The Youkai Forest

Mokou already felt that something was wrong, and the moment she came into view of the Aoki Yume's Children's Home all but confirmed it.

The house was quiet. The lights were on, all of the outside lanterns were lit, but there was no one in sight. The surrounding fields and the garden were all empty.

If there was something that could be counted on at the orphanage, it was that it was never quiet. Even in the evening after the kids had been brought it one could count on seeing someone about, such as Joshua up on a ladder along the side of the house, repairing a loose window, or Haruna relaxing on the porch.

But there was nobody in sight, and while it was late afternoon, it was still before the time when the kids would be brought in.

Mokou felt a flash of fear, a very rare sensation for her. She tightened her fists and threw everything into a final burst of speed.

The house rushed up to her. She spun around, directed her feet toward the front path, and hit the ground running. From there, she sped up the path, her bare feet kicking up clouds of dust, and leapt up the stairs toward the-

Front path.

Mokou skidded to a stop and looked around in bewilderment. Now she was facing away from the house, as if she had been running away from it instead of toward.

Also, she was pretty sure she had heard someone yell "Ow!" from inside.

Mokou turned back toward the house. For the most part it looked the same, but there did seem to be something off about it, something she hadn't noticed coming in.

Tilting her head to one side, Mokou squinted her eyes. Sure enough, all around the front porch were strange refractions of light, rippling out like the surface of a pond disturbed by a pebble.

Huh.

Mokou took a slow, deliberate step forward into the field of disorientation. Her vision quickly spun around, and she found herself facing away from the porch again. At the same time, someone yelped, "Damn it!"

It Mokou a moment to realize what was going on. That had to be Haruna. Haruna's particular gift was the ability to essentially flip reality, to turn it back around on people. Which sounded like something that would be immensely useful, but unfortunately she was unable to maintain it over a large area for very long, and if anyone or anything actually got flipped by it, it gave her a massive headache.

Rather than subject her friend to a skull-splitting migraine, Mokou cupped her hands around her mouth and called, "Hey! It's me! Let me in!"

Immediately a clamor of voices sounded within. "It's Miss Mokou!" she heard Tomohiro say. "Let her in! Quick!"

"How do we know it's actually her?" Shinji retorted. "Maybe it's another youkai, one that just sounds like her!"

Melissa said something very quick and frantic-sounding in Spanish.

Rolling her eyes, Mokou called out again. "Look, either you guys let me in, or I'm gonna start walking toward the porch over and over again until Haruna's head splits like an egg, okay? It's me!"

"That's her," Satoko's voice said. "Let her in, Haruna."

The shimmers dropped, and Mokou heard the sound of the front door's heavy lock being unbolted.

She rushed inside. There, she saw the most of the kids huddled into a tight group while some of the other adults stood protectively over them. Mokou hastily shut the door behind her and relocked it.

"What happened?" she demanded.

Haruna was sitting on the bottom step of the staircase with her aching head clutched with one hand, with Haruhi standing over her, holding onto her other hand. Sniffing, Haruhi glowered at Mokou with wet and puffy eyes. "Where were you?" she said.

"What? I was getting information like I said I would!"

"Well, you should have been here! You could've stopped this, stopped them from…from…"

"Enough!" Satoko said. She was standing with Akito crying in her arms, her normally stern features now a mix of anger and fear. "This isn't the time to tear into one another! I know we're all scared and upset, but I'm the one who asked Mokou to go look for answers. If you have to be mad at someone, be mad at me."

Haruhi just shook her head and ran off.

Mokou took a deep breath and hissed it out through her teeth. "What. Happened?"

"It was youkai," Satoko said. Her eyes were wet with tears, her face shimmering with sweat. "Wild spider youkai apparently. Five of the kids accidentally wound up outside of the charms during flying lessons. The spiders just…just showed up and took them."

