The Curse of the Rabbit's Blood
Chapter 1. Shadows of the PastIn a dense forest, where ancient trees hold the secrets of centuries, lies the eerie mansion of the **Lilith** family. A girl with an unusual appearance—a mix of Asian sophistication and European beauty—grew up here, unaware of her family's dark past. Her mother, a beautiful European, perished in a horrific fire, but her father refused to see it as a sign from above.
On the burnt threshold of the mansion, there was an ominous symbol: a rabbit skull with deer antlers and a bloody inscription in an ancient language. The fortune-teller warned her father about the impending retribution, but he dismissed her warnings and continued his cruel business of producing fur coats and conducting cosmetic experiments on rabbits.
Chapter 2. The Harbingers of TroubleAs the days passed, Lilith sensed that a curse was looming over her family. Strange sounds came from the forest at night, and the shadows grew longer. The fortune-teller came again and again, begging to stop the murders, but the father was adamant.
On that fateful night, everything changed. Lilith woke up to a strange noise in the factory. What she saw was etched in her memory forever: her father, mutilated and dying, hanging from a hook, with a small rabbit with blood-red eyes and horns sitting beneath him. The last thing she remembered was a demonic creature lunging at her.
Chapter 3. Awakening of the CurseShe woke up in a dark forest, entangled in scarlet ribbons of the curse. A talking rabbit, a messenger of the Forest Spirit, emerged from the shadows. He revealed the truth: her mother's death was not an accident, and all the warnings had gone unheeded. Now, hundreds of thousands of rabbit souls were forever bound to Lilith, and she must bear the burden of guilt for her family's actions.
Chapter 4. A New LifeSince then, Lilith has become a living embodiment of an ancient curse. Her body burns with pain, and the souls of the slain rabbits follow her like an invisible shadow. As the last of her kind, she must find a way to atone for her ancestors' sins or succumb to the weight of their crimes.
As the days turned into months and the months into years, Lilith learned to live with the pain, but she never fully accepted it. She began exploring the forest, communicating with its inhabitants, and gradually realized that the curse was not only a punishment, but also a gift. A gift of understanding the language of nature, feeling its pain, and protecting it.