TFN C87
by berryChapter 87
The prisonâs on-site doctor and nurse arrived swiftly, checking the suspectâs vitals before transferring him for further examination.
In the silence that followed the storm, Wonhyo handled the aftermath. He took out packets of salt and red beans from his inventory, handing half to the guards and the rest to the detectives.
âBefore you leave this place, sprinkle it on your body. Do it again before you reach home, and on your car tires too. If youâre taking public transport, then donât worry about it.â
Beyond that, there wasnât much else he could do.
âAnd thisâ Iâll be taking it with me.â
He pointed to the dolls bound with golden cords.
The detectives looked uncertain.
âWe canât use that as evidence, can we?â
âNo,â Wonhyo replied plainly.
Without his spiritual power, they were nothing more than haunted dolls.
Who among them could pull an animal spirit into the visible realm like he did? Not even his mother or sister could manage that.
âI see⊠Then may I ask what you plan to do with them?â
âIâll perform a memorial rite,â he said simply.
He could have sent them straight to the afterlife, but those things had devoured human lives. They needed to be cleansed completely before they could be released anywhere.
ăYou are exposed to strong âmalicious energy.â (âŠin progress⊠56.7%)ă
He wouldnât be able to do it alone. Heâd have to borrow his motherâs strength.
Wonhyo stared at the talisman hanging from the golden cord.
Like beforeâwith the vengeful spiritâhe couldnât block all of the miasma, so touching it was dangerous.
To store it in his inventory, heâd have to handle it directly, but that would spike the contamination rate instantly. He could already imagine how ugly that would get.
He hesitated, fingers twitching helplessly, when Cheongmun stretched out his hand.
Summoning a cube, Cheongmun enclosed the dolls within it and lifted them into the air.
âWill it work if I store them in my inventory instead?â
ââŠYes!â
Wonhyo hadnât even considered that. If someone else could safely carry them, all the better.
It did mean Cheongmun would have to accompany him to his motherâs shrine later, but that couldnât be helped.
Wonhyo took a long sip of lemon sparkling water and sighed.
The air around the detention center wasnât foul, exactlyâjust thick with a stagnant heaviness. Negativity clung to the place like dust, sharp-edged and uneasy.
The farther they drove, the lighter it felt. The air outside tasted sweet in his lungs.
After picking up drinks from a drive-through, Cheongmun merged back onto the main road.
The detectives had returned to headquarters, promising to contact him if anything new came up.
Wonhyo watched the detention center fade from view along the riverside road, his eyelids drooping with fatigue.
âWhat do you think will happen to him?â
âThe suspect?â Cheongmun asked.
âYes.â
âHeâll probably have access to a lawyer now. There are two possibilities,â Cheongmun said calmly. âHe could plead diminished responsibilityâclaim dissociative identity disorder caused by possessionâand be released under psychiatric supervision after treatment. Or he might confess and serve time, though his attorney will likely fight for a reduced sentence.â
âSo itâs a matter of denial or acceptance,â Wonhyo murmured.
For an ordinary person, it was an impossible situation to bear.
He turned away from the window.
âEven if he insists it wasnât him, I doubt heâll escape the consequences of what heâs done.â
âYou mean divine punishment?â
âNot exactly. More like karma,â Wonhyo replied. âWhether human or animal, killing in that form passes down the line. The curse doesnât die with youâit follows your bloodline.â
If the sins were truly oneâs own, that would be simpler. But thisâthis was hereditary calamity.
It wouldnât vanish just because he chose to look away. The wise thing would be to face it. Yet someone who flitted from fortune-tellers to tarot readers probably lacked that kind of wisdom.
âHeâll live and die alone, I suppose,â Wonhyo said softly, taking another sip of his drink. The melted ice made it even colder.
âOhâby the way,â he added suddenly. âThe system reacted to the last thing that came out.â
Cheongmun glanced over.
âMagic again?â
Wonhyo opened his status window.
âNo, not exactly. Itâs still analyzing. I donât know why itâs taking so long.â
That was new. It had never stalled before.
âWhen it was an âitemâ last time, the system responded immediately,â he continued. âMaybe thereâs less data on spells than on talismansâbut this time, itâs the opposite. Itâs like itâs struggling to find the right match.â
He frowned. âWhatever itâs hiding, I wish itâd just tell me all at once.â
It would be nice if the corrupted text finally restored itself too.
Heâd hoped meeting the culprit might bring more clues, but aside from the lingering suspicion that the same person behind the vengeful spirit incident was involved again, there wasnât much.
âAre you free on the seventeenth?â
âThe seventeenth?â Wonhyo opened his phone calendar.