Mokou looked over the group and took a quick headcount. Noba was sitting in a nearby chair, his head in his hands, with his friends Shinji, Tomohiro, and Kazuchika with him. Check. The younger boys, specifically Yoshi, Hiro, Keiichi, Dai, and Yuuki, were in another group, whispering amongst themselves. Check. Melissa, the only girl present, was pacing back and forth, wringing her hands together as she muttered under her breath in her native language. Check, And Akito was in Satoko's arms. Check.

However, more than five children were gone. Both of the terrible trios were absent, as was Melissa's fellow oddball Kana.

"Who?" she said.

Satoko sighed. "Hayate, Haruko, Eiko, Kana, and Keine."

Each name felt like a hammer-blow to her heart, but when she got to Keine Mokou felt something hot and powerful unlock deep within her. Because while she was fond and protective of all the children, Keine was kind of her favorite. Keine had been part of the trio that had rescued her from the snow in the first place. Keine had been the first to reach out to her after she had been brought in, the first to form any kind of relationship with her when all the other children had been too scared to talk to the mysterious and dangerous stranger now in their midst.

"What about the rest?" Mokou said. "Where's Kohta and Rumia?"

"Upstairs," Satoko said. "They, uh, understandably wanted to be alone."

Right, that made sense. After all, it was their friend that had been taken.

Five kids. Five little girls, taken by spider youkai.

Mokou knew the habits of wild spider youkai, she knew them very well. Some spiders were nice. Some were quite friendly people, in fact. But others were not. Others were the sort that did terrible things to other people, that did terrible, horrible, absolutely monstrous things to children. And she felt quite certain that these were of that latter category.

Mokou closed her eyes and mentally counted down from ten. "And you just let them?" she snapped before she had even gotten to four.

Haruna quickly cut in. "We did everything he could, kid," the rough-looking woman said. "Joshua tried to stop them, we both did. But they were ready for us. Hit us with some kind of web. Then they just flew off."

Joshua. He was missing too. And so was Shion.

"Where is Joshua?" Mokou said. "And where's Shion?"

"Shion flew to go get help," Satoko told her. "Old Pine Village still supports us, and it's the closest, so she went there."

Old Pine Village. Right. That also made sense, but Satoko had only answered one of her questions. "And Joshua?"

Satoko bit her lower lip. "He went after them."

The air around Mokou was starting to grow hazy. She heard several of the children whispering to one another, saw them draw away from her. "After them," Mokou repeated. "After whom? To where?"

"The youkai. He went after the youkai. He said that he couldn't let them take…take them to…"

Of course he did. Mokou closed her eyes. "And where did the youkai come from?" she said, her eyes still shut. "Where did they take the kids?"

"We don't really-"

Mokou's eyes snapped open. The haze around her vision was now a film of red.

Satoko gasped and backed away. Akito stopped crying, and just stared.

"I know," Mokou growled. "I know where they came from. I know where they took them. The Youkai Forest. Of course it is."

"Mokou, your eyes," Satoko said as she covered Akito's with her hand. "They're glowing!"

Mokou knew this. Mokou didn't care. "They took them to the Youkai Forest, and Joshua went after them! That's where they are now, that's where he is now, isn't it?"

Satoko's mouth wordlessly opened and closed like a fish's, then she stuttered. "Y-Y-Yes, th-that does seem to be the most likely-"

"Most likely my ass! Look, I've spent the last few days hunting down whatever news I could, and what I found out is that some weird shit is going on in that damn forest, and someone from outside the forest is causing it!"

"Wait, say that again?" Haruna said. "You mean to tell me-"

"I said what I said, now get out of my way!" Mokou roared.

Haruna backed up. She hadn't backed away from anyone in years, but she did so now, though not quick enough. Mokou shoved her aside and made for the stairs.

Children parted like ants from a flood, and Haruna hastily made herself scarce. Mokou stomped her way up, leaving blackened footprints sizzling on every step.

