This is the second part of my two-part dive into Costa Rica’s darker legends. Yesterday, we crept through the jungle and met La Mona, the half-woman, half-monkey creature who likes to make a racket on rooftops at night. Today, we’re leaving the forest behind and taking a ride down a lonely country road, where beauty, they say, can turn into something horrifying in the blink of an eye.
Meet La Cegueta.
She’s not the kind of ghost you run from at first sight. In fact, she’s said to be breathtakingly beautiful, with long black hair, a gentle voice, and eyes that draw you in. She appears at the edge of quiet roads, especially to men riding alone late at night. She might ask for a lift, or simply stand there, looking lost, waiting for someone gallant or foolish enough to stop.
A man on a horse, or these days on a motorcycle, usually doesn’t think twice. He’ll slow down, she’ll climb on behind him, and for a few blissful moments all feels right in the world. But the moment he dares to look back, to steal a glance at that lovely face, the illusion ends. Her beauty melts away, replaced by something that would freeze your blood solid: a head like a rotting horse’s skull, eyes burning, breath foul enough to kill romance forever.
That’s usually the part where the poor soul either drops dead from fright or bolts so hard he never rides that road again.
Every town has its own version of her story. Some say she was once a proud young woman who defied her mother’s warning and was cursed for it. Others say she’s a spirit sent to punish arrogant or unfaithful men. Whatever her origin, she seems to enjoy her work, appearing where temptation and darkness meet.
La Cegueta is more than just a roadside ghost story. She’s a mirror of human weakness, preying on vanity, arrogance, and lust. She’s the price of believing that beauty is harmless, that charm can’t deceive. Maybe that’s why her legend endures. We may have swapped horses for cars, but we’re still drawn to what glitters.
In her own twisted way, La Cegueta is justice in a long dress. She doesn’t hunt the innocent. She appears to those who think they can’t be fooled, the ones who trust appearance and ignore instinct.
So if you ever find yourself driving down a quiet Costa Rican road late at night, and a stunning woman waves you down, keep your eyes forward. Don’t look back, no matter how soft her voice sounds.
Because beauty can be blinding, and some faces are best left unseen.
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