She Stole My Cursed Dress—Now Death Follows Her
When I was seven, an accident turned me into a Shadow Walker.
Spirit money, burial garments, gold and silver ingotsofferings burned for the deadI could use them all in the world of the living.
On New Year's Day, my younger cousin Rose came to visit with her family. They'd struck it rich a few years back, and she'd developed a princess complex to match. The moment she spotted my designer outfit, her eyes went green with envy. Limited edition. Only 999 pieces worldwide. Money and connections couldn't buy it.
She asked to borrow it for a few days. Wanted to show it off at school.
I refused without hesitation.
She didn't say anything at the time. But after their family left, I opened my closet.
The clothes were gone. Along with a bag of "money."
I called her immediately. She'd already blocked me.
Monday morning, I walked into school and found her surrounded by classmates, basking in their praise while wearing my limited-edition outfit.
I marched over, face dark. "Take off my clothes. Now."
Rose looked me up and down, lip curling. "You? A nobody like you couldn't afford this outfit even if you sold yourself. What makes you think you can claim it's yours?"
The classroom erupted in laughter.
I watched the dark energy slowly gathering between her brows, and my frown deepened.
That "designer outfit" she was flaunting? It wasn't what they thought it was.
To my eyes, it was a burial garment. Clothes meant only for the dead.
When someone living wears it, the yin energy seeps into them. Best case? Bad luck and constant illness. Worst case? Death.
And anyone close to her would be dragged down too.
To Rose, I probably seemed petty. I had nice things but wouldn't share. But I had my reasons. I couldn't risk her life just to seem generous, could I?
What I never expected was that after I refused, she'd sneak into my room and steal not just the clothesbut a whole bag of spirit money too.
Of course, to living eyes, that "spirit money" looked like cold, hard cash.
Watching her smug expression, part of me wanted to let it go. She liked stealing so much? Fine. Let her wear it until the consequences caught up.
But I couldn't quite bring myself to abandon her.
After a moment's hesitation, I tried again. "Rose, you can't wear that. It'll hurt you. Give it back."
My restraint only made her bolder.
She grabbed her textbooks and hurled them at my face. The thick stack slammed into me hard enough to make my whole body jolt.
Rose snorted. "Delia, don't think being my older cousin gives you the right to accuse me of theft in front of everyone."
"Everyone knows your family's broke and mine's loaded."
"You? Afford designer brands?"
"Hahahaha..."
The class dissolved into laughter again. They looked at me like I was an idiot.
Rose had money and spent it freely. Sweet face, pretty smile. Boys and girls alike flocked to her, eager to stay in her orbit, willing to run errands just to keep her happy.
As for meI wasn't bad-looking either. But I was a Shadow Walker.
I already had an aura that screamed "stay away."
Anyone who got close would feel an inexplicable chill, their heart skipping for no reason. And unlike Rose, I didn't throw money around to buy friends.
Over time, the contrast between us became stark. Rose arrived at school like a princess, swarmed by admirers. I was the freak everyone avoided.
The boys who'd once tried approaching me? They all gave up eventually.
Aaron Chavez was the first to defend his "goddess." The jock glared at me, eyes blazing. "Delia, everyone knows Rose's daily allowance is more than your entire year's living expenses. Head to toe, she's dripping in designer. And you're saying she stole from you?" He scoffed. "Have you no shame?"
The sycophants piled on immediately.
"Take a look in the mirror."
"With your face? You think you can afford limited-edition luxury?"
"Some people are just delusional."
"Riding on being Rose's cousin, trying to take what isn't yours."
"Rose was born with that rich-girl aura. Everything looks designer on her. But you? Country bumpkin. Even real brands look like knockoffs on you."
"What you're doing is disgusting."
"We despise you."
Most of the class raised their middle fingers at me, faces twisted with contempt. Some went furthercalling me a shameless parasite, a vampire trying to steal from Rose. They said having a cousin like me was "a disgrace to the family."
Every insult they could think of, they hurled at me.
I was trying to protect Rose from the dark energy clinging to those items. And for that, I became the villain.
Rose watched it all with a satisfied smile, lips curving upward. "Cousin, don't say I'm bullying you. I'll give you a chance to prove yourself." Her voice dripped with false sweetness. "Just show us the receipt. If you can, I'll admit I stole it."
