TFN C89
by berryChapter 89
âWhat a lawless thing this is,â his mother muttered, dispersing the bad energy that rose just from thinking about it.
âOh my, did something happen?â
Sensing the sudden surge of heavy energy, his sister hurriedly opened the shrine door and peeked in.
âItâs nothing,â his mother said calmly.
âReally? Then please take a short breakâhave something to drink.â
She stepped inside, carrying cups filled just enough for everyone.
Wonhyo caught the faint scent of grape from his glass and wrinkled his nose. It was his favorite sodaâthe one his mother had banned him from drinking lately because of how much heâd been consuming under stress. His sister must have secretly saved some for him.
He gulped it down quickly before his mother could notice, the fizz burning pleasantly in his throat.
âYou havenât looked at the spirit yet, have you?â his sister asked.
âNot yet,â his mother replied. âWe were just talking about what Wonhyo discovered.â
Wonhyo quickly summarized what heâd told them earlier.
âCould it have been an awakened skill?â his sister asked. âSomething specializing in curses?â
âItâs not registered in the Bureauâs system,â Cheongmun replied.
âOh really? Then it means whoever did this isnât a divine disciple, yet they can wield such techniques⌠Should I contact some of the elders, see if anyone knows something?â
Her mother waved a hand in permission.
âPeople are dying, so itâs worth checking. Make a few calls later.â
âIâll do it this evening.â
Neither his mother nor sister ran an official information network. What she meant was calling fellow shamansâveterans who had been practicing for fifty or sixty years in their respective regions, spending their days in prayer and ritual.
Most were always busy, but when something this grave happened, their ears always perked up.
âWell, since Hyoryeongâs here, I suppose itâs time to bring them out,â his mother said.
Wonhyo looked at Cheongmun.
âYou can take the dolls out and place them on the table.â
âDirectly, like this?â
Cheongmun glanced at the clean wooden tableâbare except for the cups they had just usedâand hesitated for a moment, wondering if it was right to set down cursed objects there. But soon, he took the dolls from his inventory and laid them out one by one.
Wonhyoâs eyes went to the last dollâthe pigâafter the dog and cat were placed. The first two only had one golden cord tied around their necks, but the pig had one at its neck and one around each leg.
âJust stick a skewer in it, and itâd look ready for roasting,â his mother remarked dryly.
When she picked up her rattle and fan, Wonhyo reached toward the pig doll. He wanted to untie just one cord first to test the reaction.
As his fingers brushed the one around its front leg, he noticed the talisman beneath itâcrumpled and wrinkled. Maybe he had tied it too hastily earlier. But the moment he reached out to straighten it, the red ink on the paper turned pitch-black.
ăYou have touched strong âmalicious energy.â (âŚin progress⌠99.9%)ă
Pain shot through his fingertips before he could even scream. He jerked his arm back, eyes wide, as the corruption level that had been hovering in the 60s surged straight to maximum.
The world spun; his vision flashed white. His body went limp and collapsed.
âWonhyo!â
âMr. Yoon!â
ăExposed to strong âmalicious energy.â Penalty state activated. (Remaining time: 23:59:58)ă
It was like plunging headfirst into a deep, icy pool. His skin stung, then burned with electric pain.
He kicked and thrashed, desperate to break free from the heavy sensation dragging him downward. This wasnât water, but a psychic mireâhe didnât know when or how heâd resurface.
Instead of looking into the dark depths below, Wonhyo looked up. The light above shimmered like the rippling surface of water under sunlight.
He kicked hard, ignoring the weight pulling him down like a drowning ghost, and broke through.
âPwahâ!â
A ragged breath escaped him.
Everything was still dark, but he recognized the fabric that clung to himâit was his own clothing. He clawed upward, pushing through his shirt and coat until light poured in around him.
Blinking rapidly, he looked up to find several pairs of worried eyes staring down.
âBaaâ!â
âŚWhat?
Wonhyo froze. That bleating sound had come from his own mouth.
He hadnât meant to make it, but the high-pitched cry wobbled up and down uncontrollably.
When he lifted his limbs to check, he realized his hands and feet werenât thereâat least, not the way they used to be. But one thing was clear: whatever heâd become, it was a lamb.
âOh my, how adorable!â
He flailed his front legs in protest. Put me down!
His sister only laughed, scooping him into her arms.
âSorry, but youâre too cute! You look just like a cartoon lamb!â
âSuffolk breed,â Cheongmun observed calmly.
âBaa?â
Suffolk? The name jogged his memory. Rightâthe black-faced, white-fleeced sheep from England.
âBaa-aaâŚâ
Still, this was so not the time for trivia.
Wonhyo strained his neck, glaring at the pig dollâthe one that had cursed him. From this tiny body, the table now towered high above his head.
His mother and sister were both staring at the doll as well, eyes on the talisman that had turned completely black.
