АРВАН ДӨРӨВ. ТАНИЛ ХУТГА

Chapter 271,307 wordsCompleted

After the night‑long sandstorm at the shallow stone depression of Zürkh Kharakhan, Bayar is left alone, badly injured, without a compass, horse, or supplies. He struggles to stand, repeatedly collapsing, and crawls on his elbows using a broken rifle‑stock as a makeshift cane. Exhausted and delirious, he experiences vivid hallucinations: a pulsing “light” resembling an electric discharge, a massive glowing‑eyed creature called the “irves,” and a rusted knife half‑buried in ice. He finds a long, three‑edged iron knife lodged in a jagged outcrop, pries it free, and clamps it to his wrist as a tool and weapon. When the irves charges, Bayar attempts to shoot but the barrel slips; he instead lunges with the knife, wounding the beast, which retreats, leaving phosphorescent footprints. During the creature’s flight, Bayar feels a sharp, tingling shock running through his body, as if the ground were briefly energized. He records this sensation and sketches a bright silver‑blue streak in the surrounding rock that emits a faint crackling light, later identified as molybdenite. Despite his injuries, Bayar writes detailed notes on the location, appearance of the luminous mineral, the electric‑like discharge, and the creature’s behavior, linking them to earlier reports of “electric rain.” The rest of the party remains scattered, still without a local guide and low on food, water, and medical supplies, making Bayar’s solitary trek and discovery a new mysterious layer to the scientific and supernatural puzzles of the remote Bichig Bogd region.