She was coming close to losing it. She was coming close to losing all control and just letting the raging fires that burned within her at all times just burst free. That didn't happen often. Even at her most violent, when her life had been an unceasing cycle of pain and death, she had been careful to restrict it to a single person, someone who both deserved it and could take it.

But there had been a small handful of times, oh so very few, in which she had been pushed too far, when all other options had failed, when she had been confronted by an evil so sickening that her own monstrous soul paled in comparison and the only option was to cleanse everything with fire.

Mokou was not at the point yet. But she was getting close.

She threw open the door to her room and went straight for her dresser. She yanked the bottom drawer straight out and hurled it aside. Then she reached into the empty cavity and pulled out a small oak box.

It was this box that she set on the bed and opened up. Inside were two stacks of aging, yellow paper rectangles, all covered with a series of characters. In between them was a pile of old red-and-white ribbons. The characters on the left-hand stack were all the same, indicating them to be charms that protected against fire. Similar characters were written on the ribbons.

Mokou took those charms and stuck them all over her pants. Then she picked up one of the ribbons and muttered a word. In response, the entire pile fluttered up into the air. They surrounded her like a swarm of butterflies, and then dove in, tying themselves into bows through her long locks of hair. Mokou anticipated violence where she was going, and that meant a great deal of fire was probably going to be slung around. If that happened, then she'd rather not come home naked.

The second stack was smaller, and the runes and glyphs inscribed on each card was different. They were spellcards, each one containing an easily unleashed burst of offensive magic. Along with the glowing magical bullets known as danmaku, Spellcards were the preferred weapon of Gensokyians, and having a few on hand could be the difference between life and death.

Mokou picked up her stack of spellcards. She flourished them like a magician playing a trick to impress children, folded them back up again, and stuck them into her pocket. All right. Now she was ready to go.

Then, before she went through the door, she paused. Wait a minute.

Mokou took the cards out of her pocket and inspected them. It was as she had thought. She was supposed to have twelve cards, but there were only nine. Three of them were missing.

"Satoko!" she yelled.

"What?" Satoko was already at the door, sans Akito. "What is it?"

"My spellcards!" Mokou thrust the nine she had at her. "Who took them?"

Satoko blinked in confusion. "What do you mean? You're holding them."

"Only some! Three are missing! Did Joshua take them?"

"Uh, no? H-He took one of the usual anti-youkai packs we have in storage. I don't think he even knew you had those." Satoko frowned. "Actually, I didn't know you had those. Did you have a stash of spellcards this whole time?"

Mokou barely heard the question. Her mind was racing, filtering through the list of likely culprits.

She ruled out Satoko, Haruna, and Haruhi immediately. Of the three, only Satoko had ever even been in her room, and if she had taken her spellcards she would have told her without apology. Besides, she probably would have taken the whole deck if it meant protecting the kids.

Shion, maybe? To give her some extra protection on her trip? Incredibly unlikely. Shion also had never been in her room and had no way of knowing of her stash. So it had to be one of the kids. But which one would-

"Wait," she said. "Wait, wait, wait. You said Rumia and Kohta are up here, right?"

"Well, yes," Satoko said. "They had locked themselves in the playroom. But-"

Then realization washed over her face, draining it of color. Her hand went to her mouth, and she turned and ran.

"Kohta!" Mokou heard her calling. "Rumia? Answer me!"

Mokou didn't follow. She didn't need to. She already had pieced together what had happened.

Those little idiots. Those brave, loyal, infuriating idiots!

The spiders had five of their kids. There was one adult looking for them, and he was just as helpless as they were in his own way. And apparently two more kids had gone in on their own.

That was eight people she needed to find in a large and dense forest, eight people that were in very mortal danger and weren't even all in the same place.

When Satoko returned to Mokou's room after having confirmed that Rumia and Kohta were nowhere in the house, she found it empty with the window shattered outward and a trail of smoke still rising in the open air beyond, one that led all the way to the Youkai Forest.

