On The Mountain Top -ch. 1- By Professor Amethy... -
I climbed for six hours. The sky turned the color of a bruise—purple at the zenith, a sickly yellow at the horizon where the sun should have been. I did not get tired. That was the first wrong thing. My legs pumped. My lungs worked. But I felt no fatigue. No hunger. No thirst. I was a machine of ascent, and the stairs were the conveyor belt to a place that had been waiting.
I pulled my hand back from the crystal as if burned. My heart did not race. That was the second wrong thing. My heart was calm. I was supposed to be terrified. I was supposed to run. But the mountain had been breathing me in for days, and I no longer had the lungs for fear. On the Mountain Top -Ch. 1- By Professor Amethy...
When the professor reads, the door unseals. I climbed for six hours
They were not carved. They were grown . A spiral of fused, obsidian-black rock, each step precisely seven inches high—the ideal riser for a human leg. They rose out of the mountain’s granite as if the mountain had extruded them in a single, smooth scream. Lichen? None. Moss? None. They were sterile. Perfect. Older than the Cambrian. That was the first wrong thing
I have read. The door is not a door.
And the one constant, the single thread woven through every extinct tongue, every collapsed civilization from the Xianbei to the Dorset, was a place. Not a city. Not a temple. A height . A specific, unlocatable altitude where the old kings went to bargain with the wind, and the prophets went to stop listening to God and start listening to whatever answers.
The mountain shifted. Not a tremor. A reorientation . The stars overhead slid into new positions. The air changed from curious to hungry.
