FOR THE BEST PART of twenty years he had lain, ready for someone to find him. To begin with, he’d been well hidden in the rear of the mountain hut, with bales of straw, two sheets of canvas, a long-departed montanaro’s hoe and half a dozen tree branches piled on top of him. Over time, though, several of the layers had either rotted or been taken.
A few years ago, a group of teenage boys had removed the branches to make a St John’s Eve fire in the meadow outside, digging a hole for their pyre with the alp-man’s rusty hoe and enjoying themselves under the darkening summer solstice sky by telling ever-scarier stories of the witches and wizards said to inhabit this wild corner of the country, until most of them were too terrified to sleep. In the morning, bleary-eyed and weary, but infused with bravado by the return of the sun, the group had walked down the trail towards the nearest village for breakfast without exploring the hut further.
The brutal winters with their icy winds and heavy snowdrifts had eroded the door of the baita, which collapsed off its hinges, permitting various animals to enter, including the last of the wolves still roaming these hills, pulling away corners of the straw and the fabric, their noses twitching as they smelled the decay beneath. Gradually, he was revealed to the world, his right hand still clenched in the fist he had made as he died, containing a last bequest to his discoverers. Except, for the time being, nobody came to claim the piece of metal he held so firmly in his bony grip.
That next winter and summer removed his remaining clothes—his boots had been taken at the time of his death, too warm and comfortable to resist—and what little flesh was left clinging to the bones. His left arm was torn off and carried away by scavengers, which also removed his mandible and several ribs. He lay there now, a yellow-brown collection of bones, slowly collapsing into himself as the rest of his ligaments and cartilage dissolved.
It was this figure that the two giggling honeymooning hikers found when they peered into the hut, his head resting on his chest, as if he had nodded off. The new bride’s screams echoed around the granite outcrops which overlooked the ancient alpine meadow and were lost in the mountains, much like the poor dead man’s soul two decades ago.