Rumia and Kohta's decision to sneak out and go after the spiders that had taken their friends had been easy enough. After that display in the market, they could not trust anyone to come to their aid, and while Mr. Joshua was a good guy, he wasn't exactly the first person that they would have selected to mount a successful rescue operation, especially by himself.

Getting out of the house had been easy. Mr. Joshua and Miss Shion were both gone, Miss Haruna had her hands full with shielding the house, Miss Haruhi was a flustered wreck, and all of Miss Satoko's attention was given to trying to keep things in order. So the second no eyes were on them, they had broken into the emergency defense closet, already left conveniently unlocked by Mister Joshua, and took a pair of anti-youkai knives and some charms. Then Kohta had snuck up into Miss Mokou's room to raid her own stash of weapons, coming away with three of her spellcards.

Once they had been appropriately armed, the two of them had crept into the basement, stole through the larders to the outside door so as to bypass Miss Haruna's shield, and off they went.

It had been so easy, but when the two of them were actually away from the fields and taking their first steps into the forest, Rumia found herself kind of wishing that there had been more resistance. After all, the Youkai Forest was not quite as notorious as its larger and darker cousin, the Forest of Magic, but its reputation was plenty dark enough.

As it was in the middle of autumn, most of the trees had shed their needles, with left the pair with plenty of moonlight to see by. It was a small comfort. The naked branches reminded Rumia far too much of gnarled skeletons grasping at the sky with bony fingers. The ground was painfully uneven and covered with a thick layer of rotting needles and bark, which made moving forward slow and tedious. Though morning was still hours away, a wispy mist lay around the trees' base, further slowing their progress.

And of course, there were the noises.

Every hoot of an owl, every snap of a twig sent shivers down the two children's spines. Rumia had heard plenty of stories of children who wandered into woods such as this and were never seen again, at least not in one piece. Normally she loved those stories, with their macabre tones and gory endings. But it was one thing to recount such ghastly tales to her trembling friends while using her scary voice and laughing at how much it made them shake. It was something else entirely to be willingly stepping foot into one of those tales herself.

Then there were the other stories, the ones with similar set-ups but different endings, the ones in which the lost children would also never come home, but not because they were killed, but because the forest ended up changing them, turning them into something other than human, dooming them to forever wander the forest's dark paths, looking to become the monster in someone else's story.

Though she would never admit it, those were the stories that scared Rumia the most. Her own family had been killed by marauding youkai. Had any of them been lost children themselves? What if the same happened to her? What if she were doomed to become some red-eyed, sharp-toothed thing that devoured the families of other children? The first time she had heard one of those stories, she had been unable to sleep for most of the night. Every creak of the old house had sounded like the soft footsteps of some dark thing, every whisper of wind at the window seeming to call her name, while the moonlight made even the smallest of shadows elongate across the floor, stretching out and reaching for her.

Rumia's hand was clasped tightly to Kohta's, and for once neither of them had a joke.

They moved forward as quietly as they could, taking care not to disturb the forest debris beneath their feet. In this they were doing…poorly. It felt like something crunched with every footstep, and by the time they had gone out of side of the forest's edge Rumia was convinced that every animal and youkai for kilometers had been alerted.

Crunch. Crunch. Crunch.

"Maybe-" she started to say.

Kohta flinched. "Ah! Gods, you scared the crap out of me!"

"Sorry. But maybe we'd better go back."

Kohta stared at her like she had grown two heads. "And let Keine get eaten?"

"No! But we don't know where she is. We can't help her if we get eaten too!"

Kohta sneered at her in disgust. "No. I'm not abandoning her. Go back if you're too scared."

"I'm not scared," Rumia said stubbornly. "I just don't, you know, I just don't think-"

"Shhh!" Kohta clamped a hand over her mouth. "Look!"

