After my discovery of the Faerie Bar, and having confirmed that the account on the diary I had found was not only fiction, I couldn't stop thinking about it. My wife, my friends, even my co-workers noticed that I became distracted. But I had decided not to tell anyone. At that time, I wasn't sure how that knowledge could affect us, and I feared it might endanger them.
As such, I had to wait some time until I had an opportunity to embark on another expedition without arousing suspicions. This opportunity came when my mother-in-law got sick and my wife, along with our daughter, went to take care of her.
After my meeting with Alice, I wanted to let some time pass before returning to the Faerie Bar, so I decided to explore another place. After re-reading some of the diary entries, I decided to travel to Gerês and visit an old abandoned village in the mountains where, supposedly, during the night, the dead rose from their graves and left in a procession along the slopes and valleys.
When I left my house, it was still day time, but when I entered the road up the mountain, the sun had already set. Although Gerês' highest slopes didn't have many trees, darkness made it difficult to find the village, even with the help of a GPS. Finally, I decided to stop on a small space at the side of the road, near the point where the village was supposed to be.
I got out of the car and started looking around. With the help of my most powerful flashlight, I found the ruins I was looking for just below where I had parked.
The roofs had already collapsed, as had many walls and wooden floors. Everywhere, fallen beams rose in the night sky, like the ribs of gigantic animals.
With my flashlight's help, I looked for the best way to down. There wasn't really a path, but between boulders and brambles, I managed to find a passage.
After stumbling and slipping, narrowly avoiding some spectacular falls, I arrived at the abandoned village. Its narrow streets, by themselves already narrow and clogged with rocks, were covered with debris, brambles, and weeds, making them quite difficult to walk through. The silence of the night was only broken by the sound of animals crawling away and the hooting of the owls taking refuge in the ruins.
Finally, I got to what was left of the local church. The top of the bell tower had already fallen, as had the roof, yet the facade seemed intact, though an empty alcove above the door made me suspect that there had been a statue of a saint, now missing. It had probably been stolen by someone to sell to collectors.
Beside the church, surrounded by a low wall of loose stones, I found the place I was looking for: the cemetery. According to the diary, it was from there that the spirits of the dead departed for their nightly procession.
Tombstones, broken and worn, filled the place, along with pieces of rotting wood that once must have been crosses.
I sat on the outside, leaning against the wall, and waited for midnight, the hour my predecessor recorded he had started seeing the ghosts. It was late autumn, so it was already cold in the mountains. In part, I was thankful for it, since it was the only thing that prevented me from falling asleep.
When the hour finally arrived, I was not disappointed. Just as the clock on my cell phone struck midnight, I looked at the graves. Over these, shapes began to appear. At first, they were practically invisible, but gradually they began to take on translucent white forms. These were people wearing ghostly versions of the clothing, hats, and scarves typical of that region until very recently.
As they took their final shapes, the spirits left the cemetery and began descending the slope, while above the graves new forms appeared. I let them all join in the procession, before beginning to follow them.
I went down a path, crossed an old stone bridge, and even walked through a Roman road. The ghosts traversed miles of ground for almost two hours.
Suddenly, to the north, I saw a white line descending another slope like a gigantic albino serpent. It didn't take me long to realize that it was another procession of souls.
Three more appeared shortly after, coming from valleys and mountains, and, one by one, joined the first one and continued advancing towards the east. More than a procession, they now resembled a military column.
Then, to my surprise, the dead began returning to the ground. Little by little, they disappeared through the soil, until none remained on the surface. I was alone again, in the darkness of the mountains, with my flashlight.
I approached the place where the ghosts had disappeared and searched, without much hope, for some way to follow them. After almost half an hour, I found a hole in the ground big enough for me to get through. I pointed the flashlight to it. It wasn't particularly deep, it was only about five meters, and I thought I saw a cave from it to the west.
I didn't have any climbing equipment with me, but the wall of the hole had enough hand and foot holds for me to get down without much difficulty. In a few minutes, I reached the bottom and confirmed that there really was a cave. I pointed my flashlight at it and saw that it stretched for a hundred meters, then it changed direction.
Carefully, for I didn't know how the dead would react if they found me there, I entered the cave. I reached the bend without any problem, but as soon as I turned it, I found two ghosts. Despite my precautions, they spotted me immediately. After all, without the light of my lantern, I couldn't see anything there, but it denounced me clearly.
I looked back, thinking of running away, but I would never be able to reach the surface before they caught up with me.
The ghosts approached slowly and carefully, as if they didn't want to frighten me. Although I was suspicious, I waited for them. They didn't seem aggressive.
One of them held a candle, which he stretched out toward me he reached me. Fearfully, I grabbed it. At that instant, it turned into a human leg bone. Startled, I dropped it and took a few steps back.
The two ghosts burst out laughing.
"His face," said one of the spirits.
For a moment, I stared at them, astonished.
"I'm sorry, my friend, but I couldn't resist," said the ghost who had handed me the candle.
"Who are you?" I asked.
"The spirits of the dead, of course. Not everyone is lucky enough to rest in peace."
They seemed friendly, so I decided to keep asking questions:
"Why do you come here? Why don't you stay in your graveyards?"
"Because at the end of this tunnel lies our city. We only stayed behind because we saw you following us and decided to have some fun, "said the ghost of the candle, smiling.
"City?!" I said with amazement. "The dead have a city?"
"Of course," replied the other ghost. "We'll be around forever. We need a place to enjoy ourselves. Come on, we'll show you, as compensation for the scare we gave you."
I followed them through the tunnel for about five hundred meters, past several bends. At last, we came to a gigantic cave, larger than any I had seen before.
We were on a ledge on one of the walls, but the cave went down for several hundred meters, its bottom being only visible thanks to the pale glow of the ghosts.
There were many more ledges on the walls beyond that where I stood. On the larger ones, there were buildings of all of Portugal's historical periods. Awed, I saw Iron Age roundhouses, Roman villas, medieval huts, country houses, Pombaline buildings, and even a large multi-storey condominium, among others. Nothing connected the ledges to each other, for ghosts just floated between them.
Contrary to what had happened in the Faerie Bar, my presence in the City of the Dead did not go unnoticed. All the ghosts passing by looked at me with a mixture of curiosity and surprise.
"It's been a long time since someone alive set foot in here," said the creature that had given me the candle.
"I never even heard of that happening before," said the other.
Suddenly, from the depths of the cave, another spirit appeared, looking angry.
"What have you idiots done? You bring a living one here, especially now, with all these disappearances?"
"Sorry, Mr. President," said the two ghosts in unison, staring at the floor like two admonished children.
"Disappearances?" I asked curiously.
"Yes, some ghosts have disappeared in the last few months," said the spirit that had given me the candle.
"It never happened before," added the other. "The dead have always increased, never declined."
"Can't you keep your mouths shut?!" Shouted the president.
He turned to me.
"And as for you, get out of here while you can. And don't even think about coming back. We will move the entrance."
The president's tone left no room for discussion, and I did as he said.
On the way back to the car, and after, as I drove home, a question never left my head: how could the dead be disappearing? After my visit to the Faerie Bar and a closer reading of the diary I found, the existence of ghosts, or even of their incredible city, didn't particularly surprise me, but this issue sent shivers up my spine. At the time, I didn't quite understand why, but I would eventually find out.
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