Kitabı oku: «The Dyatlov Pass Incident. Mystery of the Fireballs»

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© Sergei Mikhailov, 2024

ISBN 978-5-0065-1260-3

Created with Ridero smart publishing system

Chapter 1 – Message from Nowhere

Moscow, Present Day

Maxim woke at 9:30, his eyes drawn to the curtained windows where a thin strip of dim light revealed another characterless December day in Moscow. The weather matched his mood – neither warm nor cold, just an endless stretch of dreary dampness that seemed to mock the very idea of sunlight. The next glimpse of sun wasn’t due until May, and the thought weighed heavily on his soul.

Following his daily ritual, he reached for his phone and spent the next half hour scrolling through social media, still wrapped in his bedding. Another morning identical to countless others – the predictability of it all terrified him. The endless cycle felt like a trap, but escape seemed impossible. Everything was so painfully foreseeable it made him nauseous: shower, breakfast, work – or rather, the “rat race” – then lunch, a walk, more work, and suddenly darkness would fall, signaling time for dinner and sleep. The monotony had become unbearable. But that evening, everything changed. Reality itself seemed to shift, leaving his former life behind like a distant memory.

As Maxim slowly maneuvered his car out of his office parking lot, he could barely contain his irritation. Moscow’s streets were choked with traffic, typical for the evening rush hour. The sky above hung gray and expressionless, a perfect mirror of his internal state.

A sudden impact from the side jolted him from his thoughts. The car shuddered from the force of the collision, and he felt adrenaline surge through his body, awakening every cell. After a few seconds, having recovered from the initial shock, Maxim stepped out to assess the situation. To his surprise, the other driver was remarkably calm – a woman around twenty-five, with striking black eyes that seemed impossibly bright against the gray urban landscape.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t see your car,” she said, meeting Maxim’s gaze directly. There was something mesmerizing in her look. Maxim felt his irritation dissolving, as if the fabric of his ordinary reality was beginning to unravel at the seams.

“It’s fine, everything’s okay,” he replied, unable to look away.

As their eyes met for the second time, Maxim felt the world around him freeze. His heart raced, and a strange flash of light burst in his mind. He tried to focus, but suddenly his legs gave way, and he collapsed into unconsciousness.

Reality returned with the scent of frosty air and the touch of a warm hand. Maxim found himself lying on a park bench. Beside him sat the woman from the accident, holding his hand. Her face showed concern, but her eyes still held that same extraordinary power.

“Are you alright?” she asked gently.

Maxim nodded, trying to piece together the recent events. His gaze fell on her again, and he once more felt that inexplicable energy radiating from her presence. The world around them seemed different somehow, filled with hidden meaning and mystery.

“What happened?” he asked, looking at her.

She paused thoughtfully before answering, “It’s my fault, I wasn’t careful on the road.” Her words rang with sincerity. “I’m sorry I frightened you. How are you feeling? Are you better now?”

Maxim nodded, attempting to gather his thoughts.

“Yes, I think I’m fine,” he replied, slowly rising to his feet.

He felt the stability of the ground beneath him restoring his confidence and mental clarity. Together they walked silently back to their cars, each lost in contemplation about their strange encounter and its implications.

When they reached the accident site, Maxim was astonished to find that the damage to his car had somehow vanished. The dent he clearly remembered – deep, with a spray of cracks in the paint – had simply disappeared. The car looked untouched, as if the last half hour had been nothing more than a strange dream.

“How did…” he turned to the woman, but the words caught in his throat. She was gone, dissolved into the evening air like a mirage.

He looked around – no one. Maxim felt a surge of bewilderment and amazement wash over him. His eyes returned to the car, which now appeared completely intact, as if the accident had never happened.

He stood motionless, trying to unravel the mystery of this encounter, sensing that his life had just brushed against something inexplicable and enigmatic.

Reaching into his pocket, Maxim felt a folded piece of paper. Unfolding it, he saw several lines written in clear, almost engraved handwriting:

“This meeting was no accident. Look for answers in unexpected places. Your journey is just beginning.”