There was a light up ahead, bobbing through the trees. The two children looked at each other. Rumia gulped. If there was one universal truth in all the stories they had heard, it was that mysterious lights floating through creepy old forests at night were bad news!

The two crouched behind a tree and peeked out. The light hadn't been their imagination. It was slowly moving through the woods about twenty meters from where they were. What was more, there seemed to a dark, shadowy figure following it. Rumia couldn't make out their features, but it didn't seem very tall.

"Is that a ghost?" Rumia whispered.

"There's no such thing as ghosts," Kohta whispered back.

Despite the severity of their situation, the stupidity of that comment made Rumia just stop worrying about the light and stare at her friend in shock. "Kohta, that might be the dumbest thing I have ever heard you-"

"Keeeeeiiiiiiinnnnnneeeeee!" the dark figure suddenly called out, its warbling voice echoing through the night.

Rumia and Kohta both ducked out of sight.

"Kaaaaaaannnnnnnnaaaaaaaaa!" the voice called. "Eeeeeiiiiiiiiikoooooo!"

Rumia was shaking all over. It was a ghost, a dark phantom mournfully crying out the names of their probably dead friends, doomed to forever wail the names of the deceased like an eternal eulogy for the-

"Oh," Kohta said. "It's him! Mr. Joshua!"

Rumia slowly breathed out. He was right. "Great. I thought we were in a different part of the forest than him."

"I guess not. Let's go before he sees us."

Kohta started to leave, but Rumia tugged sharply on his hand. "Wait," she said. "Maybe we'd better go to him."

"No way!"

"But-"

Kohta wrenched his hand from hers. "Look, if you're too scared, then you go talk to him! He'll probably just have to take you back, and he'll just stop them from searching! Keine and the others could die while he's doing that! We came out here to help find them, not make the rescue take longer!"

Rumia winced. That was a very good point. Sighing, Rumia just nodded and got up to follow.

The pair stealthily moved away from the other search searcher. It felt like it took forever, but eventually the light disappeared, as did the sound of Mr. Joshua's voice. The only sound was that of their footsteps crushing leaves and sticks.

Crunch. Crunch. Crunch.

When she was absolutely certain that they were alone, Rumia said, "There's no such thing as ghosts? Really?"

"Well, I've never seen one," Kohta said, somewhat defensively.

"Wow," Rumia said. "Wow."

"Look, everyone knows that when you die, your soul gets taken across the River Suzune by the Shinigami! That's just the rules! You don't get to stick around haunting your old house and-"

"Shhh!" Now it was Rumia's turn to slap a hand over her friend's mouth.

Kohta shut up, though he was obviously bursting with questions.

Rumia pointed a finger. When Kohta saw what she did, he made a low whimpering sound.

There was a clearing up ahead, a circle clear of trees and bathed in moonlight. There wasn't much in it other than patches of wild grass and some small stones. However, sitting directly in the center was a…something, something that Rumia could only see the basic shape of. It was large, hulking, and had a pair of great elk antlers protruding from the top.

Rumia shied back. It was one of the great monsters of the forest, it had to be! How many stories of had she grown up hearing of the dark spirits that wandered these woods, of their bloodthirsty dispositions and their taste for the flesh of children?

She tugged on Kohta's hand and tilted her head back the way they came. Maybe if they crept away as slowly and quietly as they could, they could get away without attracting its attention.

"Wait," Kohta whispered, his eyes somehow narrowing even further as he studied the towering silhouette.

Rumia gawked at him in disbelief. Wait? Why should they wait? They needed to get away from that thing right the hell now!

However, Kohta didn't seem to share her rational fear of whatever the thing in the clearing was. "I don't think it's alive," he whispered again.

Rumia quite frankly didn't care. Lots of things weren't alive. That didn't make them any less likely to kill the two of them!

However, Kohta was not to be deterred. He began to slowly creep around the clearing, keeping his eye on the thing. And since she couldn't pull him away without making a racket, Rumia was forced to go with him.

