The small village grows unusually rowdy. The Hoyo clan, with their ears perked up, eavesdrop on conversations and whisper among themselves.
âDid you hear that? Weâre all going to die? Whatâs that supposed to mean?â
âDo you really believe what the humans say? Itâs nonsense, obviously.â
âBut these days, only ominous things have been happeningâ¦â
âItâs because Hwayo disappeared. Now, weâre stuck with all the misfortune that was meant for her.â
The Hoyo clan is split on their reactions to the news of their supposed impending doom.
Some believe the world has conspired to end them, while others think itâs just a shift in misfortune now that the Gumiho has left.
Their reactions vary, and even they donât know the full truth. Only the Fox Elder knows the real story, having deliberately kept certain information secret.
In the distant past, when Linâs identity as a Gumiho was common knowledge, disputes would erupt almost daily.
After all, one cannot receive a heavenly mandate and live like a mere hound of heaven. There were those who rallied for breaking the Gumihoâs seal and starting another rebellion, and others who adamantly opposed, claiming it would be a foolish repetition of history.
But in a small village with nowhere to go, working together would barely be enoughâdisputes were out of the question.
So, the elder of the time decided to cast all the blame on the Gumiho.
They purged the concept of heavenly mandate from the foxesâ minds over generations, imprinting the idea that the Hongho was a misfortune-bringing monster.
They convinced everyone that their only reason for staying in Baekun Valley was because of the Hongho.
What remained was a defenseless young Gumiho, branded a criminal the moment she emerged from the seal. Using her as a scapegoat brought peace to the village.
Karamir clicked his tongue inwardly.
âHow revolting.â
A fox like a hokage of the third generation, wielding some ninjutsu staff. Probably some fox magic involved. Whatever.
Unlike Harold, who had his reasons, the Hoyo clan of Baekun Valley were undoubtedly trash.
Karamir, although tempted to leave them to their fate, knew that he couldnât live life exactly as he pleased.
âWhat will you do? Weâre busy people, and weâll be leaving soon, so if you keep evading, weâll just go,â he said.
ââ¦What is it you want?â
The elder eyed Karamir warily, trying to be as cautious as possible. But Karamir shook his head with exaggerated disapproval.
âStill havenât figured it out? If we leave, youâll all be monster fodder. You shouldnât be asking what we wantâyou should be begging, âPlease save us!ââ
ââ¦â¦â
He had a point. Ever since the Gumiho disappeared from Baekun Valley, the Hoyo clan had been living under the constant threat of death.
Now that she had returned as an Omihou, they had no way to keep her from leaving. If Lin left, theyâd be doomed.
They lacked the means to escape the monsters outside, and so their survival relied entirely on other options.
After much deliberation, the Fox Elder finally bowed his head.
âI beg you. I donât want to die. We never wanted this. Why should we bear the consequences of our distant ancestorsâ sins?â
Had they not defied the heavens, had they lived with satisfaction, there would have been no need to be trapped in Baekun Valley.
The elder bemoaned their ancestorsâ actions, seeking sympathy, but Karamir sneered, unimpressed. Typical fox behaviorâplaying the pity card.
âDonât act like a victim now. You pushed everything onto Lin, who knew nothing.â
âWe had no choice. We would have been destroyed if we hadnât.â
âDisgusting rationalization. I would have achieved a far better outcome.â
âIf only you had beenââ
âEnough excuses. Just get to the point.â
Though he was a young human, the elder had no choice but to listen as Karamir spoke.
âIs the threat to the Hoyo clan outside the valley the Ungwi?â
âIt is.â
Ungwiâthe bear ghost.
Since ancient times, it has been revered as the guardian deity of Baekun Valley, the root cause of why the Hoyo clan cannot leave.
The Ungwi, which survives on the mountain's spiritual energy, stands a colossal 40 meters tall. Its breath, laced with strange powers, lingers in the air without dissipating.
That breath forms the mist that shrouds Baekun Valley.
âSomething about this is unsettling.â
Thinking about breathing in bear breath with every inhalation made Karamir uneasy.
The goal was simple: if Lin defeats the Ungwi, the Hoyo clan can be spared from their impending doom.
Naturally, he had no intention of doing this for free.
âI will capture the Ungwi for you. However, there are two conditions.â
Now they were getting to the heart of the matter. The elder swallowed, unable to guess what Karamir would demand.
âFirst. You must reveal to everyone here who Lin truly is. And the heavenly mandate they carry.â
ââ¦And the second?â
âI understand thereâs a shrine underground, known only to the Fox Elder.â
âHow did youâ¦?â
The elder looked startled, almost losing his composure. How could an outsider like Karamir know of a shrine known only to the Fox Elder?
Indeed, there was an underground shrine in the fox den, unknown to anyone but the elder.
âLet Lin enter the shrine. That is my second condition.â
It seemed Karamir understood the shrineâs purpose perfectly.
How?
If the man before him had once seemed merely suspicious, he now invoked fear. Accepting his conditions seemed certain to bring disaster.
âWill you accept, or not? We donât have time.â
But the elder wanted to live.@@novelbin@@
He listened to his survival instincts.