Maxim carefully folded the note and tucked it away. Sitting in his car, he paused for a moment, his gaze lingering on the empty space beside him where the mysterious stranger had been. His thoughts swirled around the enigmatic encounter and the cryptic message on the paper.

He put the car in motion and headed home, driving slowly, deep in contemplation, trying to piece together all the elements of this extraordinary evening.

Chapter 2 – Ghosts of the Past

The sight of his apartment door standing ajar made Maxim freeze on the fifth-floor landing. His heart hammered against his ribs, pumping a mixture of fear and inexplicable anticipation through his veins. He approached cautiously, feeling the air thicken with tension around him.

The door opened with a soft creak. Inside, the apartment held not a dead silence, but a living one, electrified, as if the air itself was charged with invisible energy. Something had shifted in the familiar space, though he couldn’t quite identify what.

A photograph lay on the table – one he was certain hadn’t been there before. Maxim approached slowly, as if afraid to startle an apparition. As he picked up the photo, a chill ran down his spine.

The black-and-white image showed a group of young hikers against the backdrop of a winter forest. Their faces radiated life and energy, but their eyes held something unsettling, as if they already knew their fate. Maxim’s fingers trembled as he turned the photograph over. On the back, in faded ink, was written the date – February 1959.


The photograph in his hands seemed to open a portal to the past, and the story behind it demanded to be told.

Ten young hikers, full of life and hope, had set out on an expedition to the Northern Urals in early 1959. The group was led by Igor Dyatlov – an experienced mountaineer whose name would later become synonymous with one of the 20th century’s most enigmatic tragedies. They had planned to traverse the wild, nearly inaccessible terrain and reach the summit of Mount Otorten.

Yuri Yudin, one of the participants, had fallen ill at the beginning of the route and was forced to turn back. That decision would ultimately save his life.

When the hikers failed to make contact at the appointed time, their families raised the alarm. The search operation revealed a horrifying scene: their tent on the slope of Mount Kholat Syakhl had been cut open from the inside, as if the occupants had fled in panic. Footprints led down the slope – the hikers had inexplicably rushed into the forest.

What the searchers found later sparked dozens of theories and speculations. The bodies bore strange injuries – crushed skulls, broken ribs, wounds that couldn’t be explained by ordinary accidents.



Maxim studied the faces in the photograph, trying to understand what had driven them to slash their tent and flee into the freezing night. What force could have broken the ribs of experienced hikers?

He leaned closer to the image. This story had long been part of his life – how many hours had he spent studying documents, reading witness testimonies, trying to unravel the mystery of Dyatlov Pass? And now…

Reality around him began to blur, shattering into fragments of visions. The night sky erupted with strange lights, mysterious glowing orbs danced in the air. He saw the panic in the tent, heard the screams, felt the burning cold of snow under his feet. Then his consciousness seemed to split – he was everywhere and nowhere at once. Now he was driving a truck loaded with barrels of alcohol along a snow-covered road, now operating a train, now checking documents at a station in a police uniform.

Gasping, Maxim collapsed into a chair. Blood pounded in his temples, fragments of visions still flashing before his eyes. The photograph in his hands pulsed with strange energy, as if it were alive.

“What’s happening? Why am I seeing all this?” he whispered, feeling fear mix with burning, irresistible curiosity.

Then his gaze fell on a diary lying on the table. The worn leather cover bore the marks of countless touches. With trembling hands, Maxim opened it and froze – it was Igor Dyatlov’s own journal.

“My God…” he breathed, realizing the value of his discovery. In his hands were the writings of a man whose mysterious story had haunted him for years.

Dyatlov’s diary was full of secrets. The pages were littered with diagrams, formulas, and encoded entries, as if their author feared they might fall into the wrong hands.

The lines unfolded before Maxim like a map of unknown territory. A second group – never mentioned in any official account – had also been there at Kholat Syakhl. The choice of the tent site hadn’t been random – precise coordinates, calculated using mountain peaks, rock formations, and a specific cedar tree.

