
Roger did not get out of the vehicle immediately.
He stood with his hands on the steering wheel, squeezing without realizing it, staring fixedly towards the corrals.
They were not the same.
The old wood that I remembered… was no longer fallen.
There were reinforced parts.
Others rebuilt.
The well had a new cover.
And the ground… was trodden.
Not wild.
Not abandoned.
Treaded.
As if someone had been there every day.
“It can’t be…” he murmured.
But it was.
The sound confirmed it before he could deny it.
Grunts.
Motion.
Breathing.
There were pigs.
Not one or two.
Many.
More than he had ever had.
He got out of the vehicle.
His legs felt heavy.
Not because of tiredness.
For something deeper.
Something that resembled fear… but wasn’t quite fear.
He walked slowly.
Each step stirred up old dust.
The air smelled different.
No to abandonment.
To life.
When he reached the first corral, he stopped.
And there he saw them.
Big.
Strong.
Too much.
They weren’t piglets.
They were not sick animals.
They were adult pigs.
With a full body.
The broad loin.
Attentive eyes.
And the strangest thing…
They did not flee.
They looked at him.
As if they recognized him.
As if they knew.
Roger felt a void in his stomach.
It didn’t make sense.
Five years.
Without food.
Without controlled water.
No one.
That doesn’t hold water.
Not like that.
Not growing.
Not multiplying.
He took another step closer.
One of the pigs gave another one to him.
Non-aggressive.
Not docile.
Just… present.
And then he saw the mark.
In the ear.
An old cut.
Crooked.
Exactly like the ones he made to identify his animals.
He stepped back.
One step.
Two.
Because that brand… couldn’t be there.
Not after five years.
Not in an animal like that.
The sound of a branch breaking made him turn around.
Mang Tino was behind.
Thinner.
More hunched over.
And with a look that wasn’t that of someone surprised.
It was the voice of someone who had already spent too much time trying to understand.
“I told you to come…” he said.
Roger did not respond.
He pointed to the corral.
-What is this?
Mang Tino didn’t look.
—They’re still there.
-As?
Silence.
Long.
Heavy.
—They didn’t leave.
That answer didn’t help.
—That doesn’t explain anything.
Mang Tino swallowed.
—At first I thought someone was raising them.
-AND?
—I came at night. I hid. I waited.
Roger didn’t blink.
-AND?
—Nobody came.
The wind passed between the trees.
Dry.
Dragging leaves.
—But they eat— said Roger. —They grow. They reproduce.
Mang Tino nodded slowly.
-Yeah.
—So someone…
-No.
He interrupted him.
Firm.
-Nobody.
Roger felt something inside him begin to tense up.
Not like before.
Not like when he lost everything.
This was different.
Darker.
—And the water?
Mang Tino pointed to the well.
—It never dried up.
Roger walked towards him.
He lifted the lid.
The water was there.
Deep.
Dark.
Peaceful.
Too calm.
He turned his gaze back to the corrals.
The animals didn’t move much.
They didn’t fight.
They were not competing.
They didn’t make the chaotic noise he was used to.
It was a movement… contained.
As if there were an order.
But without anyone to impose it.
—This isn’t normal…
-I know.
Roger reached along the fence.
The wood was worn… but sturdy.
Repaired in parts.
—Who fixed this?
Mang Tino did not respond immediately.
—I thought you had returned.
Roger denied it.
-No.
—Then I don’t know.
Silence returned.
But this time it wasn’t just awkward.
It was heavy.
As if he were listening to something.
One of the pigs came closer.
Very close.
Too much.
Roger looked at him.
And the animal did not look away.
There was no fear.
There was no aggression.
Just… a fixed attention.
As if he were evaluating him.
“I don’t like this…” he murmured.
He took a step back.
And in that movement… he saw it.
In the background.
Where there used to be a small corral.
There was something else.
A structure.
It wasn’t there before.
Of that I was certain.
It was low.
Deck.
Made with different wood.
Latest.
—What is that?
Mang Tino hesitated.
—I haven’t opened it.
Roger looked at him.
-Because?
—Because I wasn’t there.
That answer… hit harder than anything that came before.
Because it wasn’t a doubt.
It was a certainty.
He wasn’t there.
And now, yes.
Roger walked that way.
Slowly.
Each step heavier than the last.
The pigs did not follow him.
But they didn’t go far either.
They stayed.
Looking.
As if they knew where I was going.
As if they were expecting it.
When he arrived in front of the structure, the air changed.
It wasn’t the same smell.
There was something else.
Denser.
More closed.
He extended his hand.
The wood was cold.
Not because of the weather.
Inside.
As if what was there… didn’t quite belong there.
“Don’t open it…” Mang Tino said, almost in a whisper.
But Roger was no longer listening.
I had spent five years trying to forget.
Trying to leave that behind.
Convincing himself that it had been a mistake.
That the mountain had taken everything from him.
And now…
Now the mountain… hadn’t let him go.
He pushed the door.
Slowly.
It didn’t creak.
It opened as if someone had recently used it.
The darkness inside was deeper than it should have been.
Nothing could be seen.
But it was felt.
A strange heat.
Heavy humidity.
And a sound.
Very mild.
Rhythmic.
It was not a moving animal.
It wasn’t breathing.
It was something else.
Roger didn’t go in.
It wasn’t necessary.
Because at that moment… something within that darkness moved.
Not towards him.
Inside.
As if it were reacting to his presence.
As if I had been waiting for it.
He stepped back.
His heart was pounding in his chest.
Not out of emotion.
Warning.
He closed the door.
Without saying a word.
He turned around.
And he walked back without looking back.
Mang Tino followed him.
Neither of them spoke until they reached the vehicle.
The sound of the pigs returned.
Normal.
As if nothing had happened.
But it didn’t sound the same anymore.
Roger opened the door.
It stopped.
He looked once more towards the corrals.
Towards the structure.
Towards that place that had been his.
And he understood something that needed no explanation.
Not everything that survives… gets a second chance.
Sometimes…
It’s something that continued to grow…
without anyone seeing him.
He got into the vehicle.
He started the engine.
And this time…
He didn’t hesitate to leave.
But it wasn’t relief he felt when he came down the mountain.
It was something else.
An uncomfortable certainty.
The kind you don’t say out loud.
There are places…
that are not completely abandoned.
And things…
that they don’t need anyone to come back…
to stay there.
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