âI will accept the first condition. But the secondâ¦â
âWhy? Is it impossible?â
âItâs not that I wonât show her. I believe she is currently unfit to harness the power within. If she were to lose control, there would be no point in accepting your terms.â
âSo you wonât let her see it?â
âIâm not refusing to show her. First, defeat the Ungwi. If she proves her worth by handling the Ungwi, it will demonstrate at least minimal competence.â
The elderâs expression was resolute. Despite his immediate compliance when his life was threatened, he refused to back down on this.
âSo thatâs how it is.â
The elderâs refusal was within Karamirâs expectations.
To raise Lin into a true Gumiho, she had to return to Baekun Valley before they perished for not fulfilling their heavenly mandate.
It was a race against time. Before then, Lin had to grow stronger.
Once she became an Omihou and growth stalled, she would return to Baekun Valley, accept the elderâs request, and defeat the Ungwi. Only then would she be granted access to the shrine as a reward.
However, with prior knowledge, there was more flexibility than in the original. It meant options that didnât exist before.
He thought that obtaining the shrineâs secrets would make defeating the Ungwi much easier, but it seemed it wasnât going to happen just yet.
âIf youâre that firm on it, I suppose thereâs no other way. Fine. Iâll accept the first condition first, and then, once everythingâs settled, weâll deal with the second.â
The Fox Elder gathered the Hoyo clan in the villageâs small square and revealed the truth.
Linâs true identity. Why they remained in Baekun Valley. The reasons behind the recent surge in disasters. What would happen if Lin were to leave.
Their survival now lay in Linâs hands. Shock and disbelief spread through the Hoyo clan.
âIs this⦠a lie?â
One of the Hoyo, who had often tormented Lin, clenched their jaw and glared at the elder. The elder averted his gaze.
This was the truth, not a lie. Naturally, the Hoyo clanâs gaze shifted to Lin.
âHwayo⦠Lin? You wonât abandon us, right?â
âH-Hey~ Weâre family, after all. You wouldnât do that, right? Come on, letâs eat meat together now! Animal liver is so delicious, you know.â
âSheâs going to defeat the Ungwi for us, isnât she? Sheâs going to get us out of here.â
The foxes approached Lin, wearing insincere smiles that reminded her of sycophants sucking up to a king.
Watching them grovel made Linâs heart churn. Confused emotions surged within her, creating an uncontrollable storm in her chest.
Those who once treated her as a calamity now acted as if she were a savior. All because she had a few more tails.
Could perception really change that quickly?
It was disgusting. She didnât want to deal with them.
Lin swiftly leaped away and disappeared somewhere in the village.
âWhat the? Whereâs she going? She has to defeat the bear before she leaves!â
âShe wouldnât, right? I mean, weâre family. She only survived because we didnât drive her out and shared our potatoes with her, right? If she has any conscience, sheâd help us out.â
âOf course, right? After all, weâre practically family. Would she really betray blood?â
Watching them pat themselves on the back, Karamir sighed. Living in such an isolated village, they had never learned the art of reading the room.
Karamir followed the direction Lin had gone. He found her crouched in a corner of the deserted village.
âWhatâs wrong? Not happy with the way things turned out?â
Even as Karamir approached, Lin kept her eyes fixed coldly on the ground.
âThey need you now, donât they? The same ones who tormented you. You hold their lives in your hands now. Isnât that satisfying?â
âLin never wanted this. She just wanted to be treated as a fox, as familyâ¦â
Lin had always watched from afar, longing to be part of the laughter and camaraderie the other foxes shared. She envied them and dreamed that one day she, too, would be treated like that.
But now, they werenât treating her like family. They only saw her as a tool, something to sacrifice for their benefit.
The Lin who had longed for their acceptance felt a deep, indescribable disappointment.
âHmm, it seems youâre too caught up in this idea of family.â
âItâs justâ¦â
âLin, family really isnât much, you know?â
âHuh?â
Lin perked up her ears.
With a wry smile that fit a slave trader, Karamir leaned in, a mischievous glint in his eye.
âDid Lin choose to live with them? No. She was simply there when she came to her senses. And itâs the same for them. Family is just an arbitrary connection. Like a heavenly mandate.â
Children donât choose their parents, and parents donât exactly choose their children either. Itâs not like they picked them out of a lineup.
âWe like to think of it as an unbreakable bond. Even if we didnât choose it, even if itâs uncomfortable, we have to stick to it. Imagine how inconvenient that must be.â
ââ¦â¦â
âBut the people we meet in life are different. We choose those we want to stay with, and they choose us too. âI want to be with that person.â Itâs a connection born out of mutual will. Just like how I chose you, Lin.â
Lin lifted her head slightly.
âA relationship that requires both sides to choose each other. Not fate, but a bond we create by our own choices. Isnât that even closer than family? What do you think, Lin?â
Lin thought for a moment.
Karamir, a stranger who cared for her. The Hoyo clan, family who only looked after themselves.
There wasnât much to consider.
âI like the Master better. Not them. I want to stay with you.â
âThen, why worry about being accepted as family by them? Just focus on being good to me. Youâre my slave, after all. A slave only needs to please their master.â
It was true.
All she needed was to live up to the expectations of the one who picked her up that day. The Hoyo clanâs well-being had never been her concern.
The master-slave bond was far more important than family.
Having sorted out her thoughts, Lin brushed herself off and stood up.
âLin will go catch the bear.â
All for the Master.