La Ley Del Espejo File
That night, Mateo dreamed he was standing before a colossal mirror. In its reflection, he saw himself—not as he was, but as he acted. He watched himself wake at midnight, not to work, but to lie in bed, staring at the ceiling, paralyzed by a fear of failure he’d never named. He saw himself refuse help from colleagues, not out of strength, but out of terror that he wasn’t needed. He saw his “discipline” as a mask for his own hidden laziness—the laziness of never questioning his own heart.
“No,” Mateo said, his voice trembling. “I came to apologize. I called you lazy, but I was only seeing the part of myself I’ve buried—the part that needs rest, that fears being still because stillness might reveal how lost I am.” La ley del espejo
He smiled, closed his eyes, and for the first time, rested without fear. That night, Mateo dreamed he was standing before
And in that moment, the mirror showed him only peace. He saw himself refuse help from colleagues, not
The next day, he found Lucia packing her stall early. “Another fine?” she asked bitterly.
In the misty highlands of a land called Argolla, there was a forgotten law whispered among grandmothers and carved into the archway of the old courthouse: La ley del espejo —the law of the mirror.