His fingers shook as he turned the pages. An encounter with an elf-like being they’d offered sugar to. A broken light filter used for determining coordinates. Panic in the tent.

One entry stood out – hurried, with smeared letters, as if Dyatlov had rushed to record what he’d seen before it slipped from memory:

“Today we saw something strange. Something glitters in the distance, on the mountain slope. We decided to check it tomorrow morning.”

Then Maxim stumbled upon something incredible. An entire page was devoted to strange glowing spheres in the sky. Detailed diagrams, thorough descriptions of their movements – smooth, as if guided by intelligence. They emitted a peculiar light that penetrated even the densest darkness. Sometimes they would hover motionlessly, as if observing, then vanish at impossible speeds, leaving behind silence and an inexplicable sense of unease.

Sitting in silence and reading these lines over and over, reality around him became increasingly unstable and unreliable. Overwhelmed by the depth of the mystery before him, he realized that the Dyatlov group was merely one link in a chain of events reaching back to the previous century. They hadn’t simply encountered something inexplicable – they’d become part of a grand design whose scale was only beginning to emerge.

1891. A secret expedition of the Russian Empire to the Urals. Scientists sent to investigate mysterious geomagnetic anomalies and strange lights in the night sky. In the yellowed pages of Professor Voronov’s diary, their quest came alive:

“Again observed strange luminous phenomena on the horizon. They appear as if from nowhere and vanish without a trace. We are powerless to explain their nature. The locals call them ‘spirit lights,’ but I am convinced – there is something more behind this, something that could overturn our understanding of reality.”

Maxim slammed the diary shut. The silence in the apartment pressed against his eardrums. The story that had begun more than a century ago still hadn’t reached its conclusion. And now he stood on the threshold of uncovering the truth.

The choice was crystal clear – though terrifying in its certainty. He could put the diary aside, return to his ordinary life, forget all this like a strange dream. Or step into the unknown, following the footsteps of those who had tried to uncover this mystery before him.

The answer was obvious. He couldn’t unsee what he’d witnessed, couldn’t unread what he’d discovered. He had to find the truth, no matter how terrifying it might be. The Dyatlov Pass tragedy was just the tip of the iceberg – beneath it lay a story capable of changing humanity’s destiny.

A chill ran down Maxim’s spine – he physically felt the weight of unseen eyes. Someone was watching him, evaluating, weighing. They were waiting for his decision, testing whether he was worthy of the ancient knowledge passed down through generations.

With a determination that surprised even himself, he stood up, feeling the heavy tension in his chest give way to clarity. A dangerous journey lay ahead – one that could change not only his fate but the course of world history. There was no turning back now.

Chapter 3 – Shadows of Ivdel

The photograph of the Dyatlov group drew Maxim’s gaze like a magnet. For hours he had been studying the black-and-white image, and gradually it came alive before his eyes. Nine young faces, full of life and hope.

In the center stood Igor Dyatlov, his gaze fixed on some distant point, as if he already sensed the approach of something inevitable. Next to him, Lyuba Dubinina smiled – her warmth reaching across the decades, touching even now. Yuri Doroshenko must have just told a joke – laughter still sparkled in his eyes.

As Maxim ran his finger along the photograph’s rough edge, he felt a strange connection to these people. It was as if he had been there himself, on that frozen day in 1959, sharing their last moments of carefree happiness before the impending tragedy.

He shook his head, dispelling the vision, and opened the diary again. Exhaustion weighed on his shoulders, but he sensed something important still eluded his grasp. Again and again, he pored over the lines written in Dyatlov’s hand, trying to penetrate the dead hiker’s thoughts.

Then suddenly – a discovery. On one of the last pages, he found something he’d overlooked before – an encoded message and a map with mysterious markings. His pulse quickened. Perhaps here lay the key to unlocking the mystery of the pass.

Turning to his computer, Maxim dove into the depths of the internet. On specialized forums, amid thousands of theories and speculations, he stumbled upon something truly disturbing – the testimony of Pelageya Solter, a nurse from the Ivdel morgue.

