Chapter 1: The Girl Who Spoke to Ghosts
The alarm clock screamed at 6:00 a.m.
Hye Young opened her eyes to darkness — not the peaceful kind, but the kind that clung to her walls like smoke. Her room was small, cold, and bare, except for the single photo of a man with kind eyes on her nightstand.
Her father.
Dead, but not gone.
“You didn’t sleep again,” his voice whispered from the shadows.
Hye Young turned toward the faint shimmer of light forming near the window — the outline of her father’s spirit, glowing softly in blue. His presence always came with the scent of wildflowers and rain.
“You know she wouldn’t let me,” Hye Young murmured, sitting up.
Outside her door, she could hear footsteps — her mother’s. Heavy. Sharp. Each step carried anger.
The door opened without a knock.
Ha Rin — elegant, flawless, cruel — stood there in a silk robe that shimmered like a fox’s fur. Her eyes glowed faintly gold.
“Still talking to ghosts?” she asked, her tone dripping with disdain.
Hye Young lowered her gaze. “He’s my father.”
Ha Rin’s smile was a knife. “Your father betrayed the heavens for me. Don’t make the same mistake.”
She stepped closer, her perfume suffocating. “Tonight, a guest will visit your room. Be pleasant.”
Hye Young’s blood ran cold. “Mother—please, not again—”
“Do as I say!” Ha Rin’s voice cracked like thunder, her tails flashing faintly behind her. “You were born cursed. At least make yourself useful.”
The door slammed.
Hye Young sat frozen, trembling, tears stinging her eyes.
Her father’s spirit knelt beside her, his touch cold but comforting. “You must leave, my child. Before she destroys what little light you have left.”
“But where can I go, Father?”
“Follow the wind. It will lead you away from this place. And remember—” he looked at her with a faint smile, “—your power will awaken when your heart learns what love truly is.”
The words sank into her heart like an ancient promise.
That night, the storm came.
Thunder roared through the mountains as Hye Young packed a small bag — a hoodie, a notebook, and the photo of her father. Her mother’s voice echoed from downstairs, laughing with guests.
She slipped out the window into the rain.
The cold wind whipped her hair as she ran — down the hill, through the forest, past the old temple where foxfire still burned faintly on the stones.
Each step felt like breaking a chain.
When she finally reached the road to Seoul, she collapsed on the sidewalk, soaked and breathless, whispering,
“I’ll never go back.”
Weeks passed.
She lived quietly in a cheap boarding house, attending a small high school in the city. She never told anyone what she was — not human, not monster — just something in between.
Her classmates called her weird.
She didn’t mind. She had learned long ago that loneliness was safer than love.
Until that day.
It was raining again when she saw the little boy in the middle of the street — crying, his foot trapped in a broken drain. A truck’s horn blared in the distance.
Without thinking, Hye Young ran.
The world slowed.
Time itself froze — raindrops hung motionless in the air. Her eyes glowed faintly gold as power surged through her veins.
She pulled the boy free, pushing him out of the way.
Then—impact.
A delivery bike slammed into her side, and everything went dark.
When she opened her eyes, there was white.
Hospital lights.
Voices, distant but kind.
“She’s just a child,” a woman’s voice said softly.
“Then she stays,” a man replied firmly. “Until she wakes.”
The woman turned toward him. “You’re too kind, Chairman. What if she has no one?”
The man sighed. “Then she’ll have us.”
Far away, in a mansion shrouded in mist, Ha Rin sat before a mirror, her reflection shifting between woman and fox.
She smiled darkly. “Run as far as you like, little one. You cannot escape what you are.”
The mirror flickered, revealing Hye Young’s unconscious body glowing faintly with divine light.
“Half human. Half gumiho.”
“A curse upon both worlds.”