The silhouette didn't move as they circled around it. Rumia bit her lower lip to keep from whimpering in fear as she watched its horned head, just waiting for it to suddenly turn toward them.

It didn't.

"I think-" Kohta started to say, right before Rumia slapped a hand over his mouth. She gawked at him for being so stupid as to talk with that thing so close.

Kohta rolled his eyes. He pulled Rumia's hand off and inclined his head toward the silhouette.

Rumia looked again. Come to think of it, it didn't look like any kind of creature. Instead, it seemed kind of rough and misshapen. However, it did have a definite shape, one with a high and wide back and-

"It's a chair," Kohta sniggered. "That's all it is. A chair."

Rumia shot him a dirty look, but he was right. It was a chair, a great big chair made of stone and covered with moss, sticks, and even a few mushrooms.

"A chair. You were scared of a chair!"

Rumia flicked him in the ear. "That still doesn't mean it's not dangerous and evil! It's probably like some kind of cursed throne!"

Kohta shrugged. "Well, okay, but it's not doing anything."

Rumia ignored him. She wanted to see what the horns were all about.

She continued to circle around the clearing, bringing the front of the chair into view. It was still hard to make out the details, but her eyes had adjusted pretty well to the darkness, and there was plenty of moonlight to see by. Just a little further, just a little further…

Then Kohta inhaled sharply. Rumia swallowed.

There, seated in the chair, was an amalgamation of bones, seemingly collected from a dozen different creatures. Big bear bones, slender bird bones, and even Human bones, all carefully pieced together in a massive humanoid shape swathed in ragged clothes that swirled in the night breeze.

And seated on the top of its shoulders was a grinning bear's skull affixed with a pair of elk antlers.

"What the hell?" Rumia said.

"I…" Kohta took a step backward.

Rumia shot him a look. "Still think it's not scary?"

"I…" Kohta's face had gone pale. "Maybe we'd better, you know, leave it alone."

Then the horned bear skull turned to fix its empty eye sockets right at them.

Rumia gasped and Kohta made a sound like he had gotten kicked in the gut. The two spun around and ran from the clearing as fast as their feet would take them.

"Eeeeeiiiiikoooooo!" Joshua called.

There was no response. He had been tramping through the forest for the better part of an hour now, and still had found nothing. No response, no tracks, no any sign of the kids or the monster that had taken them.

He was starting to get frantic. The youkai had flown through the air during their retreat. What if they simply had dropped down into the forest right at their lair? If so, then there was probably no trail to be found. He was just going to wander around aimlessly until something ended up picking him off as well.

Pushing those dark thoughts from his mind, Joshua muttered a short, terrified prayer under his breath. Those had been coming with greater regularity the longer his search went on, and they were becoming increasingly desperate.

Then something cracked under his feet.

Joshua paused, and then stepped back. He knelt down.

It was another pile of bones, those of some kind of big cat. From the look of things it had been dead and picked clean of meat for weeks, and now all sorts of things were growing all over its ribs and vertebrae.

Joshua closed his eyes. Actually, he hadn't found nothing. He had been finding plenty of bones. No Human bones yet, thank God, but that might have already changed.

In his mind's eye, he saw the ravaged and defiled remains of the children, their flesh and meat ripped from their bones and gobbled down, their bloody skeletons left for the scavengers and the remains of their clothing left to rot, until exposure to the elements erased all trace of their existence, leaving no evidence that their had ever been a Haruko, a Kana, a Hayate, an Eiko, or a Keine.

It was a horrific fate, and it happened all the time. There were probably bones from a few hundred children scattered all over the forest.

Joshua refused to let it happen to his.

He rose up and set off again. "Haaaaaaruuuuuuuuukooooooooo!" he called. "Can you hear-"

Something seized him by the back of his collar. Before he could react, he was swung around and slammed backfirst into a nearby tree trunk, with a forearm thrust across his windpipe.