She paused.
"So? Can you?"
The whole class stared, waiting.
Rose looked so confident. Obviously, she'd torn my room apart and found nothing.
She knew I couldn't produce a receipt.
As for where I'd actually gotten the outfit? She didn't care. As long as it was real, that was enough for her.
When I stayed silent, her smirk widened.
"Can't produce it?" She reached into her pocket. "Here. Look at this."
Aaron snatched the slip of paper, scanned it, and grinned. "This is the proof of purchase for the outfit. Delia's just slandering Rose."
The mockery intensified. They called me shameless, pathetica girl so desperate for designer brands she'd frame her own cousin.
Rose basked in their support, more smug than ever.
"Cousin, look at youeven if deep down you're jealous and bitter, you shouldn't claim this outfit is yours."
"Everyone knows you only wear thrift-store garbage."
"Who'd believe you can afford designer?"
"If you really want nice clothes, come by my place. I've got tons of last-season stuff I can toss your way as charity."
"You just had to come to class and make a fool of yourself."
"Humiliated yourself for nothing."
"Why bother?"
Watching Rose preen, waving around a forged receipt just to steal my burial garment, my expression went flat.
"Since you want it that badly."
"Wear it."
"I don't want it anymore."
I returned to my seat, pulled out my textbook, and started studying.
The mockery swirled around me. I tuned it out.
These past few years, Uncle Vincent's business had exploded. Rose's life transformed overnightluxury cars, household staff, designer everything. Somewhere along the way, she'd developed a princess complex.
Even with family, she looked down her nose at us. We weren't people to her. We were "low-class"beneath her.
Mom and Dad always told me to let it go. I tried. I avoided conflict, swallowed my pride, kept the peace.
But this crossed a line.
She wanted that outfit so badly? Fine. Let her wear it.
Whatever happened next wasn't my problem. I'd warned her. She didn't listen.
"I'm in a good mood!" Rose's voice cut through the room. "Money's being handed out!"
She pulled a thick stack of cash from her backpack.
The class went silent.
Most of us came from ordinary families. A few bucks for lunch money, if that. Nobody had ever seen this much cash in one place.
Aaron's jaw dropped. "Holy crap, that's gotta be tens of thousands!"
Rose glanced at the bills, unbothered. "No idea how much. It's just my allowance."
"I'm feeling generous. Everyone gets a cut."
The room erupted.
"Rose is amazing!" voices shouted.
Even the kids who usually kept their distance from herthey shoved forward too, terrified of missing out.
"Don't push. Line up."
"Everyone gets some."
They formed a line. One by one, they approached Rose like she was royalty dispensing favors.
Each person walked away clutching hundreds. Some got over a thousand. They bowed. They thanked her with tears in their eyes.
Word spread to the neighboring class. They were practically foaming at the mouth with jealousy, wishing they could drag this "goddess of wealth" into their homeroom.
Too bad for them.
While everyone celebrated their windfall, something cold settled in my stomach. I stood up.
"You can't take her money!"
The room went quiet.
Every pair of eyes in the classroom turned on me, sharp with hostility. Hands tightened around bills like I might lunge forward and rip the cash away.
"Delia, I'd advise you to mind your own business." Jayden Perry, class president, stepped forward. Of course he'd be the one to speak uphe'd gotten the biggest cut. Nearly two thousand dollars. Enough to finally buy that game console he'd been drooling over for months. "This is pocket money Rose gave us. You say we can't take it, so we can't? Why? On what grounds?"
I didn't tell them the money was mine. I didn't explain that Rose had stolen it from my room along with my clothes. Even if I told the truth, they'd just think I'd lost my mind over cash.
What they were clutching so desperately? Spirit money. Currency for the dead.
Sure, they could spend it. But the price for using it wasn't something the living could afford.
"Believe me." I kept my voice steady. "Return the money to her. Now. You cannot use it. The consequences will be... severe."
My warning earned nothing but hatred. Their curses hit me like stones, resentment dripping from every word.
Looking at those hostile stares, I knew greed had already blinded them. Nothing I said would break through.
Dark energyinvisible to mortal eyeswas already drifting toward them in thin wisps, coiling closer.
They're done.
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