He heart began to beat fearfully against his ribs as the world shrank beneath him. The summit loomed close, a terrifying pinnacle, the most bizarre, feral pipe-dream. Unable to contend with the overwhelming mess his life had become, he had slipped out of the Hollow, hunting for an answer. He had smelled it in his dream. It tickled his nose and tugged at his soul with it's enigmatic scents of things he couldn't name. As if awoken by a thunderclap, his eyes had suddenly burst open. Within a moment's notice, he was on his feet and borne away by the wisps of his desperation that hung on the fading breeze. Like a heathen stalking prey, he had carefully tracked his dream through bracken and across streams, losing it often enough to make him consider giving up. But he was <i>hungry</i>, oh so very hungry, and the answer was out there — somewhere.
As the dawn began to spill over the lip of the jagged peaks, Kiche found himself fumbling over the rocky, callous face of the mountains. It he could feel it now, he was close. The scent was heavy and unmistakable, pungent and uplifting. His spirits rose with him as he scaled the mountains, somehow knowing that what he sought was at the peak without being able to say why. Every once and awhile, he took a break and sprawled out over a flat, grey outcrop and gazed down at the shrunken, strange landscape below him. Something began to stir in him as his eyes roamed over forests and lakes and plains, covering miles in moments. It was a powerful feeling, an omnipotent feeling. Suddenly a gaping hole was opened in him, and he longed for a friend he had not seen or spoken to in ages. No matter how he denied it, he missed Him. But he doubted, he doubted more than he ever wished to admit. To the wind, he asked, "<b>God, do you feel this way... when you look down?</b>" Turning his gaze upwards, he searched the skies, the clouds for an answer. Finding none, he asked himself a question, a question he could never make himself ask out loud, <i>God, God do you exist?</i>
And now he was almost there, not far from the summit of all his dreaming and hoping, and he was overcome with emotion. For some reason, he found that he could not continue. The forsaken agnostic sunk to his haunches and stared up at the summit. The dream-scent was still on the gale winds that buffeted him unmercifully. Now was the time to decide: <i>Do I want to know? Do I want an answer?</i>
Of all the questions he could not answer for himself, this one hurt the most.
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