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E Castigo | Vinganca

But then the wind shifted.

He did not scream. He did not cry. He simply fell to his knees in the muddy, ash-strewn square. Gaspar Mendes, miraculously, had been thrown clear of the Fortuna before the second explosion. He was found clinging to a piece of wreckage, burned but alive. He was taken to the mainland to recover, his fortune ruined, his fleet sold to pay for the damage claims, but alive.

Joaquim ran down the cliff, his legs failing him. He arrived as the firemen were pulling out the last of the bodies. He saw her hand first, still clutching the silver locket he had given her for her fifteenth birthday. vinganca e castigo

The Salted Earth

The punishment was not for Gaspar. It never had been. But then the wind shifted

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.

Joaquim built a device. It was crude but perfect. A hollowed-out buoy, filled with the crude oil and a tar-soaked wick. Tethered to the seabed by a long chain, with a floating trigger that would snap taut at the exact depth to pull a flint striker. When a boat’s propeller passed over it, the turbulence would pull the trigger, the flint would spark, and the oil would ignite—a geyser of flame directly under the hull. He simply fell to his knees in the muddy, ash-strewn square

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.

The Fortuna appeared, its lights like a vain firefly. It cruised into the killing zone. Joaquim held his breath.

© Joe Hagen Music LLC 2025

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