Xia-qingzi -
Her rational mind fought back. Sleep paralysis. Stress. But the jade pendant grew warm each time, until one night it burned her skin awake. She looked down. On her chest, where the pendant rested, was a faint blue bruise shaped like a coiled dragon.
But Qingzi had started remembering things that weren’t her memories. A girl in a red coat, laughing. A flood rushing down the mountain. A promise broken. She realized: the pendant didn’t just carry luck. It carried a soul—her great-aunt’s twin, drowned in 1955 during a sudden storm, her death erased from family records because she had been born on a “cursed” day. xia-qingzi
She never tried to find the well again. But sometimes, at 3:33 a.m., she’d wake to find the jade pendant whole again, cool against her skin, and a single wet footprint on her balcony floor. Her rational mind fought back
Desperate, she returned to her grandmother’s village. The old house was crumbling, the well in the courtyard sealed with concrete and iron bars. “Don’t open it,” the neighbors warned. “Something was put there to sleep.” But the jade pendant grew warm each time,
The next morning, the well was dry. The red coat was gone. But in Qingzi’s apartment in Shanghai, a pot of tea would sometimes be found already poured. And on her architectural models, tiny paper boats would appear—folded perfectly, as if by a child’s hand.
Five years later, Qingzi was a rising architect in Shanghai—sharp, logical, and utterly disconnected from the rural village she came from. Then the nightmares began.