By: Charles L. Adair
For readers still haunted by Perched on the Rooftop, Hector Rivera isn’t offering peace—he’s deepening the mystery. In his upcoming novel, The Guardian in the Corner, Rivera revisits a family’s troubled past and invites readers to enter once more. The story may pick up where the last one left off, but the unsettling atmosphere is far from over.
Set once again in the mist-shrouded hills of 1970s Honduras—where folklore, faith, and fear intertwine with daily life—The Guardian in the Corner finds the family returning to the home they once fled, holding onto the hope of healing. But as soon as they step back inside, it becomes evident that something has been waiting. Watching.
The silent bird perches first.
Then come the whispers.
And finally, the altar—hidden deep in the brush, marked with symbols no one dares to fully understand.
Inspired by unsettling true events, Rivera transforms everyday domestic spaces into places brimming with supernatural tension. The walls seem to breathe. Doors open by themselves. Shadows stretch longer than expected. In this sequel, the horror is quieter—but it resonates more deeply. It doesn’t simply question whether evil can be defeated. It asks if it can ever truly leave.
“I wanted to explore what happens after survival,” Rivera explains. “What if leaving isn’t the end? What if the thing you feared most finds a way back in?”
A Story That Doesn’t Let Go
The Guardian in the Corner is more about reckoning than confrontation. It’s not merely a ghost story—it’s a trauma story wrapped in folklore, where the curse doesn’t just haunt spaces; it haunts relationships, memories, and the stories we tell ourselves to feel safe. Rivera shifts the tension from external horror to internal erosion—questioning whether the true haunting lies in the home or in the heart.
If Perched on the Rooftop introduced us to Minda—a spirited young mother battling an illness the doctors couldn’t explain—The Guardian in the Corner picks up the thread and tightens it. The family has survived. But now they must ask: at what cost?
More Than Horror: A Cultural Legacy
Rivera’s strength lies in his restraint. His stories don’t shout—they quietly linger. His sentences move like ancestral prayers, carrying the weight of history and the rhythm of oral storytelling. He doesn’t sensationalize the supernatural; he grounds it in lived experience—poverty, illness, familial sacrifice—and in the rhythms of Honduran life. A creaking wooden ladder, a grandmother’s lullaby, the scent of earth after rain—these moments root his horror in a reality that feels disturbingly close.
What distinguishes his work is its deeper purpose. Rivera doesn’t write just to frighten; he writes to preserve. “Our truths don’t disappear if we give them shape,” he shares. “Even the darkest ones.” His stories are steeped in heritage—some passed down, others intentionally buried. While the supernatural may drive the plot, at its core, this is about legacy: what we carry, what we hide, and what refuses to stay silent.
About the Author
Hector Rivera, born in Honduras and now based in the United States, writes with the urgency of someone preserving something sacred. His debut novel, Perched on the Rooftop, and its sequel, The Guardian in the Corner, are inspired by his family’s lived experiences—fictionalized but deeply personal. He is also working on The Boy and the Snake, a children’s adventure, and a biography honoring his grandfather—a man, Rivera says, “who lived enough stories to fill ten lifetimes.”
An Invitation Into the Unseen
The Guardian in the Corner isn’t just a sequel—it’s a deepening of the wound and the wisdom within Perched on the Rooftop. For those who enjoy atmospheric horror rooted in truth and myth, Rivera offers another compelling chapter. And for new readers, it serves as a haunting entry point into a universe where the unseen is never far, and what we fear most might live just beside us.
Available on Amazon and at selected retailers. Enter with caution—but leave a light on. You might want to keep an eye on the shadows.
Visit: https://hectorarivera.com/










