АРВАН ГУРАВ. ХУЛАН ЖОРОО

Chapter 26698 wordsCompleted

After the violent sandstorm at the shallow stone depression of Zürkh Kharakhan, the expedition remains split, guide‑less and running low on food, water and fuel. The two field‑researchers, Nikolay Vladimirovich Panur and Tomor, spend two desperate days combing the steppe for the missing geologist Bayar. They set up a small night‑camp, drink tea, share a meagre meal and try to keep their horses calm, but the animals grow restless and begin “going mad” as darkness deepens. While Panur smokes a cigarette to stay awake, he notices a faint, black, stinging creature flickering in the firelight. He catches it and discovers it to be a tiny, highly venomous “zara” (a local scorpion‑like insect). The insect’s sting feels like a needle; after it disappears the men are shaken but suffer no further bites. The episode sparks a long‑winded discussion about field ethics: any unexplained observation must be reported to comrades, even if the observer cannot fully explain it. The elderly former guide Damdin arrives from a nearby bakery, lights a small fire and urges the party that Bayar will be found. He tells lengthy myths about the “hulan joroo” sandstorm, a relentless black‑bird that circles the storm, and how such phenomena are often linked to hidden dangers in the steppe. His folklore‑laden words give the exhausted crew a glimmer of hope. Unbeknownst to the searching team, Bayar survived the sandstorm alone. While taking shelter in a shallow hollow he notices a faint, bluish‑green glow emitting from a vein in the rock. The vein pulses with a soft electric hum; touching it sends a sharp shock through his fingers. Recognising the mineral as molybdenite (MoS₂), Bayar records detailed sketches, stratigraphic notes and chemical formulas in his field notebook, noting the vein’s location about three kilometres west of the western flank of Bichig Bogd and the accompanying “electric rain” he witnessed. The party remains without a local guide; supplies are dwindling, the horses are restless, and morale swings between anxiety over Bayar’s disappearance and the eerie hope inspired by Damdin’s stories. The next step will be to regroup, follow the clues in Bayar’s recovered notebook (if it is found), and decide whether to press on toward the luminous molybdenite vein that Bayar may have uncovered.