The misty forest loomed dense and silent, its ancient trees draped in silver moss, their branches twisting under a sky choked with roiling gray clouds, their edges pulsing with a sickly green. Suyeon lay slumped against a gnarled trunk, its bark etched with glowing runes that pulsed faintly in time with her heartbeat. Her breath was shallow, each exhale a faint wisp that vanished in the damp air. The yeomma's burn seared across her chest, its dark veins encircling her heart, pulsing with the curse that thundered within. Her nine tails, hidden beneath a cloaking spell as fragile as the mist, trembled with her depleted power, her foxfire a faint glow flickering in her palms, though the cracked orb she clutched pulsed stronger, its silver light a steady anchor, its runes shifting like a living chant, whispering her true name. The pain was relentless, a fire choking her with every heartbeat, but the weight of Jinwoo and Hana's presence threatened to break her. Jinwoo knelt beside her, his blood-soaked hanbok staining the moss crimson, his amber-flecked eyes wide with worry as he pressed a trembling hand to her shoulder, shielding her from the forest's chill. Hana stood a few paces away, her broken staff clutched like a talisman, her gray eyes scanning the mist for Miran's shadow or the god's next hunter. The air was thick with the scent of wet earth and divine malice, the forest echoing the god's words: *The pact is eternal.*
Suyeon's arm throbbed, the burn's dark veins a lattice of pain resisting her foxfire's healing, though the orb's growing warmth dulled the curse's edge. The curse pulsed, a searing reminder of the pact made a thousand years ago—kneeling in a temple, her fur matted with her kin's blood, begging a god for power to survive a world that hunted Kumihos. The god's veiled face, her cold voice demanding a vow—*Serve me, or surrender all you are*—haunted her. The temple, the yeomma, the shadow foxes, Miran's pursuit—they were a trap closing around her, with Jinwoo and Hana caught in its jaws. She wanted to push them away, vanish into the mist, but their loyalty was a chain she couldn't break, their blood a guilt heavier than the curse.
"Suyeon," Jinwoo said, his voice rough, strained by pain and the forest's damp chill. He leaned closer, his blood dripping onto the moss, his hand steady despite his wounds. "You're not okay. We need answers, something to fight back." His amber eyes searched her face, his oath a fire burning through the mist, anchoring her against her will.
She shoved his hand away, eyes flashing gold before forcing them brown. "I don't need your pity," she snapped, voice hoarse, the burn's agony wavering her words. She struggled to her feet, the soft moss cushioning her unsteady steps, her body trembling with exhaustion. "You're bleeding worse than I am, Jinwoo. Save yourself." Her words lacked venom, her gaze lingering on his bloodied form, guilt a blade sharper than the god's wrath.
Hana's broken staff sank into the earth, her face pale, blood trailing faintly in the moss. "He's right," she said, voice sharp but strained, breath heavy in the humid air. "You're dying, Kumiho. That burn's divine—it's killing you faster than you think. We're not safe here. Miran's out there, and the god's not done." Her gray eyes met Suyeon's, grudging respect flickering beneath suspicion. "There's a glade deeper in the forest—I felt its energy crossing the portal. It's old, maybe sacred. It might hold answers, not just shelter."
Suyeon's lips curled, a bitter smile masking the fear clawing her chest. "You think a glade will stop a god?" she said, voice low, bitter. "She wants my soul, and yours to get it." She stood, swaying, her cloaking spell straining to hide her trembling hands, the orb's glow anchoring her. The curse pulsed, the burn spreading, and the memory of the god's laughter grew clearer—her vow a chain forged in desperation. The pact's terms were foggy, but its price was stark: her soul, or theirs.
Jinwoo stood, limp pronounced, blood staining the moss. "Then we face her together," he said, voice steady despite the chill. "I swore an oath, Suyeon. I'm not leaving." His hand hovered, stopping short of steadying her, respecting her warning. His amber eyes burned, a fire that ached her heart, reminding her of lives destroyed by letting mortals near.
Hana's voice cut through, sharp, practical. "Enough," she said, staff pointing to a faint path through the forest, mist parting to reveal a silver glow from a distant glade. "We're wasting time. That glade's our best shot—answers, power, something. Die out here if you want, Kumiho, but I'm not letting that god take me without a fight." She started down the path, steps deliberate, blood trailing faintly in the moss.
Suyeon hesitated, the curse burning hotter, the burn's pain choking her despite the orb's warmth. She didn't want their help, their blood on her hands, but the mist was relentless, Miran's laughter echoing in her mind. She nodded, leaning on Jinwoo despite herself, his warmth a lifeline she hated needing. They trudged through the forest, the path winding deeper, trees growing denser, bark etched with runes pulsing stronger with silver light. The glade loomed closer—a circular clearing, its center a stone platform carved with foxes, their eyes glowing brightly, tails curling in ancient, familiar patterns.
Suyeon's curse flared, not with pain but clarity. She'd been here before, not as Yuna or any mortal guise, but as a Kumiho, centuries ago, before the pact. This was no shrine to the god, but to her kin, a place where Kumihos wove their magic, silver tails dancing in defiance. The air was still in the glade, mist parting gently, the curse quieting as the orb pulsed stronger, its runes glowing vividly, syncing with the platform's carvings. The orb's hum grew louder, whispering her true name and a ritual—a chant to sever a divine bond. The sacrifice rune glowed brighter, its meaning stark: breaking the pact required her immortality, her memories of her kin, or her Kumiho essence, leaving her mortal, stripped of self.