Gasping like a fish, Joshua looked up to see two blazing red eyes in a coldly beautiful face, one framed by locks of shimmering silver hair and a mouth full of bared teeth.

"Quiet, you idiot!" Mokou hissed. "Do you want to get yourself eaten? Because this is how you get yourself eaten!"

"Stop," Kohta panted. "Stop. It's not chasing us."

Rumia might have argued the point, but to tell the truth she was willing to take any excuse to stop running. She was young and active, but hadn't had to run that fast for that long before. Even footraces back home had only lasted a few seconds.

The two children collapsed in the shelter of a gnarled tree as they tried to catch their breath. Despite being completely out of breath and nursing aching legs, Rumia still made a point of checking to see if Kohta was correct.

Sure enough, there was no sign of a bony amalgamation pursuing them, though honestly it was so dark that simply not being visible didn't count for much.

"What was that?" Kohta said.

"How the hell should I know?" Rumia said. "Seems like no matter how many stories we hear about this place, someone always has a new one."

"Well, I guess now there's one more."

"I guess." Then, despite the direness of their situation, Rumia couldn't resist sneering at him. "So, still don't believe in ghosts?"

Kohta sighed. "Oh, shut up, Rumia."

"Seriously, that is easily the dumbest thing I have ever heard you say."

"I said, shut up, Rumia!"

Rumia did so, though she didn't stop smirking.

After a while Kohta said, "Hey. Do you hear that?"

Rumia did, actually. In fact she had been about to ask Kohta the same question.

There was a low buzzing sound, like hundreds of insects beating their wings, barely perceptible over the sound of their own breathing, but now that it had been pointed out it was clearly not her imagination.

"Yeah." Rumia's face twisted up in confusion. "What the hell is that?"

Kohta shrugged.

Now there was a second sound, a deep, bass pulsing, like a sluggish heartbeat.

Something rustled the leaves nearby, beyond a tall tree. The two children tiptoed toward the tree. As they did, the buzzing grew shriller and shriller, until Rumia could feel it in her teeth. As for the thumping pulse, that only grew deeper and deeper, until Rumia could feel it in her gut.

They pressed their backs to the tree and peeked out around it.

Beyond the tree was a short but steep incline into a leaf-covered depression. And standing in those leaves with its back to them was a…a thing.

It was humanoid, with two legs to stand upon, a torso were a torso ought to be, two arms dangling from its shoulders, and an oval-shaped head on those shoulders, but that was where the similarities ended. Its body was just so horribly long and thin, with sticklike legs taller than either one of the children were, an emaciated body twice the length of a normal Human man at less than half the thickness, and arms that hung down to its knees. Its head was completely hairless, with beams of moonlight shining off of its pale dome. It wore a form-fitting outfit of black, and its flesh was as white as bleached bones.

The pulsing grew louder, or maybe that was just Rumia's heartbeat. There was no question about it now, no "maybe it's evil and maybe it's just a pile of rocks and bones." This was an actual youkai monster, one of the evil wanderers of the Youkai Forest.

The slender creature didn't seem to have noticed them. It was calmly loping forward, taking long and slow strides, its footsteps barely disturbing the leaves. Rumia looked over to Kohta and tilted her head in the opposite direction. Kohta nodded.

Then the creature paused, and everything fell silent. The buzzing stopped, as did the pulse.

Rumia and Kohta went stiff.

The creature raised its head, as if sniffing the air. It reached up with one disturbingly long arm to touch the branches up above.

Then the buzzing returned, and Rumia swore she heard voices in it. The pounding returned as well, staring off slow but building to a thundering percussion, as the slender creature slowly turned around to look over its shoulder directly at them.

It had no face. From its pointed chin to the round dome of its head was nothing but a blank expanse of skin.

Oh, screw this!

With nothing left to gain from hiding, Rumia and Kohta again spun around and fled.