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Chapter 3 - The 'Mercy' of Jungle

The edge of the forest wasn't far.

Tall trees stood like sentinels, guarding truths older than words.

I slithered beneath the underbrush, faster now, stronger.

My skin itched.

I was growing.

Shedding would come soon. A fresh layer of skin, a newer version of this cursed body.

But the jungle had no time for rituals. Not like how humans had a schedule..I remember how I used to organize my schedule in diary before..Haha

For now tho..

I saw a hawk snatch a squirrel mid-scream.

A leopard pacing the ridge, sniffing, looking for meat.

I saw a python strangling a fawn near the river, the bones crunching like twigs.

Everywhere—death and hunger.

It was glorious.

And terrifying.

And in it... I didn't feel out of place.

Not anymore.

---

I made my home inside a hollow tree.

A damp, dark place layered with the smell of fungus and something else—

Snake skin.

Old. Torn. From another life.

Not mine.

I wasn't the first to die and return here.

Something was waiting in this forest.

A path.

A lesson.

Or a curse.

---

Another thing I learned is that I can understand other animal's languages..I don't know how? Maybe it's my power..

It was the monkey that told me.

Yes. A monkey. Thin, scarred, with a torn ear and eyes like oil.

He spoke in riddles and laughs.

> "So cold, the snake… yet its eyes burn like fire. You were man, weren't you?"

I hissed. "You know nothing."

> "Oh, but I do. I know about the Bone Circle. Where all reborn beasts meet."

I was shocked inwardly 'What!?' but I tried to keep my calm and asked,

"Where?"

> "Deeper. Past the river where the crocodile sleeps. Past the stones that bleed. There. You'll find your answer. Or your end."

Then he vanished into the trees, giggling like a broken bell.

---

The journey began.

Days blurred. I hunted. I dodged death. I grew colder.

More snake.

Less man.

I killed a rat. A bird. Even a scorpion.

Each life fed something inside me — not just hunger.

Power.

But guilt never left.

Not even when I struck a rabbit too young to run.

Not even when I heard the girl's voice again, calling to her mother—

> "Don't kill it, Amma. Maybe it's scared too."

...

It wasn't a myth.

The Bone Circle was real.

A ring of rocks, half-buried in moss and bone.

Carved with claws. Painted in blood.

And there they were.

Other animals.

Not ordinary.

A three-legged wolf with eyes like a storm.

A crow that never blinked.

A goat who spoke like a poet.

They all looked at me.

And I knew.

They were like me.

Reborn.

From human.

To beast.

---

A voice, low and heavy, came from the center.

A black cobra, massive and regal, its hood flared with white markings like painted flames.

> "You are late, man-born."

I bowed instinctively.

He circled me slowly.

> "You have tasted life. Death. Pain. Hunger. Yet you still ask why."

"Is this punishment?" I asked.

> "No. It is clarity. You were given a form closer to truth. No lies here. No masks. No mercy."

"Will I die like this?"

The cobra paused.

> "Only if you forget what you were...

And fail to become what you must."

Then he lunged.

No ceremony. No audience. No second chances.

Just the snake elder's voice as I slithered toward the trial ground:

> "You want answers? Then endure what you once gave others—fear without reason."

The trial?

Spend a night near the funeral pyre on the village edge.

A snake, visible.

Not hidden in grass or coiled in shadows.

I was to remain still.

Not hiss.

Not strike.

Not flee.

Just exist, and endure the humans' reaction.

---

At dusk, I slid into position behind a crumbling stone near the pyre.

Ashes floated in the warm breeze.

Smoke. Soot. A burnt sandal.

Villagers gathered to mourn.

No one noticed me yet.

Then the boy came—barefoot, sharp-eyed.

He pointed.

> "Snake!! Amma, snake there!"

It began.

Rocks flew. A stick missed my head by inches.

Two boys shouted, "Kill it!"

One tried to poke me with a bamboo pole.

I wanted to bite.

Every coil in my body begged me to strike.

But I stayed still.

Silent.

Rooted in rage.

Rooted in restraint.

Time crawled like a dying rat.

The moon rose. The humans left.

I remained—broken in patience, but unbroken in will.

The elder snake was waiting at dawn.

> "Now you begin to understand what it means to be feared. For no crime… but being born a snake."

Yeah now I understand how it feels to be on the receiving end of this torture.

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