"This place," Suyeon whispered, hand brushing the platform's runes, their touch cool against her fevered skin. "It's ours." The curse stirred, a memory flickering—not the pact, but her kin, their laughter, their strength, chanting to seal their power into an orb like hers. The orb was a vessel of their defiance, its runes a guide to breaking the god's chains, but the sacrifice rune warned of losing her identity. The glade hummed, runes glowing brighter, the orb's light pulsing, revealing etchings—a ritual requiring her essence to unlock its full power.
Hana's eyes narrowed, staff raised. "It's old," she said, voice low. "These runes protect spirits like you, alive here, vibrant. This place could hold the god back." She glanced at the orb, gray eyes sharp. "That relic's your kin's will, a weapon. But it's asking for something big, isn't it?"
Suyeon's heart raced, the curse pulsing softly, responding to the glade and orb's awakening. "It's their legacy," she said, voice hoarse, resolve flickering. "My kin sealed their strength to defy gods. It shows me how to break the pact, but the price…" Her fingers traced the sacrifice rune, dread heavy. "It might take my essence, my memories, my immortality." She sank to her knees before the platform, the burn's pain easing, runes glowing brighter, the orb's light steadying her. Memories flickered—her kin's silver tails weaving through a glade, chanting against divine tyranny. The orb was their hope, a key to sever the god's hold, its price a shadow over her soul.
Jinwoo knelt beside her, tearing a strip from his hanbok to bandage her arm. "You're not alone," he said, voice low, urgent. "Whatever the relic demands, we'll face it together. Use it." His fingers brushed her arm, gentle but firm, and she flinched, foxfire flickering brighter with the orb's influence.
"Don't," she said, voice breaking. "You don't know what you're asking, Jinwoo. The pact's not just my soul. It's blood, sacrifice. If you stay, you'll pay." Her eyes met his, guilt of his wounds unbearable. Flashes of her past—lovers betrayed, allies lost—faded into centuries. Jinwoo's oath was a chain, binding him to her fate, and she couldn't let him die for it.
Hana knelt by the glade's edge, staff across her lap, eyes scanning the mist. "These are Kumiho runes," she said, voice soft, reverent. "They protect your kind, not bind them. This place, that orb—it could break the pact. Its power's older than the god's, maybe stronger." She paused, gray eyes softening. "What did you trade, Suyeon? What does she want?"
Suyeon's claws twitched, foxfire stirring despite exhaustion, bolstered by the orb's power. "I don't remember everything," she said, voice low, bitter. "Young, hunted, my kin gone—slaughtered by exorcists, mortals, demons. I begged a god for power to survive, and she gave it—at a cost. My soul, my freedom. I thought I could outrun it, live mortal. I was wrong." She paused, hand brushing the burn, its pain a reminder of the pact's price. "The god wants my service, or my death. And now, she wants you."
The glade trembled, a rumble sending leaves falling. Runes flared, silver light clashing with green glow seeping through the ground. A voice echoed, cold, melodic: "You cannot hide, Kumiho. The pact is eternal." The curse roared, Suyeon staggered, her cloaking spell breaking, a single tail flickering. Jinwoo's hand tightened on his sword, eyes on the glade's edge, where mist swirled, parting to reveal Miran, her talisman glowing, eyes burning with the god's power.
"You've run far, Kumiho," Miran taunted, stepping into the glade, mist clinging to her tattered robes. "The god's patience is gone. Surrender, or they die." She raised her talisman, runes pulsing, shadow foxes rising from the moss, black tails lashing, eyes green, unblinking.
Suyeon rose, nine tails breaking free, their silver light illuminating the glade, amplified by the orb's glow and the platform's runes. "If she wants me, she'll have to take me," she snarled, foxfire flaring brighter, fueled by the relic's power and the glade's energy. Jinwoo fought beside her, sword slashing shadows, blood staining the moss. Hana's talismans burned, binding foxes, but Miran's power overwhelmed, her staff splintering further.
"You can't win," Miran said, talisman pulsing. "The god's will is absolute." She raised her hand, a yeomma emerging from the mist, molten-iron hide glinting, eyes burning green. Suyeon's heart sank, foxfire flickering, but the orb's energy steadied her. She met the yeomma head-on, tails slashing like blades, the relic's power surging, amplified by the glade. The yeomma roared, claws tearing air, and she dodged, body sluggish, burn choking her.
Jinwoo's sword struck, drawing ichor, but the yeomma's claw hurled him into a tree. Hana's talisman burned, binding its legs, but it broke free, roar shaking the glade. Suyeon's foxfire, amplified by orb and glade, erupted, consuming the yeomma, its form dissolving into ash, but the effort dropped her to her knees, tails fading, body trembling.
Miran laughed, talisman flaring. "You're done, Kumiho," she said. "The god will claim you." But the glade's runes pulsed, the orb flared brighter, its runes vivid, a crack splitting the ground to reveal a faint light—a portal. Suyeon staggered to her feet, clutching the orb, leaning on Jinwoo, his blood mixing with hers.
"We go," she gasped, voice raw. They stumbled through the portal, the world twisting, emerging in a misty peak, the glade's remains behind them. Suyeon collapsed, tails gone, body drained, the orb clutched in her hand, its glow her only anchor. Jinwoo knelt beside her, breath ragged, eyes fierce. Hana stood guard, staff raised, face pale.
"We're trapped," Hana said, voice low, resolute. "Miran's at our heels, the god's chains a noose." The mist churned, cold, suffocating, and Suyeon felt the pact's weight crushing her, her defiance a fading ember that could either shatter her bonds or consume them all—her essence, or their lives.