Her account of the bodies delivered in early February 1959 completely contradicted the official version. According to her, they brought in two women first – though documents told a different story. But most shocking was Solter’s claim that there weren’t nine bodies, but eleven. They arrived by military helicopters, in small groups of two or three.

Maxim felt tension course through his body. Something here was fundamentally wrong.

Digging deeper, he discovered another irregularity – the dates didn’t align. The criminal case had been opened long before the Dyatlov group was officially reported missing.

“Why?” The thought pulsed in his head. “How could the authorities have known about the tragedy in advance?”

Then it hit him like lightning – what if they had initially found different bodies? What if they had mistakenly identified them as the Dyatlov group? That would explain both the early case opening and the conflicting witness testimonies.

With each new fact, the mystery deepened. Maxim felt he was approaching the truth, but his intuition warned that the reality might be so shocking it would overturn everything he thought he knew.

Exhausted from hours of internet research, Maxim returned to the diary. Flipping through the pages, he froze – among Dyatlov’s entries, there was a mention of a particular cedar tree near their campsite.

“Why did he single out this tree?” The thought nagged at his consciousness. Maxim began researching the area, and suddenly an incredible theory formed in his mind.

What if the cedar had been planted deliberately? Perhaps more than a century ago? A marker tree, indicating something hidden from prying eyes, some anomaly in the area.

“Did Dyatlov know something about this cedar? Or did he accidentally stumble upon an ancient secret?” Maxim felt he had found a thread leading to the truth. Each answer spawned a dozen new questions, but now he had a clear purpose.

There was no time to waste. He retrieved a large backpack and methodically began packing for the journey, as if preparing for an expedition into the past. Warm clothes, sleeping bag, flashlight, provisions, first aid kit – everything arranged with military precision. Most important were Dyatlov’s diary and documents, carefully sealed in a waterproof bag. These yellowed pages now seemed more precious than any treasure.

He studied the area map like an ancient manuscript, trying to discern secret signs left by his predecessors behind the contour lines.

As he prepared for departure, he suddenly felt someone watching. Looking out the window, he spotted a black car lurking in the shadows of the building across the street. Surveillance? Possibly. But who?

He needed to act carefully. The apartment’s back exit led him to the courtyard, where a taxi took him to the station via a circuitous route. Just in case.

Buying his ticket to Ivdel, he noticed a man with a red beard. The stranger watched him openly, and when their eyes met, Maxim was struck by a sharp sense of recognition – he had seen this face in one of his visions of the past.

*************************************************

The train carried him east for almost two days. Snow-covered Ural peaks drifted past the window as Maxim tried to piece together the puzzle from fragments of information. He sensed that somewhere among these ancient mountains lay a secret capable of transforming humanity’s understanding of reality.

Ivdel greeted him with biting cold. The wooden station building, snow-laden firs – it seemed nothing had changed here in sixty years.

Suddenly reality wavered before his eyes. In a rushing vision, he saw them – young, vibrant hikers, talking animatedly on this very platform. Dyatlov, his companions… The vision vanished as abruptly as it had appeared.

When the world regained clarity, Maxim noticed an elderly man watching him intently. Something in his gaze felt hauntingly familiar, like an echo from the past.

“Looking for answers about the pass?” The old man’s quiet voice sounded unexpectedly close. It carried a strange mixture of wariness and relief.

Maxim tensed but nodded. Something about the stranger inspired trust.

“Nikolai Ivanovich,” the old man introduced himself. “I was in the search party. Looking for Dyatlov’s group. And what we found there…” he glanced around, “Come with me. This isn’t the place for such conversations.”

The small café near the station smelled of coffee and damp. Over cups of scalding tea, Nikolai Ivanovich began his story, and with each word, the reality around Maxim became increasingly unstable.

“They ordered us to stay silent about what we saw. We were supposed to forget everything, as if nothing had happened. But how can you forget something that leaves a mark on your soul?”

