ГУРАВДУГААР БҮЛЭГ

Chapter 292,015 wordsCompleted

After the night‑long sandstorm at the shallow stone depression of Zürkh Kharakhan, the split expedition regroups. Bayar (c1), badly injured and without a horse, limps onward with the wounded Russian geologist Nikolay Vladimirovich Panov (c5) and fellow geologist Erdene (c4). In the bleak steppe they discover a thin, glowing vein of molybdenite (MoS₂). The mineral pulses with faint electric discharges that shock Bayar, confirming the strange “electric‑rain” and “blue‑gray fire” reports. While examining the vein the three are attacked by a luminous creature called an irves. The beast lashes out with searing light; Panov is wounded again and Bayar, despite his pain, drives it off with a broken rifle and a knife. After the struggle they make a crude shelter in the stone depression, share dwindling water, cigarettes (the “Kazbek” pack) and food, and wait for daylight.

Meanwhile the main camp—Professor Bat (c3), collector Tomor (c6), driver Ider (c7) and the reluctant former guide Damdin—remains guide‑less and low on provisions. Damdin continues to refuse formal guiding duty, offering only occasional advice. The group spends the night debating recent findings: Bayar’s notebook, recovered earlier, records a bright‑blue, highly conductive MoS₂ deposit a few kilometres west of Bichig‑Bogd and a “circular cavity” with animal tracks; Panov explains MoS₂’s layered sulfide structure and its ability to store large electric charges, linking it to the mysterious electric phenomena; Bat shows a historic silver medal he believes belonged to Genghis Khan and delivers a rambling monologue about the “Urid alaad, hoino ailtgah” curse; Damdin reads a faded wartime letter addressed to Panov and, after a brief confused discussion of identity, shares a folk legend about a “fast horse” from WWII. The team also discovers a lone silver “Chinggis Khan” medal in the field, which Bat declares a gruesome “curse of blood.” The “Kazbek” cigarette box, found in Bat’s luggage, contains a personal confession that Bayar reads, his face briefly changing expression before he pockets the box.

In short, the expedition is still without a reliable local guide, supplies are dwindling, and morale is shaky. Yet the discovery of a luminous MoS₂ vein—and the violent encounter with an irves—offers a tantalizing scientific clue that may explain the region’s eerie electric storms. Bayar, Panov, and Erdene limp back toward the main camp, intent on pressing onward to the western flank of Bichig‑Bogd to verify the molybdenite claim, while the rest of the party prepares for the next leg of the survey under Bat’s increasingly erratic leadership.