Mateo ran with his chest burning and the river's bell still ringing behind him, the forest closing like a hand. Wind scolded the leaves; insects cut at the evening air. He had one thing in his head: the warning his grandmother had pressed into his palm—"Beware the Duende." The words hit him again as he crossed the last footbridge, and he kept moving because curiosity and the ache of proving himself tugged harder than fear.
The village of Tarpia sat low and leaking smoke into the dusk, a cluster of roofs and crooked palms where everyone knew the paths and where the old rules still mattered. Mateo's grandmother spoke in short, sharp sentences when she told the story: a small creature, a hat, fingers like roots. Her voice dropped when she said the rule—do not chase what hides at the forest's edge.
But rules do not stop hands that want to know. At dawn, Mateo packed bread, dried meat, a flask, and a scrap of cloth his mother had tied to his shirt. He stepped under the canopy where the light thinned, and the air grew moss-cool. The forest sounded like a held breath. He walked until the trees shifted and closed behind him.
He followed a thin music at first: a whistled phrase, then a soft chime like glass. The sound pulled him into a clearing where the air tasted different—sweeter and sharper at once. There, small as a child but older than a stone, the Duende watched him, hat shadowing its eyes.
The creature's skin was dark and lined, its fingers tapered like roots, its teeth small and serrated. It regarded Mateo the way someone might regard a curious animal. "You shouldn't be here," it said, the voice like a net of wind. Mateo answered with a single, steady word: "Mateo."
The Duende smiled without warmth and reached out a long finger. The touch at Mateo's forehead was like a cold sun; his sight folded.
When his eyes opened he was elsewhere—rows of twisted trunks arced like the ribs of a great sleeping thing, mushrooms hung like pale lanterns, and the dusk tasted of cool loam and rain. The Duende walked beside him with a stride that did not hurry and spoke of balance in a voice that sifted through the air: people cut and took until the old names forgot the land, and the land answered by letting its keepers slip from memory.
It led him past a pool that reflected no sky but faces—old hands cradling seedlings, a woman mending a net with a child watching—images that lived in the creature's remembering. Mateo watched them like images behind glass; his heart pulled toward the real river and the way his sister's laugh had fallen at its bend the week before when men floated logs through a narrow curve. Those memories arrived as small knives of regret and also as simple proof: people belonged to places in ways work and trade could not erase.
The Duende did not scold. It showed. A sapling bending where a stump used to be; a riverbank scarred by a new channel; a footpath where an old tree had been taken. Each vision settled in Mateo like a stone in his chest and made a sound: the river's bell, a child's cough, the scrape of an ax. The lesson was not a sermon but an assembly of small losses set side by side.
Then the air tightened. Shadows pooled at the edge of that woven world—shapes that moved with a slow crookedness, their edges ragged like old rope, their eyes dull sparks that ate warmth.
"The forgotten ones," the Duende said, and there was no anger in it, only an exhausted clarity.
"They are what memory unbinds. They feed on being left behind. They take names and dress them in hunger."
Mateo felt panic, sharp and immediate, but beneath it a steadier thought: running would be a choice that left others to the unmaking. He thought of his grandmother's palms, the river's bell, the way the village's songs used to name trees and places. Those are the bridges, he realized—small acts that bind a person back to what keeps life whole.
When the shapes advanced, Mateo did not flee. He set his feet, felt the earth press up through his sandals, and spoke in the strongest, plainest voice he had.

