Maxim listened, afraid to miss a single word. The old rescuer’s account supported his boldest theories – about the events of those years and the strange phenomena on Kholat Syakhl.

“But most importantly,” Nikolai Ivanovich lowered his voice almost to a whisper, “next to the bodies we found a strange device. Like a radio, but… different. And a note…”

The door bell jingled. Two men entered the café – their military bearing unmistakable. Nikolai Ivanovich abruptly cut off his story.

“We need to go,” he said, rising. “Tomorrow at noon. The old sawmill by the weather station. I’ll show you something… What I’ve kept all these years.”

They slipped out through the café’s back door into the frozen night. In his hotel room, insomnia awaited Maxim. In his fitful half-sleep, he saw fiery spheres hovering above mountains, heard shouts in an unfamiliar language, felt reality itself coming apart at the seams.

Chapter 4 – Escape into the Unknown

The frosty winter morning found Maxim in his hotel room, preparing for his meeting with Nikolai Ivanovich. The black car still lurked below – its familiar silhouette reflected in the frost-covered window. There was no time to waste.

Grabbing his backpack, Maxim silently descended the fire escape. He knew that somewhere there, in the old sawmill, answers awaited that could turn the world upside down.

The abandoned building emerged from the morning fog like an ominous specter. Tall pines surrounded it in tight formation, like silent sentries. Nikolai Ivanovich was already waiting at the half-collapsed entrance.

“Quickly,” the old man’s voice was barely audible. “They might be close.”

Inside, the air smelled of rotting wood and time. Beneath a pile of old boards lay an expertly concealed safe. Nikolai Ivanovich’s hands trembled as he opened it.

“Here,” the old man exhaled. “I’ve kept this for sixty years.”

Inside the safe lay a worn folder and a strange metallic object. At first glance, it appeared to be an ordinary radio, but something about it seemed alien, wrong.

“We found this next to the bodies,” Nikolai Ivanovich spoke quietly, as if afraid the walls might hear. “And in the folder – documents about the second group. And Dyatlov’s notes that they ordered us to burn.”

Maxim picked up the device – it was unexpectedly light. The metal emitted a barely perceptible vibration, as if some alien energy pulsed within.

“And something else,” Nikolai Ivanovich’s voice dropped to a whisper. “Near where the second group died, they found a body in a spacesuit. A living body.”

Maxim froze.

“Living?”

“Yes. But the military took it almost immediately. It only managed to say a few words – in a language no one knew. Except for one word. Kholat Syakhl.”

At that moment, the device in Maxim’s hands came alive. Glowing symbols raced across its surface, and strange sounds emerged from its speaker – like distorted human speech passed through an unknown filter.

“Lord above,” Nikolai Ivanovich breathed. “In all these years, it never…”

Maxim felt the metal pulsing beneath his fingers like something alive. He held in his hands not just the key to the pass’s mystery, but to something incomparably greater.

The sound of approaching vehicles shattered the silence.

“Go,” Nikolai Ivanovich pushed him toward a far door. “Quickly. I’ll hold them off – won’t be my first time.” The old man darted to a corner of the sawmill and pulled a pair of hunting skis from under a tarpaulin. “Take these. You won’t get far in the winter forest without them. Behind that door is a trail into the mountains. Head for Kholat Syakhl – that’s where the answers wait.”

Maxim stuffed the device and documents into his backpack and shouldered the skis. “What about you?”

“I’ll be fine. I know how to talk to people like them. Now go!”

After a firm handshake with the old searcher, Maxim plunged through the indicated door. Behind him, the growing roar of engines, the thunder of opening doors, and sharp voices violated the winter forest’s silence.

He ran along the snow-covered trail, each step carrying him further from the familiar world. In his backpack, the strange device hummed quietly, counting out his heartbeats. Ahead, among the stern Ural peaks, waited a mystery that had kept its silence for more than half a century. There was no turning back now.

Yaş sınırı:
16+
Litres'teki yayın tarihi:
25 aralık 2024
Hacim:
175 s. 10 illüstrasyon
ISBN:
9785006512603
İndirme biçimi: