Haunted Peak
A mountain that no map records rises from the fog of the Taebaek range. Locals call it Haunted Peak, and the ropeways that once carried climbers to its summit have been rusted through for forty years. Han Jinyang does not climb it for a stunt or a sponsorship. He climbs to find the three mountaineers who disappeared on its north face — one of them his younger sister.
The ascent is a catalogue of horrors. Corpses hang from pitons, their gear still intact, their eyes frozen wide at something the fog is still hiding. Radio frequencies buzz with voices that repeat his own words back with a seven-second delay. The higher he climbs, the more the mountain seems less interested in killing him and more interested in keeping him. At the summit, he finds a shrine with no inscription and an offering bowl filled with human teeth. Inside the bowl, still wet: a photograph of his sister, taken yesterday. Haunted Peak is not empty. It has been waiting, and the door it has been guarding has just been pushed open.
Also known as: 망령봉, Mangnyeongbong, Haunted Peak.