said quietly, reading his thoughts.
âIs that⌠difficult to do?â Cheongmun asked.
Wonhyo nodded, rubbing his forehead. âVery. Even if it looks hastily scrawled, a proper talisman needs structureâeach symbol placed for a precise command. Normally one charm does one job. Thatâs how the instructions are followed cleanly.â
âSo having a Transaction Seal among them already makes it stand out,â Cheongmun noted.
âExactly,â his mother said. âA sale thrives on trafficâon people coming and going. So to use that energy to twist or lure something in is possible. But thereâs a difference between forcing the door open from the outside and enticing whatâs within to step out and beckon others in.â
She spoke slowly, explaining how the two types of charms functioned in opposition.
âThe harder the talisman is to make, the greater the powerâand the heavier the recoil. Power always demands payment.â
âStill,â Wonhyo murmured, âwhoever did this clearly knew their craft.â
âIndeed,â his mother agreed. âNo amateur could bind conflicting charms this precisely. That kind of knowledge doesnât come from dabbling.â
Such peopleâthose who misused spiritual powerâwere like poisonous mushrooms. No matter how often they were eradicated, they always grew back. But to wield such a force without fear suggested recklessness, not mastery.
âIf they knew nothing of yeoksal, they canât truly serve the gods,â she added, her tone darkening.
âWhat is yeoksal?â Cheongmun asked.
Wonhyo hesitated. ââŚReflection, kind of. You see, a salâa curse or attackâdoesnât always hit its target cleanly. It can rebound. Like how magic can be dispelled.â
âSo, the curse reflects back on the caster,â Cheongmun summarized.
âExactly. And in shamanic practice, the line between sender and receiver isnât clean. When you cast harm, youâre tied to it. If the other side repels it, the energy comes back twice as hard.â
Cheongmun tilted his head. âSo it can be avoidedâbut at a cost, perhaps?â
Wonhyoâs brows furrowed. âYeah. You can dodge it, but youâll pay. The power wasnât meant to hurt others. If you twist it that way, the backlash is severe. And if youâre borrowing power from something unholyâlike in this caseâthenâŚâ
He trailed off, his voice low.
âThen not even your life is enough to pay the price.â
ě ëš (Shindang) â a Korean shamanic shrine, often located inside a home or in a small building where spirits (ě ë šë) are enshrined and rituals are performed.
ěë (Jakdu) â a large ritual blade that shamans sometimes stand or dance on during trance rituals to prove their divine possession or sincerity.
ę¸ě¤ (Geumjul) â a twisted rope decorated with paper charms, hung at gates or doors to ward off evil spirits or mark sacred boundaries.
ëší / ě¸ěë (Dangpa / Eonwoldo) â traditional polearms or crescent blades, weapons sometimes displayed in shrines as part of protective or warrior-spirit rituals.
ě´ (Sal) â literally âkilling energyâ; in Korean shamanism, it refers to malignant spiritual energy or a curse.
ěě´ (Yeoksal) â âreflected curse,â a concept where harmful spiritual energy bounces back onto the person who cast it.
ëśě (Bujeok) â a talisman or charm, usually handwritten on yellow paper with red ink to summon, seal, or repel certain spiritual forces.
ëëŹźë š (Dongmul-ryeong) â âanimal spirit,â a malicious spirit born from an animalâs lingering resentment or suffering, capable of possessing humans.