Me: “Complete? Is that mean……”
Friend: “Yep… The tomb has already completed……What do you think needs to be placed there to make it completed?”
At this point, aside from the clueless hunters, I think everyone else knew what this meant.
The feng shui master later explained that whoever “completed” this tomb must have had a decent level of geomantic knowledge.
And they probably hate someone deeply…
Even though the tomb was complete, my friend still had to assess its condition. So he started walking around and inspecting the area.
At the feng shui master’s direction, the apprentice was told to fish something out of the pool—a strange little stone statue or beast figurine—for them to examine.
Me: “Wow, being your apprentice sounds rough…….”
They noticed a nail driven into the stone—a coffin nail.
Normally, a coffin nail is used to ward off evil. So, placing it in an ominous point—maybe it was for protection?
Wrong. While coffin nails are indeed protective, if they’re melted down and recast, they become objects that gather yin energy (death energy). And with it nailed into that stone beast, the intent to concentrate yin energy was blatantly obvious.
Just as the teacher was debating whether to destroy the coffin nail or leave it undisturbed for now, he noticed his apprentice staring behind him, eyes wide and dazed.
Then the apprentice started trembling and stammered, “M-Master… there’s a woman over there in the shadows….”
The teacher froze, turned around, and saw nothing.
“She’s crying, saying why are we helping him? He’s so awful, so why… Oh my God, Master, she’s covered in blood! There’s blood flowing from her eyes…”
The teacher immediately turned back, pressed his apprentice’s head down, poured pure yang water over the apprentice’s head, and wiped it across his eyes.
Then he tossed the stone statue back into the pool, told his apprentice to shut his mouth, and began chanting something under his breath, as if reciting a sutra.
The thing might look hilarious from normal people. In reality, it might seems like:
Middle-aged Hunter: “Look at that young guy just wading into the pool like that—doesn’t even change his shoes or care about getting his feet wet?”
Old Hunter: “It’s shallow, so it’s not a big deal… Wait, did he just pull out a stone statue? Could it be some ancient artifact?”
They watched as the young guy suddenly pointed behind the old man.
The old man turned to look, then immediately turned back and smacked his apprentice on the head before splashing water on him. Then he tossed the stone back into the pool.
Old Hunter: “Looks like it’s not that important. Seems like the kid was just messing with the old guy.”
Middle-aged Hunter: “If he can’t take a joke, fine—but no need to hit the kid and splash him, I say…”
After my friend finished his inspection, he turned around and saw the master and apprentice still in their original positions, almost like they were praying. He hurried over to them.
The teacher didn’t say much, just told my friend there wasn’t a big problem and that it’s better not to mess with strange things they come across.
Then he patted his apprentice on the shoulder, saying it was fine now, and walked over to the dark spot the apprentice had pointed at earlier.
Just as my friend started to feel puzzled, the teacher picked up a short, flat object from the shadows and came back.
Before my friend could ask, the teacher looked down at the object and muttered:
“Why bother… dragging yourself into it too—was it really worth it?”
Then he looked up at my friend and said, “I’ll take this with me. If you’re done checking and there’s nothing else, let’s head back.”
Though it was odd, my friend told the teacher he’d already confirmed everything. The positions of the points hadn’t changed, so they could head back whenever.
Naturally, the return trip was uneventful—though, personally, I was kind of hoping for something to happen.
Later, we found out that while the ominous tomb was indeed ominous, it wasn’t the kind that worked just by burying something there…
Beyond finding the correct place, both “eyes” needed to have parts of the same person buried in them to take effect.
(Think about how you’d even split someone in two…)
The object the teacher took, according to the apprentice later, was something like a guardian item.
But it had been mixed with “certain things” from a resentful person, creating a cycle of curses and hatred.
It also trapped the person who set it up in that same cycle—neither the one they hated nor themselves could leave that land or find peace. How deep must that hatred have been, to go through all this effort and ruin themselves in the process, just for a revenge cycle that might only be psychological?
Also, when they confirmed the points, they did some digging… According to my friend, the remains were quite old—fragmented bones, impossible to tell if they were human or animal. To avoid unnecessary trouble, they didn’t mention it to the two hunters.
Me: “By the way…”
Friend: “What’s up?”
Me: “A few times when we went hiking, you’d always tell me to go first or pick stuff up…”
Friend: “Yeah?”
Me: “You weren’t calculating something back then, using me as a shield or whatever, were you?!”
Friend: “Nope. ( ′_ゝ)”
AdvertisementsMe: “Come on, seriously?”
Friend: “Nope. ( ′_ゝ)”
Me: “… You Better!!”
Finally, let’s talk about the unfavorable of this ominous tomb place.
The place is located in a sinkhole, formed over many years. The central cavity has stagnant airflow.
Additionally, the pool in the middle is still water. Though it doesn’t flow, it can evaporate—but because the area is high-altitude and cool, the moisture gets trapped inside.
The two “eyes” of the point are at the ends of the pool where sunlight doesn’t reach—spots untouched by the sun. This creates a chaotic state of no sunlight, no airflow, and no water movement.
That’s just the internal feng shui. It still needs to align with the broader external feng shui.
In short, this place is naturally flawed and severely imbalanced by external factors.
According to the feng shui master, the incomplete burial of remains already violates a major burial taboo—let alone the act of breaking the bones.
Not only does it prevent the deceased from finding peace, but it also curses their descendants.
The twin-point setup, paired with the split remains, amplifies the resentment and unwillingness of the dead due to their proximity.
Yet the stagnant energy traps it all, preventing the deceased from being purified by the natural energy of heaven and earth.
A recast coffin nail continuously draws yin energy into this spot, and combined with the point’s inherent chaos, it accelerates its transformation into an ominous site.
What’s even more extreme is that the person who buried the deceased used some method to bind themselves to this place too.
Their own resentment, mixed with the cycling yin energy, not only corrupts the land but also perpetually suppresses the deceased, ensuring they never find release.
What kind of grudge could drive someone to commit such a heinous act, harming both others and themselves in the process?
What the apprentice saw was likely the manifestation of that resentful soul…



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