O Sono Da - Morte

The village breathed a sigh of relief. A fluke, they said. A strange fever.

For three days, Rafael slept. On the fourth, he woke with a gasp, sat bolt upright, and spoke of a silver meadow where time did not pass and a woman made of moonlight who had offered him a cup of forgetfulness. “I almost drank,” he said, trembling. “But a black dog bit my heel and pulled me back.” o sono da morte

That night, the sleep came for the whole village. A warm, velvet fog rolled down from the mountains. One by one, the villagers felt the irresistible pull. Most succumbed, smiling as they slid into their chairs, their beds, even the cobblestone streets. The village breathed a sigh of relief

At dawn, the fog lifted. Those who had fought woke with bloody mouths and aching jaws, but they were awake. Those who had not? They slept on. And on. For three days, Rafael slept

The first victim was Rafael, the blacksmith’s son. A strapping lad of twenty, he was found in his cot—not dead, for his chest still rose and fell, and his cheeks held a faint blush. But no shaking, no burning feather under his nose, no shouting of his name could rouse him. His eyes were closed, a serene smile frozen on his lips. The doctor from the next town declared it a coma. Marta, who hobbled to his bedside uninvited, whispered, “ O sono da morte. His soul is dancing in the old forest.”

“How do we stop her?” cried Rafael’s mother.