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Chapter 20

Into the Forever

The morning light was starting to dawn, breaking through the small cracks in the storm clouds, as she was well on her way to parts unknown. Many rumors started to circulate as to where Esperanza might have run off to. It was now two days without a word from her, which was odd to her mother. She asked the townspeople for any news or sightings, but nothing was reported from anyone. Two weeks had gone by, and the rainy monsoon season had passed.

A young boy came to the village, asking if anyone knew of two missing boys. He had come from a small village along the river that was seventy miles away. The boy had been sent by his mother to all the towns along the river to inquire as to who might have been missing the two boys. When he got to Rayon, his search finally ended. There he was greeted with positive results by the townspeople who had been consumed by the search for the missing woman and her children.

Word was sent to Esperanza’s house where her mother was summoned to the town square. The young boy was being fed and cared for after his tiring journey. Esperanza’s mother arrived with a hundred questions for the boy. Were there only two boys? Were they alive? Did he see the children himself?

The mother couldn’t contain her anxiety as she prodded the boy for answers. The young boy was saddened to have to report the details of the children. They were found on the riverbank, entangled among driftwood, both swollen from many days of death and exposure to the elements. He brought with him a piece of the swaddling cloth that was wrapped around one of the children. Esperanza’s mother let out a cry of pain at the sight of the cloth. She instantly recognized it as a small blanket she had given the babies.

The questioning turned to asking if there was a mature woman ever found in those parts and if there was news of a third little boy.

The boy explained the circumstances whereby it was his uncle who was by the river and discovered the children. The villagers came to the site and assisted in the rummaging through the driftwood to be certain there were no other items or casualties, the boy continued.

He reported that the little bodies were promptly interred in the local cemetery and that a mass was recited for their innocent souls. Again, Esperanza’s mother asked if there was any word of a young woman, a stranger to those parts, ever mentioned by anyone. The boy assured her he had heard no mention of such a person. With the young boy’s mission accomplished, he was going to return home. He had been gone five days and was concerned that his people would start to worry. It was then that Esperanza’s mother told the boy she would accompany him to his home; she needed to feel as much as she could about her daughter and grandchildren.

They set off along the riverside road, stopping at the little villages along the way to get water and some food that was customary to give strangers passing through.

At each stop, she would ask if anyone had seen or heard of a young woman who might have passed through. The answer in each case was a stern no.

Arriving at the boy’s village, she felt an eerie chill that signaled some part of her soul was nearby. She was introduced to the uncle who had discovered the bodies. She asked him if one of the children had deformed feet, but he could only answer no with a sad expression.

“They had been exposed to the elements,” he said, and he could only hang his head in sorrow for the poor woman’s plight.

She then asked to visit the cemetery where her little boys were buried, and the old uncle escorted her out to the edge of town. As she arrived, she fell to the ground next to the little graves and wept out loud. The pain that was coursing through her body was intense, as was the guilt for having shunned the innocent babies. It was a guilt she would never be able to escape. She asked to be escorted out to the riverbank where the babies were found, and there again, she cried out to the skies above for forgiveness. It was all she had left to give.

She was then walked back to the young boy’s home where she was shown a place to rest before heading back to her village of Rayon. That night, she was unable to arrive at a sound sleep as she tossed and turned about on the cot. Finally falling to sleep, she was awakened by a wailing cry off in the distance.

It sounded very close to human crying, but she shook it off as some lone coyote celebrating the night’s kill.

My nana stopped speaking and told me she was tired and needed a nap. I was still spellbound by the tale that she had just told me, but I gave her a small kiss on the forehead as she lay down, and I said my goodbye.

I headed back home for my mother’s dinnertime burgers and kept the medallion a secret from my family members. I had a great hiding spot out in my yard where it was kept, never even mentioning the medallion to my friends or Blackie.

I figured that keeping this part of the story a secret would protect my sanity and prevent others from pestering me to see it. I had not yet learned of the power this medallion held and figured I would probably end up selling it for the silver and jewels.

Never in a million years would I ever know the significance or the importance of having this relic in my possession.

Demon Dancer

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