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Nan Pass Village
Republic of Kuridan – 3rd Month, Early Morning
Snow falls lightly, vanishing into the steaming breath of chimneys.
Republic of Kuridan – 3rd Month, Early Morning
Snow falls lightly, vanishing into the steaming breath of chimneys.
✧༝┉˚*❋ Whispers in the Mist ❋*˚┉༝✧
The snow whispered against the thatched roofs of Nan Pass Village, soft and constant like a lullaby the mountain never stopped singing. Lanterns swung gently from wooden eaves, their golden glow barely reaching beyond the drifting mist. Somewhere, a bell chimed the hour—low and reverent, its tone swallowed quickly by the hush of falling snow.
Though the village was quiet, it was not at peace.
Tucked against the edge of Nan Pass, the village had always been known as a small mining outpost, a place where stone and ore were coaxed from the mountain’s bones. The mines had run for generations, cut deep into the foothills of the Paizu Mountains, and though the work was hard, the people endured—proud and resilient.
Now, the pickaxes rang less often. The forges cooled sooner. And the silence in the snow grew heavier by the day.
Beastkin villagers, cloaked in layered kimono, moved through the narrow, sloped streets with downcast eyes and quickened steps. A mother tugged her child away from the edge of the shrine path, muttering blessings to the mountain spirits. A snow harekin merchant packed his stall early. No one spoke too loudly—as though afraid something in the mist might hear them.
Outside the teahouse and message hall, a parchment fluttered softly in the breeze:
“Assistance requested.
Dangerous unrest in the upper ranges.
Aid needed to investigate the Yukijin.”
Signed: Genta Moriyama, Village Headman
Inside, the scent of roasted barley and pine ash mingled in the warm air of the teahouse. A kettle hissed softly over the hearth, its steam curling in the dim morning light. At a low wooden table near the window, Hoshime, the one-eyed foxkin elder, poured tea with deliberate care.
Across from her sat Genta Moriyama, shoulders tense beneath his winter coat, a half-finished cup cradled in his hands.
“They haven’t come,” he said, voice low, roughened by worry. “It’s been days.”
“They’ll come,” Hoshime replied, calm as ever. “They always do. Sooner or later.”
Genta shook his head, staring into the steam.
“The Yukijin are moving closer. We’ve seen them near the ridge trail. They don’t attack, but they watch. Quiet. Still. Like they’re waiting for something.”
“They’ve always watched,” Hoshime murmured, sipping her tea. “The difference is, now we’re afraid to look back.”
Genta’s brow furrowed.
“And the Belmonte homestead… torn apart. Tools shattered. Garden destroyed. No sign of animals—just cold ash and silence.”
Hoshime’s tail flicked, thoughtful.
“It wasn’t the Yukijin.”

“No. It wasn’t.” Genta leaned forward, eyes hard. “But the village thinks it was. And that boy—Kenta’s youngest—came back bloodied. Deep gashes across his side.”
“Blades,” Hoshime said quietly. “Not claws.”
He nodded.
“Too clean. Too precise.”
They sat in silence a moment, the crackle of the hearth the only sound between them.
“The Yukijin have lived in those mountains for generations,” Hoshime said at last. “They didn’t change. Something changed around them.”
Genta exhaled through his nose, the weight of responsibility bowing his shoulders.
“Then I hope whoever answers that call knows how to listen… before they draw a sword.”
Outside, the snow continued to fall.
And somewhere, beyond the curve of the pass,
the mountain waited.