Chullachaqui
The Chullachaqui, also known as the Shapishico, is a mythical forest creature of the Peruvian and Brazilaian Amazonian jungle.
He is generally described as short and ugly,[1] with one leg shorter that the other and one foot either larger than the other,[2] pointed backward[1][2] or in the form of a hoof.[3]
He is said to persuade his victims to follow him deep into the jungle where even experienced trackers can not find their way back. He does this by taking the form of a family member or a loved one long not seen, or disguising himself as a prey animal.[1] His uncanny ability to replicate others makes him impossible to tell apart, except for his mismatched feet.
Others say that he appears in the shape of a very short man dressed in rags waving his closed fists in the air looking for a fight. In this case, the indigenous peoples believe a man must accept his challenge and beat him until he uncovers all the richness he has hidden in the jungle. He who declines this challenge is cursed with the inability to hunt and foul luck: family and friends turn into enemies, wife leaves with another man, etc.
Chullachaqui is said to have an ability to turn into any animal of the rainforest. Chullachaqui is a kind of a forest spirit who guards the lands and the animals and punishes a man if he breaks a taboo or otherwise acts unwisely in the forest. According to a local legend, Chullachaqui is a member of an older species, a species that lived there long before humans. Most of the time they remain quite uninterested in humans. They inhabit forest spots far from human inhabitance where they supposedly have their own gardens and fields to tend. If a human being dwells too close to those gardens, they might attack and put a spell on the unlucky human. Sometimes a Chullachaqui might also steal a human child and raise it as its own, or lure humans into its trap for mating purposes. A human thus stolen by the Chullachaqui becomes one of them.