A cold wind shoved through the mouth of Tunnel 26, and something alive in the dark called Diego's name, sharp as a pick against rock.
Potosí, Bolivia—a city of ghosts and legends, where the weight of history sits in the thin mountain air. Above it looms Cerro Rico, the "Rich Hill," once the source of the Spanish Empire’s vast wealth. Its silver veins fed distant empires, paid with lives. Tens of thousands of indigenous and African laborers died in its depths, their footsteps and stories folded into the stone.
Among the miners who still go below, whispers travel like wind through the tunnels—stories of shadows that move on their own, of voices calling from unseen places, of a spirit who has never left: a miner murdered for greed and still searching for justice.
Diego Ayala had spent his life among those stories. He never believed them. Not until the night the ghost of Cerro Rico whispered his name.
The Mountain’s Curse
Diego had worked the shafts of Cerro Rico since he was a boy. It was the only life he had ever known, as it had been for his father and grandfather. Each day he went down with a lantern and a pick, feeling the stone close around him. The deeper they dug the less silver the mountain offered and the worse the tunnels became—unstable, cold, full of the scent of old dust and damp metal.
“The Tío is restless,” Don Vicente said one morning, his eyes veiled by dust and years. Miners left offerings—coca, a dram of alcohol, the occasional sacrifice—things meant to keep the underworld spirit from taking more than it already had. Diego did not pray to the Tío. He believed the mountain had rules, and he respected them.
That morning, Diego and his crew entered Tunnel 26. The mine was a low hum of pick and breath. Then, deep in the dark, he heard something else: a whisper that threaded straight through the clatter.
“Diego...”
He stopped. No one was behind him. His lantern painted the walls in quick strokes. The air tightened around his chest.
For the first time, fear moved through him like cold water.
A Warning from the Past
That night the miners gathered outside a small tavern, singani steaming in their cups and the streetlights throwing long bars across the cobbles. Diego told them what he had heard. Conversation stopped. Even the bartender's rag was still in his hand.
“What did you hear?” Don Vicente asked.
Diego said simply, “Someone whispering my name.”
The old man's face closed. He spoke then of Tomás Soria, a miner who once found a vein so rich it would have changed everything. Tomás trusted another man, Luis Aguirre, and the trust became the chain that ended his life. Aguirre killed him deep below and hid the body where no sun could find it. Then the mountain took Aguirre as punishment; his body was never found either.
“The old ones say Tomás never left,” Don Vicente said. “He walks the tunnels until someone uncovers the truth.”
Diego swallowed. “And you think that’s what I heard?”
“If the mountain is calling, do not walk back into its throat,” the elder warned. “Run.”
Diego did not run.
Descent into Terror
He returned to Tunnel 26 the next day, determined to prove the tale a story for drinkers and old men. The pick struck stone until his arms ached. Then the whisper came again, a voice at the edge of a lantern's reach.
“Help me...”
Diego dropped his pick and turned. The tunnel seemed to hold its breath. A shadow moved, not quite a man, not quite a trick of light. It stepped forward into the cone of his lantern and the shape resolved—then blurred like smoke.
Diego ran that time, up and out and into day, lungs burning with cold air. He fled not because he believed in ghosts but because the place had found a name for him.


















