Ethan met Nora by chance through mutual friends during a rock-climbing trip. The trip was conceived as an easy adventure: ropes, belay, a few routes, and an evening by the fire.

At first, everything was familiar and safe. But in recent weeks, conversations increasingly turned to a new level of difficulty. Free climbing was no longer an abstract idea—it was the next step.

This route wasn’t reckless. They carefully chose a wall that required complete concentration and confidence.

“I think we’re ready,” Ethan said quietly, not hiding the tension.

The climb began confidently. The rock cooled his palms, chalk crumbled across his fingers, his breath mingled with the wind. And suddenly, Ethan caught a sound that shouldn’t be there.

At first, he dismissed it as a gust of air. But the sound repeated.

“Nora… did you hear that?”

She froze. It was like the creak of a door—muffled, closed, too close.

“There can’t be anything here,” she whispered, more to herself than anything else.

Then Ethan noticed a strange mark on the rock—a thin, shiny streak of pale pink. Not rust. Not dirt. Something else.

Another sound came from above. This time—a muffled murmur. Human.

As they climbed, the shadow in the stone took on clear lines. Right angles. Alien to nature. And then they saw it.

The house’s façade was built into the rock.

An old wooden door, grayed with age, set tightly into the limestone. Around the edge, the metal of the roof, as if half-absorbed by the mountain. On either side, genuine windows with cloudy glass reflect the sky.

They emerged onto a narrow ledge—a barely noticeable strip of stone in front of the entrance.

“Anyone there?” Nora called. There was no answer.

Inside, everything looked old, but not abandoned. Stone steps led deeper into the mountain. The air was damp, smelling of earth and something sweet.

And suddenly—footsteps. Not ahead. Above them. Quick, heavy. Someone was running.

Nora screamed. She lunged upward, and Ethan barely managed to grab her arms and pull her up. At that moment, there was a sharp crack—and a man’s desperate cry, cut off mid-sentence.

They hurried toward the sound.

A man was hanging at the edge of a small pool, upside down, one foot caught in a noose of thick vines. He looked at them with a mixture of relief and embarrassment.

“Thank God…” he breathed out. “I thought I was going to fall in.”

While Nora carefully untangled the knot, Ethan couldn’t help but ask:

“You… live here?” The man chuckled.

“You could say that.”

When they freed him, he landed awkwardly and laughed, rubbing his back. A sharp, sweet smell emanated from him.

“Have you been drinking?” Ethan asked cautiously.

“Wandering,” Ethan corrected. “Wild grapes. A bit overdone.”

Then everything fell into place: the vines, the hammock, the footsteps, the noise.

“I jump into the pond,” he admitted. “It clears my head. I decided to try again today… but I lost my balance.”

The waterfall roared nearby, and the fear gradually dissolved. The house in the rock no longer seemed a threat—just someone’s strange, solitary life.

When they descended back, the mountain became just a mountain again. But the thought remained.

Somewhere inside the rock, someone lives quietly, voluntarily, far from the world.

And not all places are meant to be found. And some stories are better left where they are.