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The police, paid by Gaspar, ruled it an “unfortunate accident due to negligence.” For three years, Joaquim became a ghost. He stopped fishing. He sat on the cliff above the Inferno rocks, staring at the white water. Sofia brought him bread and fish, but he ate little. She brought him the parish priest, but Joaquim only whispered, “God’s justice is too slow. I will be His hand.”

The village elder, a blind woman named Dona Matilde, spoke: “You sought to punish a wolf, Joaquim. And in doing so, you burned down the sheepfold. Your revenge is now your cage.” vinganca e castigo

He saw the church bells begin to toll—not in celebration, but in alarm. He saw the villagers running toward the blaze. And he saw Sofia, his daughter, who had gone to the church to light a candle for Tomás’s soul. The fire consumed the church in an hour. The stone walls remained, but everything inside—the wooden pews, the confessional, the altar, the congregation of thirty-two souls who had come for the evening mass—was ash. The police, paid by Gaspar, ruled it an

They did not exile him. They gave him a hut on the edge of the village, a crust of bread each day, and a task. Every morning, he must walk to the charred church and sweep the ash from the stone floor. Every evening, he must fill the holy water font with seawater. He must live among the ghosts of the people he had killed. Sofia brought him bread and fish, but he ate little

He learned Gaspar’s routine. Every Thursday at dusk, Gaspar sailed his private yacht, the Fortuna , to the mainland city to visit his mistress. The route took the Fortuna directly past the Inferno rocks—the same rocks that had killed Tomás.

He is still there, twenty years later. An old man with a broom, sweeping ash that never goes away. Gaspar Mendes, his enemy, died rich in Lisbon, in his own bed, surrounded by grandchildren. The sea took Joaquim’s son. The fire took his daughter. And his own hand forged the fire.

Gaspar Mendes respected no one. He owned the docks, the ice house, and the cannery. He decided the price of sardines. And for a decade, he had coveted the prime mooring spot where the Esperança rested—a spot that guaranteed first access to the rich fishing grounds.