Huening kai doesn’t believe in curses. He doesn’t believe in ghosts, past lives, or anything supernatural. He believes in his friends, and that’s enough.
But the changes he starts noticing are impossible to ignore.
At first, it’s small things: the shadows in the corners of the rooms seem darker when he’s around. The ocean calls to him when he’s by the window. And at night, he wakes up to see the girl—not in his dreams, but standing at the edge of his bed, just staring at him with those pleading eyes.
She never says a word, but every time she appears, he feels something stir deep inside of him. It’s a connection—an overwhelming sense that she’s trying to tell him something.
Huening kai becomes the emotional anchor of the group. When everyone else is at their breaking points, he’s the one who makes them laugh, keeps them from falling into despair. But deep inside, he’s starting to crack.
The truth? Huening kai is the musician’s reincarnation—the one who once loved the girl so fiercely, and yet was forced to let her go. But his love wasn’t enough to break the curse. In this life, Huening kai feels the full weight of her sorrow, her loneliness.
As the curse reaches its peak, Huening kai discovers a heartbreaking truth: The girl’s soul has been calling to him not just for closure, but because she’s still in pain, trapped between the worlds, unable to move on.
Huening kai faces a choice: To save his friends and break the curse by letting the girl’s soul finally rest, or to return to the past and find her again, risking everything he’s built in this life.
In the final moments, when the full moon reaches its peak, Hueningkai realizes that the true power of the curse isn’t just the music—it’s the sacrifice of love. He has to choose whether to embrace the love he’s always wanted to give her or let go of a bond that’s been haunting him for lifetimes.