âUh⊠yeah, thatâs Monday. No plans.â
It was the week of Eulyuâthe Roosterâan auspicious day, one where exposure to negative energy wouldnât be harmful.
âAnd with the dungeon-born bird flu dying down, thereâs no risk there either,â he added dryly.
âGood,â said Cheongmun. âThen Iâd like to ask a favor that day.â
ââŠDo we have to go far?â
âNo. Weâll stay in Seoul.â
Wonhyo blinked. âDo I need to prepare anything?â
He suspected it would be spirit-relatedâsomething requiring talismans or exorcism tools.
Cheongmun merely shrugged. âHopefully nothing. But it might be similar to what happened at the Mapo apartment.â
Wonhyoâs eyes narrowed. âMapo⊠where the vengeful spirit appeared?â
âYes.â
ââŠIs there a reason Iâd need to go there again?â
The timing made him uneasy. The request hadnât come after the vengeful spirit caseâit came right after meeting a possessed murderer.
Cheongmunâs lips curved in a faint, crooked smile.
âHopefully not. But I have a feeling we might.â
Wonhyo pressed his lips together and let out a long sigh.
âIâll bring whatever I can, just in case.â
Heâd been given a chance to settle an old debtâto repay what he owed. He couldnât waste it.
He made a mental note to check his stock of talisman paper and plan out which ritual tools to craft. At least it wasnât tomorrowâhe needed a day to recover.
Heâd burned through most of his energy. With the heaterâs warmth melting into his bones, heâd nearly dozed off before realizing they were near Hongje Station.
Instead of heading toward Seoul Station, theyâd taken the inner ring road north before looping back down.
Thinking of his motherâs house near Inwang Mountainâs Guksadang shrine, he stretched his sore body.
Despite it being the weekendânormally a quiet hourâtraffic had slowed.
When the car stopped at a red light, Cheongmun glanced over.
âBy the way, how much corruption have you accumulated?â
Wonhyo covered a yawn with his hand and opened his status window.
ââŠSixty-two point nine percent. The cube blocked most of it, so it didnât spike.â
For all the spirits heâd handled, being under eighty percent was impressive.
âSixty-three percentâŠâ Cheongmun mused.
âWhy?â
When their eyes met, his tone was mild but deliberate.
âWhen we arrive, youâll have to take the dolls out of the inventory. That levelâs⊠precarious. It might spike once theyâre exposed again.â
âI mean, maybe⊠but thatâs fine, isnât it?â
He tilted his head, puzzled.
Cheongmun steered smoothly as he spoke.
âWouldnât it be safer to lower the level before we get there?â
ââŠHuh?â
Wonhyo flinched, caught off guard. His eyes darted nervously.
Cheongmun looked entirely unbothered, as though heâd just suggested shaking hands.
Had he not heard it himself, heâd have thought it was a misunderstanding.
Wonhyo swallowed hard, staring at the road ahead as they passed Muakjae.
âUh⊠thereâs no need to do that right now, is there?â
He blinked rapidly, words tumbling out. âYou could just use your skill again like at the visitation room.â
It had startled him the first time, but it had worked perfectly. Why not again?
Cheongmun raised an eyebrow. âMy skill only blocks miasmaâit doesnât purify. It wonât reduce whatâs already built up.â
âBlockingâs enough,â Wonhyo said quickly.
He wasnât planning on leaving again soon.
His motherâs shrine could handle the rest. And even if it couldnâtâwell, that wasnât exactly his problem.
At his refusal, Cheongmun nodded lightly. âUnderstood.â
The car slowed, turning into a narrow lane by the address Wonhyo had given.
Cheongmun glanced out the window, a faint smirk tugging at his mouth.
âQuite a different atmosphere from your place, Mr. Yoon.â
Unbuckling, Wonhyo laughed.
âI donât serve anyone at home. Here, there are plenty of beings to attend to.â
The shrine, set along the path up to Guksadang, looked like an old traditional home at first glanceâbut the details made its purpose clear.
White paper charms hung in garlands across tiled roofs connecting multiple buildings, and beside the gate stood a sotdae pole draped with five-colored cloth.
Wonhyo dialed his sister.
ââWonhyo?â
âYes, nuna. Iâm out front.â
ââGood. Iâll come open the gate.â
He hung up and stepped out of the car.
Cheongmun followed, circling around to join him before the wooden gate.
âWill someone open it from inside?â
âYeah. The lockâs⊠a bit old-fashioned.â
No keypad or electronic systemâjust a thick wooden bar across the door. Cheongmun chuckled under his breath.
Creaaakâ
The gate opened with a rough scrape.
âWonhyo.â
His sister appeared, eyes glowing faintly with a red-tinged aura.
âCome in.â