The snow had always been gentle in Hoshimine.
It fell without violence, without urgency, as if the sky feared disturbing the fragile peace of mountain villages. Renjiro Aokami had grown up believing snow was kind. It softened sound. It hid scars in the earth. It made even poverty appear pure.
On the morning his world ended, the snow fell the same way.
He descended the mountain path carrying bundles of charcoal, breath steady in the cold air. He was tired but satisfied. The earnings would buy rice. Perhaps dried persimmons if he bargained well. Akari loved persimmons.
He imagined her smile.
That was when he noticed the silence.
Not the normal winter hush.
A wrong silence.
Birds were absent. Wind carried no scent of cooking fires. Even the dogs in neighboring homes did not bark.
Then he smelled it.
Iron.
Dense.
Wet.
His body reacted before his mind understood. The charcoal slipped from his back, scattering against stone. His breath shortened. Each step toward his home felt heavier, as though the snow resisted him.
The door stood half open.
Snow drifted inside.
The metallic scent thickened.
Renjiro stepped across the threshold and the world collapsed into stillness.
His mother lay near the hearth, her hand extended as though reaching for something that was no longer there. His younger siblings were scattered across the room in unnatural quiet.
No movement.
No warmth.
Only red spreading against white tatami.
The snow that had always been kind now seemed merciless, settling gently upon lifeless skin.
For a long time, Renjiro did not cry. Shock hollowed him. Grief had not yet found its voice.
Then he heard it.
A faint rasping breath.
Akari.
She lay near the far wall, her body trembling faintly.
He rushed to her, lifting her gently. Her skin felt cold but alive. Relief surged through him with such intensity it hurt.
He carried her outside immediately, desperate for help in the next village.
That was when her body convulsed.
At first he thought it was shock.
Then her grip tightened unnaturally around his shoulder.
Her breathing grew uneven.
Her eyes opened.
They were no longer the soft brown he knew. They burned crimson — luminous and unfamiliar.
Her lips parted, revealing teeth too sharp.
The growl that escaped her throat was not human.
Renjiro stumbled backward into the snow as she pinned him beneath her. Her strength was terrifying — far beyond her small frame.
He could feel her hunger.
Not cruelty.
Hunger.
A primal force pushing against her mind.
For a moment, instinct urged him to fight, to push her away. But he did not.
He saw tears forming at the corners of her distorted eyes.
She was still inside that body.
Fighting.
He whispered her name — not as command, but as memory. He reminded her of persimmons. Of the time she tripped carrying water and laughed instead of crying. Of how she insisted on walking ahead of him on mountain paths as if protecting him from invisible threats.
Her grip trembled.
The growl fractured into something broken.
She did not bite.
Instead, she pressed her forehead against his chest as if seeking anchorage.
Snow continued to fall around them, indifferent witness to a choice that should not have been possible.
And in that moment, Renjiro understood something without words: whatever had taken his family had not fully taken his sister.
He did not know yet what she had become.
But he knew she was still Akari.
And that would be enough.
