Travelers in the northern ranges whisper of Hollow Peak, a jagged mountain that looms above the valleys like a frozen scream. To look upon it at dusk is to see the sky itself fracture, for its ridges cut deep into the horizon. They say the mountain groans at night, a sound not born of shifting rock or weathered stone but of something alive beneath. Generations of shepherds, miners, and wanderers have carried the story, passing it like a warning. Few dare to approach, and fewer still have ever climbed beyond its lowest slopes. Hollow Peak is not merely dangerous—it is cursed.
Locals claim its caves are not made of stone, but bone—white, ridged, and enormous, curving through the mountain like the remains of some primordial beast. When torchlight strikes the cave walls, they gleam faintly, smoother than granite should ever be. Many insist these are ribs, the remnants of a creature buried beneath the earth. Some say it slumbers, others that it died ages ago, its colossal body petrified into landscape. Either way, the mountain does not belong to humans. To enter those caves is to step inside the carcass of a god, or worse, something that was never meant to die.
Climbers speak of tremors underfoot—soft at first, then swelling into ripples that shift rocks from their perches and send gravel skittering down the slopes. It feels, they say, as if the mountain itself inhales and exhales beneath their boots. No earthquake follows, no landslide. Instead, the tremors fade, replaced by silence so thick it presses against the chest. Then comes the realization: the silence is not empty. It is listening. Climbers descend in haste, hearts racing, convinced they have trespassed where they should not. Some never make it down, vanishing into cracks and caves that swallow them without leaving a trace.
At dusk, the moaning begins. Carried by the winds, it rolls down the valleys like the toll of some titanic bell. The sound rattles windows in villages miles away, sending cattle into frenzies and dogs howling madly. The moan lingers, low and drawn-out, vibrating in the bones of all who hear it. Villagers bar their doors and whisper prayers, warning travelers not to remain outside when the sound begins. It is not merely noise, they insist—it is a summons, a beacon. The mountain calls out, its voice filled with hunger, and those who listen too long find themselves compelled to climb.
Shepherds tell darker tales. They say those who sleep on the slopes of Hollow Peak never wake. At first light, their companions find them pale and rigid, eyes wide open, lips parted in silent screams. No wounds scar their bodies, yet their faces are frozen in terror. Worse still are the blackened eyes, pupils swallowed into endless voids. The shepherds refuse to touch such corpses, claiming the mountain still claims them. Instead, they leave them where they lie, for burial is forbidden. Those who attempt it sicken within days, coughing black bile until they too perish, their corpses stiff and silent.
Some claim the mountain feeds on fear. It drinks it as rivers drink rain, drawing strength from the terror of those who trespass upon its flanks. The more frightened a traveler becomes, the deeper the mountain’s hunger grows. Wanderers tell of hearing whispers in the wind—strange voices repeating their own thoughts back to them, twisted with malice. Others speak of shadows moving within caves, even when no torchlight flickers. The mountain seems to know who steps upon it. It bends the senses, eroding courage, until the victim trembles, collapses, and is swallowed whole by its hollow, unseen heart.
Few who return from Hollow Peak will speak of it, and those who do are broken. They stumble back to civilization with cracked lips, pale faces, and haunted eyes. When pressed, they refuse to explain what they heard within the caves. Some go mad, screaming about bones that shift when no one watches. Others fall silent forever, withdrawing into themselves as if their minds remain imprisoned within the mountain. The bravest attempt to draw maps of the caverns, but their lines twist into spirals, circles upon circles, with no entrance and no exit, only endless descent into nothing.
There was once a village at Hollow Peak’s base, long abandoned now. Old maps show its name—Eldhollow—but no living villager remains. Tales speak of how, one winter, the groaning grew so loud it shook the timbers of their homes. Children woke screaming each night, claiming the mountain called their names. Eventually, entire families began vanishing. Some fled, others were drawn up the slopes by unseen forces. By spring, the village stood empty, doors swinging open in the wind, hearths gone cold. No one dares to rebuild there. Eldhollow is left to the crows and the snow, a ghost town beneath a ghostly peak.
