You cannot discuss night work in Galicia without encountering the rich folklore embedded in the region's Celtic roots. For centuries, rural communities viewed those who worked the forests at night with a mix of reverence and superstition.

Based on the search results, the phrase "Fu10 The Galician Night Crawling Work" appears to refer to a 19th-century practice related to sanitation.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, urban sanitation in Galicia relied heavily on manual labor. The Fu10 workers were a critical part of the local infrastructure, ensuring that waste was removed from residential areas to prevent the spread of disease.

Unlike the Compaña , which is a curse, the "work" implies a purposeful, almost industrial or functional process carried out by entities at night.

When they reached the edge of the harbor, he stopped. In the shallow light the carvings on the box looked less like art and more like maps. The old man opened it again. Inside was a thin scrap of cloth, embroidered with a cross and a map of a small island stitched in silver thread. The edges were frayed as if the island itself had been nibbled by tides.

The harbor settles. The bell tolls—three, faint. The waves hiss like a page turning.