La Tormenta — Ofrenda A

Ofrenda a la Tormenta: The Gripping Conclusion to the Baztán Trilogy

Amaia’s investigation reveals a horrifying pattern: for decades, infants in the region have been dying under similar mysterious circumstances. Local superstition points to the Inguma , a malevolent demon from Basque folklore that consumes the breath of sleeping children. However, Amaia refuses to accept supernatural explanations. She hunts for flesh-and-blood monsters, uncovering a secretive, elitist cult practicing ritualistic infanticide. Ofrenda a la tormenta

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The narrative picks up shortly after the events of Legado en los huesos (Legacy in the Bones). Inspector Amaia Salazar is called to investigate the suspicious death of a newborn girl in the valley of Baztán. The death is initially attributed to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), but forensic markers raise red flags. If you share with third parties, their policies apply

Returning alongside Amaia are the characters who have become family to readers. There is her unwavering ally ; her meddling yet loving aunts, the matriarch Engrasi and the complicated Flora ; and the enigmatic American judge Javier Markina , whose intellectual and romantic tension with Amaia adds a complex emotional layer. New to the mix is the powerful Father Sarasola , a member of Opus Dei whose theological and anthropological interest in the case adds an institutional dimension to the investigation. And, lurking in the shadows as a constant specter, is Rosario , Amaia’s monstrous mother, whose influence permeates every page, forcing the protagonist to confront the ultimate source of her personal anguish.