Theories abound among scholars and wanderers alike. Some suggest Hollow Peak was formed around the remains of a colossal beast, fossilized into mountainscape. Others claim it is no beast at all, but a prison—stone wrapped around something that was never meant to walk free. Myths speak of ancient gods who warred across the skies, their fallen bodies shaping valleys and mountains. If so, then Hollow Peak is no ordinary summit—it is a tomb. And tombs should remain sealed. Still, men are curious. Expeditions gather, lured by the mystery, by the chance to uncover what lies inside the mountain’s belly.
Of the expeditions, few returned. The most famous was led by Captain Alaric Dorne, a veteran explorer with maps of forgotten lands etched into his memory. He and twenty men set forth, armed with ropes, lanterns, and journals. They disappeared for months. When winter thawed, only one returned, a young boy barely grown into manhood. His hair had turned white, his skin cold as stone. He spoke no words, not even his name, but scratched endlessly at the dirt, carving rib-like arcs until his fingers bled. He wasted away in days, leaving behind only a ragged journal filled with unreadable scrawl.
The journal’s few legible passages chilled those who read them. Dorne described caverns vast as cathedrals, ceilings lost in darkness. He wrote of walls that pulsed faintly, as though alive, and a rhythm beneath the stone—slow, steady, like a heartbeat. “We walk,” he wrote, “inside something that should not breathe.” Later entries grew frantic. “The moaning is not wind. It is speech. We hear it in our dreams.” The final words, scratched in blood, read only: *It is waking.* After this, the writing dissolved into spirals and jagged lines, no longer language, only madness etched onto fading paper.
Some brave souls visit Hollow Peak even today, though never for long. Superstitious hunters will not camp near its base, claiming they hear footsteps circling their fires. Travelers crossing the range hurry past, refusing to look too long at its silhouette. From afar, they say, the peak seems to shift slightly, as though changing shape when unobserved. Storms gather often above it, lightning forking down into the summit with uncanny precision. Some nights, villagers swear they see faint lights crawling up the slopes, lanterns of those who should be long dead, eternally climbing toward the caves that will never release them.
The mountain has a strange hold over dreamers. Poets, artists, and madmen sketch its form without ever having seen it. In faraway towns, children wake screaming, describing the sound of moaning winds that rattle their windows. Sailors crossing the northern seas claim to glimpse its outline even from leagues away, though maps place it deep inland. It seems the legend travels not by mouth alone, but by some deeper current, seeping into the minds of those who are most vulnerable. Hollow Peak hungers for remembrance. Its name lingers in nightmares, echoing across distance, pulling hearts closer whether they will it or not.
There are rumors the mountain moves. Not visibly, not with steps, but subtly—its ridges growing taller, its valleys deepening year after year. Old maps show one silhouette; newer ones another. Miners claim entire ridgelines have shifted since their fathers’ time. If true, Hollow Peak is no mountain at all, but a living relic, stretching upward slowly, shaking the earth as it rises. What happens when it fully awakens? When the bones beneath no longer lie still? The groaning may not be mourning, but stirring. Perhaps, one day, it will stand, and the ranges themselves will crumble under its impossible weight.
Still, men tempt fate. Treasure hunters dig at its foothills, searching for relics of whatever slumbers beneath. They find bones, yes—but not human. Bones longer than wagons, teeth larger than axes, fragments of vertebrae heavy enough to crush stone. Most flee when they uncover such remains, but some carry fragments away. Those fragments never last long. Their keepers sicken, hearing moans even in their sleep, until madness overtakes them. Some burn the relics in desperation; others vanish, drawn northward as if summoned back. Always, the bones return to Hollow Peak, as if it reclaims what belongs to it.
And so Hollow Peak endures, a shadow over the northern ranges, a wound in the earth that refuses to close. The groaning continues each dusk, rattling windows, chilling hearts, calling to anyone who dares listen. Travelers whisper of it, villagers avoid it, and scholars argue endlessly about what lies within. But none deny the truth: it is a place where death and silence reign. Few who enter return, and those who do are never the same. For Hollow Peak does not simply kill. It remembers. It waits. And in the hollow of its heart, something vast and ancient still breathes.
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