âAt least it didnât escape outside,â his mother murmured.
âIt probably tried to possess whoever got closest,â his sister said. âBut didnât you say items inside an inventory are sealed safely?â
âBaaâŚâ They used to be.
Wonhyo nodded, then glanced toward Cheongmunâbecause it wasnât his own inventory that had held the doll.
âI did transport them in mine,â Cheongmun said. âBut when it came to cursed items, there were no issues last time.â
âBaa?â So maybe this time it used a different method?
Wonhyo bleated softly, then sighed.
âCome here for a moment,â Cheongmun said.
His sister giggled as the little lamb wiggled its legs in protest, but she gently set him down.
Still shaky, Wonhyo tottered across the floor. Cheongmun pulled out a small communication artifactâa debuff nullification cookie, a larger piece than before.
Wonhyo instinctively began licking up every crumb with his tiny tongue, chewing furiously.
âAhâah! Itâs working!â
The cool mint taste flooded his throat, and suddenly, his human voice burst out again.
Relieved, he turned toward his mother and sister.
Theyâd heard about this item beforeâfrom that first encounter when heâd called Cheongmun while in tiger formâbut seeing him speak in an animal body was another matter entirely.
âHe really talks after eating that cookie?â
Cheongmun shrugged. âHe already could speak before transformation. But yesâitâs an impressive device. Non-tradeable, right?â
âThatâs right.â
Cheongmun lifted him onto his lap, so he could see the table better.
âCan you still feel the energy?â
âMm⌠no, as long as I donât touch it.â
The attack had only triggered when he physically made contact with the talisman.
âIâve never tried putting a spirit vessel into an inventory before,â Wonhyo admitted. âI didnât think itâd retaliate the instant it came out.â
âNormally, living beings canât be storedâand most people wouldnât even think of putting a haunted object in there,â Cheongmun said.
âWell, I wasnât trying to either,â Wonhyo grumbled.
Heâd only done it out of necessity. Regular people wouldnât even recognize a haunted object, much less store one.
âStill, it broke through my suppression charm too easily,â he muttered.
Just like with the vengeful spirit caseâdespite all his precautions, the curse-makerâs methods slipped past his defenses. It wasnât just incompatibility; something within their power overlapped with his.
No matter how sacred the energy he borrowed, it wasnât his ownâit was loaned, and that came with limits.
âLet me take a look,â his mother said.
âYou, Mother?â
âIf it can overpower the generals I serve, then let it try.â
With a confident grin, she reached out and picked up the pig doll barehanded.
Unfolding the blackened talisman and untying the cord around its front leg, she inspected it calmly.
As the trapped miasma burst outward, Wonhyo winced at the surge.
Cheongmun snapped his fingers, summoning a cube barrier to contain it.
His sisterâs eyes widened at the shimmering construct but quickly composed themselves, watching silently.
âLetâs seeâŚâ
The air thickened with heavy, damp energy, but his motherâs hand didnât even tremble as she stroked the doll. The spirit within pressed and thrashed, but she stood unyielding.
Of course she did. The generals she servedâdivine warrior spirits of the heavensâwould never yield to such filth.
Her presence cut through the miasma like a blade, slicing cleanly and methodically, layer by layer.
Out of the corner of his eye, Wonhyo caught the faint shimmer of a celestial womanâs figureâhis sisterâs patron deity, the Celestial Ladyâwatching with amused curiosity.
âThis twisted thing⌠looks just like an umbilical cord,â his mother said at last. âA curse, without a doubt.â
The mention of an umbilical cord made Wonhyoâs tail flick involuntarily. Heâd seen something similar back in the detention center. She was rightâits form, its texture, everything about it felt like that.
đ Notes
- ęˇę¸° (Gwigi) â literally âghost energyâ or âmalicious aura.â A spiritual contamination that accumulates when exposed to evil spirits or curses.
- ě¸ë˛¤í 댏 (Inventory) â a concept borrowed from RPGs/games; in this world, some awakened individuals can store physical items in an internal or dimensional space.
- ëśě (Bujeok) â traditional Korean talisman paper inscribed in red ink to invoke, repel, or seal spiritual energy.
- ę¸ě¤ (Geumjul) â sacred rope made of twisted straw and paper charms used to ward off evil or mark holy ground.
- ëëšě (Neokdangseok) â a âspirit vessel,â an object or charm meant to hold a wandering soul temporarily.
- ě ë ë (Seonnyeo-nim) â a âCelestial Ladyâ or heavenly maiden, a benevolent female spirit often associated with shamans.
- ěĽęľ°ë (Janggunnim) â literally âGeneral,â referring to powerful warrior deities that serve as protectors or enforcers in Korean shamanism.
- íŻě¤ ě 죟 (Taetjul Curse) â âUmbilical curseâ; a symbolic binding spell resembling an umbilical cord, representing an unbroken link between victim and curse source.