Crimson Spirits in the Mirrorwood
Crimson Spirits in the Mirrorwood
The first time Yurei stepped inside the Mirrorwood, his boots barely made a sound on the loamy ground. You ever felt someone’s watching before you’ve even breathed in a place? That’s how it feels here, he thought. He’s the last heir of the Tsuzura clan, doomed to find his sister Nari who disappeared three months past within these haunted woods. Every path shimmers. Nothing is true. Friends turn to shadows between the trees. Yurei doesn’t trust even the sunlight—if you could call this stained-red haze sunlight at all.
Following him: Kai, a wandering priest banned from all but the lost temples. “Whatever waits here, it’s older than us,” Kai whispers. You believe there are doors that shouldn’t be opened? Yurei never asked him that, but the thought still arises. Our two heroes clash but keep walking. They have their torch, a ragged old map, and hope that hasn’t worn thin—just yet.
First night—sudden scream cuts the trees, glass-like. Is it Nari? Or trick of this demon-stained place? “Did you hear that!” asks Kai, dagger ready. Yurei grows cold: “That’s my sister. Or a ghost wearing her soul.” Down a washed-out track, they meet Yama, a man draped in vulture feathers. He offers tales for blood: “The woods want a memory. You pay, you pass.” But whose memory? Kai gives one from his own boyhood—mother’s green scarf fluttering at a shrine—just to win Yurei time. Memory flashes. For a moment they’re at the shrine, in sun, then the woods throw them back. They shudder. Doesn’t it scare you, losing what little you have left?
On the second day, the ghost village appears under lichen armour. Houses left open, cold stew on tables. All watches stopped at ‘never.’ Yurei digs his nails into his palm and shakes off the whisper inside his ear. “Keep moving,” he tells himself. They press into deeper parts. A shadow ducks through ruins; it has Nari’s grin—though twisted now. “You found me, brother? Quickly, let’s go—before they feed again.” But her hands aren’t her own. They’re bone-white, clawed. Is this really her? Yurei tries to reach out. When was the last time you had to doubt someone you loved?
Nari twists away. She flees. When she glances back, hollow eyes burn red in the gloom. Kai calls for a barrier: low prayer, damp chalk on a door lintel. It holds—barely. Night falls in a groan of wind through rotted roofs. This time the forest sings, not with birds, but hungry elegy. 
Yurei’s mind cracks and shuffled memories spill out—old arguments, a fight by a rain barrel ten years before, her shoes flung at his head and her laughter so sharp. He can only chase shadows and regret for now.
“What’s the point in keeping the past, if it’s already been devoured here?” asks Kai once Yurei doubts if they should keep searching. What would you do? Press further for someone you lost, when every clue seems half-lie, old trick, old wound?
Then, the mirror pool appears, glassy and dark. Still surface waits beneath hanging boughs. To pass through, both must give away a truth. Yurei’s voice cracks: “I hated that you left me, Nari.” Pool ripples, ripple runs to dark. Kai, coughing, says, “I lied to every priest before I fled.” One by one they stumble through liquid reflection, falling towards blackness—the last scene, a hundred arms of red ghosts reaching up. Will they see Nari, or only each other’s ruined faces? Freeze.