Los Suyos Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Pdf
But following the magical realism style of García Márquez, I’ve written an original short story titled (which could mean "Her People" or "Their Own"). Here it is: Los Suyos By an admirer of Gabo
Father Almeida arrived with holy water, a crucifix, and a hangover. He stood at the cemetery gate at three in the morning, as instructed. The fog was thick as corn dough. He sprinkled the gate with water and recited the Pater Noster backward, which someone had told him was the proper method. Nothing happened. Then he heard footsteps—not one pair, but many. Soft, shuffling, like bare feet on dry leaves.
One night, a traveler from the capital passed through. He scoffed at the open doors. “This is how you get thieves,” he said, and slammed the door of the inn where he stayed. He locked it, then bolted it with a wooden bar. Los Suyos Gabriel Garcia Marquez Pdf
Not all at once, but house by house, candle by candle. When anyone lit a wick, the flame would bend away from them—toward the cemetery. The electric plant, which had worked since the gringos came, began to hum the lullaby Úrsula used to sing to premature babies. The mayor, a practical man who did not believe in spirits, ordered the town’s priest to exorcise the graveyard.
The trouble began three nights later.
The next morning, the entire village found their doors unlocked. No one had been robbed. Instead, every house had received something: a sewing needle in a thimble, a dried flower pressed into a Bible, a half-eaten sweet potato on the kitchen table. In the mayor’s house, someone had washed his dirty socks and hung them in a perfect row on the line. In the whorehouse at the edge of town, someone had replaced the broken mirror and left a single marigold on the counter.
At dawn, they found him sitting upright in bed, his eyes wide open, his hair turned completely white. He was not dead. But he would never speak again. In his hand was a single strand of long gray hair, coiled like a tiny snake. But following the magical realism style of García
Do not close the door on your own people.
“In the name of the Lord, who are you?” he shouted. The fog was thick as corn dough
On his door, written in what looked like ash but smelled of myrrh, were the words: