La Ruta Del Diablo Guide
My blood turned to ice.
The voice grew clearer. “Papi, it’s dark. I’m scared. Come find me.” It was perfect. The tremor in her lip, the way she swallowed the last vowel. A grown man could not have mimicked it. But the Devil doesn’t need to mimic. He just reaches into your mind and pulls out the thing you love most .
They don’t put it on any map. Not the official tourist ones with their glossy photos of waterfalls and colonial cathedrals, and not the digital ones that guide delivery drivers through the barrios. The locals call it la vereda que se tapa los ojos —the path that covers its eyes.
I clutched the pouch of ruda. I kept walking. La Ruta del Diablo
And then I heard her.
I knelt. The ruda pouch burned in my palm. I reached for the thread.
Three strikes on stone. Not loud. Polite, almost. Like a visitor at a door you’ve locked. My blood turned to ice
“The Three Knocks?”
The path narrowed until my shoulders scraped the rock on both sides. The wind began to whistle, not like air through a canyon, but like a voice trying to remember a melody. That’s when I saw the stakes. Hundreds of them. Wooden posts driven into the fissures of the rock, each one wrapped in a faded ribbon—red, blue, yellow. Some had scraps of cloth, others had photographs, rain-bleached and curling. Each stake was a soul. Each ribbon was a promise the Devil had collected.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
My heart lurched. I almost ran. But Don Celestino’s words slammed into my chest: Do not answer. Because it wasn’t her. It was the echo of her, the piece the path had stolen. If I answered, I’d be acknowledging it as real. And once you do that, the Ruta owns you.
Just for a while.
Don Celestino gave me a small leather pouch of ruda and iron filings. “Her passenger is just a fragment,” he said. “A stray piece of shadow she picked up like a burr. But to remove it, you need to cut it at the source. You need to walk the Ruta, find the place where her shadow broke off, and retrieve it before the Three Knocks.” I’m scared