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The wind did not howl; it shrieked like a dying animal. Kenji pulled his woven straw cape tighter around his shivering shoulders, but the freezing gale cut right through to his bones. He was the only soul on this treacherous mountain pass in Shinshu, knee-deep in fresh snow. Suddenly, the shrieking wind stopped. The silence that followed was entirely unnatural. Then, he heard it—a high-pitched whistling, spiraling closer and closer, spinning violently through the falling snow.
It was the dead of winter in the Edo period, a time when the mountains of central Japan belonged entirely to the elements. Kenji, an experienced courier, was tasked with delivering a bundle of urgent letters across the steep, treacherous alpine valleys. He knew the risks of traveling during a blizzard. The elders in his village had repeatedly warned him about the spirits that danced in the whiteouts, but duty had forced his hand.
The snow crunched heavily under his woven boots. The world around him was an endless canvas of blinding white and charcoal-grey tree trunks. His breath materialized in thick, erratic clouds before being instantly snatched away by the biting cold. Every step was an exhausting battle against gravity and frost. He kept his head down, focusing only on the next step, praying to the mountain deities for a safe passage. The sun was beginning to dip below the jagged peaks, painting the snow in eerie shades of bruised purple and deep blue.
The sudden cessation of the wind was what first alarmed him. In these high altitudes, the wind never truly died; it merely changed direction. But this was an absolute, suffocating stillness. Kenji paused, his chest heaving, his senses on high alert.
Then, a strange pressure began to build in his ears, popping loudly. The snow on the ground a few yards ahead of him began to twitch. It did not blow away; it began to spiral upward, defying gravity. A violent dust devil of pure, freezing white was forming, spinning faster and faster until it became a solid column of blinding snow.
Before Kenji could even take a step back, the whirlwind darted toward him with impossible speed. It was not moving like the wind; it was moving like a predator. The air temperature plummeted so drastically that Kenji felt his eyelashes freeze together. He tried to raise his arms to protect his face, but the sheer force of the spiraling gale slammed into his chest like a battering ram.
He was thrown backward, tumbling violently into a deep snowbank. Disoriented and gasping for air, Kenji scrambled to sit up. The whirlwind was directly on top of him now, completely engulfing him.
Through the blinding vortex, he thought he saw three distinct shadows darting around him. They were small, no larger than hunting dogs, moving so fast they blurred into streaks of dark fur. The first shadow slammed into his knees, pinning his legs to the frozen earth.
Then came the second shadow. Kenji saw a flash of silver—something curved, metallic, and impossibly sharp. He felt a sudden, terrifying pressure drag across his right calf. It felt as though someone had drawn a line across his skin with a blunt stick. There was a sound, too—a sickening snicker-snack, like wet silk being violently ripped apart.
He opened his mouth to scream, bracing for an agonizing surge of pain, but the third shadow was already there. It darted over the exact spot the second shadow had struck. Kenji felt a bizarre, comforting warmth spread over his leg, followed by a strange tingling sensation. And then, as quickly as it had appeared, the whirlwind collapsed. The high-pitched whistling faded over the ridge, leaving Kenji entirely alone in the suffocating silence of the snowy pass.
Kenji sat in the snow, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. He breathed heavily, waiting for the shock to wear off and the pain of the attack to hit him. But nothing happened. His leg felt perfectly fine.
Slowly, trembling, he reached down and brushed the thick snow away from his right leg. His thick cotton trousers were cleanly sliced open, the edges looking as though they had been cut by a master swordsman. Beneath the torn fabric, a deep, horrifying gash ran from his knee down to his ankle. Thick, dark blood was slowly welling up from the wound, staining the pristine white snow around him in a terrifying crimson halo.
He stared at his own exposed flesh, utterly bewildered. The cut was deep enough to reach the muscle, yet he felt absolutely nothing. No burning, no throbbing, not even an itch. It was as if the wound belonged to a corpse.
Kenji carefully stood up. The leg supported his weight perfectly. The old stories of the village elders echoed in his mind. The first knocks you down. The second cuts your flesh. The third applies the medicine. He looked out toward the dark, jagged peaks where the whistling wind had disappeared. He realized then that he had not just survived a storm. He had been spared by the Kamaitachi. But as he began his slow, silent walk down the mountain, trailing drops of painless blood in the snow, a chilling thought remained: what would happen if the third weasel ever decided to stop trailing its brothers?