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Chapter 5 - CHAPTER 5 THE MESSAGE IN THE WINDOW

Dawn arrived earlier than usual, or at least that's how Efraín felt when he opened

his eyes. He had slept little, and yet he awoke with the sensation that something

had called to him from outside. A faint murmur, like the rustling of leaves or the

distant echo of a familiar voice. He didn't know if it was a dream or a sign, but he

rose with a strange, light determination, as if someone had taken his hand while he

slept and left him standing before his own destiny.

The house was silent. His parents were still asleep. The cool morning air drifted in

through the half-open window, carrying with it the damp scent of earth and a faint

whisper, so soft that Efraín wondered if he had imagined it.

She took a few steps and opened the window completely. The hill, barely visible in

the distance, was still shrouded in mist. A mist so thick it seemed to have a life of

its own. Just as she was about to close the window, she saw him.

It wasn't a physical figure this time. It wasn't someone standing watching him from

afar.It was a light.

A faint, almost tiny light, located on the hillside. It flickered slowly, likeIf it were

breathing. It would turn off. It would turn back on.

With a rhythm… a familiar rhythm.

"It can't be..." she whispered.

The rhythm was exactly the one she'd heard in her dream the night before. A soft

pulse, three long flashes and one short one. Like a call. Like someoneHe was

sending a message in a language only he could understand.

Efraín placed his hands on the window frame, trying to decipher if that wasReal or

just a coincidence. But something inside him knew: it wasn't a coincidence. "He's

already waiting for you." That's what the previous message said. That's what he had

seen written. That's what had been repeated in his mind over and over again.

Now I felt that reality was responding to that phrase.He spent a long minute watching the light until it finally went out, as ifwould have

fulfilled its function.

It left him with one certainty: he had to return to the hill.

Later, while the sun was still hidden behind the clouds, Efraín set out for his

dayNormal. Or what should have been his normal day. Because nothing he did felt

the same as before. As he walked toward the village, he noticed people were

looking at him differently. It wasn't judgment. It wasn't rejection. It was curiosity.

Admiration. A silent question in their faces that said: What's happening to you?

And he didn't know the answer. Not yet.

In the workshop where he worked some mornings, his colleague Matías observed him

several timessometimes with a sense of strangeness.

"Brother, you look... different today," he commented, while wiping the grease off

his hands with an old rag.

—Different how?

Matías shrugged.

—More awake. More… I don't know. Like you'd seen something.

Efraín wanted to deny it, but he felt it would be

useless.Something had changed.

Something was calling him.

And even though he didn't fully understand, he couldn't hide it.

As evening fell, he decided to meet with the small group of people who had

gathered the day before. This meeting wasn't planned, but many people from

the village had sought him out throughout the day with the same phrase:

Will there be another meeting tonight?

Ephraim didn't know what to say. He wasn't a leader; he wasn't qualified to lead

anyone. But remembering the peace he felt when they prayed together for the first

time gave him strength.

—Yes —he finally replied—. Tonight, at the same time.The news spread quickly.

As dusk fell, more people were waiting beneath the same tree on the hill, the one

that had become an almost sacred gathering place. This time there were nearly

twice as many. Older people. Younger people. Parents with their children. People

who had never been to a spiritual gathering like this before. They were all there.

Not for him. For something bigger.

Because of the call that the people were beginning to

feel.Efraín took a deep breath before speaking.

"I'm not here to preach to you," he began. "I just want to share what God is

putting on my heart. I feel that… we are being called to something. I don't know

exactly what it is, but it's not just for me. It's for everyone who is searching for

light."

Some people bowed their heads. Others closed their eyes, as if waiting for an

answer.The invisible was already brushing against his spirit.

"Yesterday, when we were praying together," Efraín continued, "I felt a guidance.

And this

Early morning… —he paused, hesitating whether to share it— …I saw a light. On the

hill. It wasn't a flashlight. It wasn't a campfire. It was something… different.

Upon mentioning it, a murmur ran through the group.

"I saw something too," said a woman in the back. "Like a flash when I was..."passing

near the hill.

"And I heard something," another man added. "Like a distant voice. I thought it was

my imagination."

Their eyes met. The

atmosphere changed.

It wasn't just him.

Something was happening in that place… something that was beyond them all.

Efraín felt a shiver run down his spine. It wasn't fear. It was confirmation.A force that

assured him that he was not alone in what he saw, what he heard, what he

dreamed.

And just as he was about to continue, he felt it.A sudden gust of wind swept through the group, rustling the tree branches above

them. It wasn't a normal wind. It came from above, from the hill, as if someone

hadopened an invisible door in the air.

A wind with such a strong presence that everyone fell silent.

Efraín closed his eyes. And he saw the light again. Not outside. Inside. As if a spark

ignited behind his eyelids. He tried to open them, but he couldn't. The wind

continued.blowing, dense, enveloping, almost as if it were speaking.

Until finally he listened…

One sentence.

A soft phrase. Intimate. As if it were being whispered directly into her heart.

—Get in.

Efraín opened his eyes

suddenly.The wind stopped.

The silence was

absolute.And everyone

was looking at him.

"What happened?" a woman asked him.

But Efraín could not speak.

The word echoed in his mind, throbbing with the same force as the message of light.

Go up.

He looked towards the hill.

Still shrouded in

shadows.Still waiting.

I felt that this was the moment. Not another. Not

tomorrow. Today.He stepped forward.

And then another one.

Until standing in front of the group.

"I'm going up," she said firmly. "I don't know what I'll find, but... He's calling me."Nobody laughed. Nobody doubted. Nobody

questioned.Because everyone had felt it.

Some wanted to accompany him, but Efraín gently declined.

"Not yet," he whispered. "This is something I must do

alone." And then he began to walk.

Towards the

hill. Towards

the mist.

Towards the place where the light had flickered at dawn.

Towards whatever it was that had been waiting for him all

along.

📖 Author's NoteThank you for reading The Call of Ephraim.This chapter is a preview of a work of spiritual fiction that explores faith, doubt, and purpose in the face of an extraordinary calling.

The complete version is available on Amazon Kindle for those who wish to continue the journey.Thank you for reading and for answering the call.

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