Carlos unscrew the lid of the flask and pours me another cup of tea. “So you think we’ve forgotten the mountains,” he observes while I drink. “You don’t think they’ve let us go.” The Sun has risen during my story, and it strikes a color from the summit of Canigou.
“I thinks so,” I admit.
“So the Incas knew the secret of worshipping mountains and now it is lost?”
“Maybe.”
He passes me the monocular. I lift it to my eye, and Canigou leaps back in sharp detail.
“Awesome?” he asks.
I lower the monocular and nod.
“Excuse a dead man’s wisdom, Martin, and let me tell you this. When something roused you to awe, when it has felt the touch of your worship, it will never let you go. It’s the case with mountains. It’s the case with life.”
We both stare out at the Pyrenean mountains in silence.
“So we are all right then,” I say “The mountains are still looking after us.”
“Far from it. They don’t let go, but we can still fight to be free. Fight with your intelligence. See through the patterns that hold us. You know your Old Testament?”.
"Where do our myths start, Martin?
The Garden of Eden – a place where four mighty rivers find their source, therefore obviously located up a mountain? Or after the flood, where Noah leads man and beast down the slopes of Ararat. Does Judaism hail from the moment Moses receives the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai? /…/
When the new Messiah arrives, of course he must make his appearance on Mount Zion and honor the prophecies that herald him.” /…/
Centuries pass and the Archangel Gabriel appears to a man sitting in a cave in the side of Mount Hira. The man is Muhammad, and it is in this mountainside that he first hears the word of the Koran. From the summit of Mount Moriah, where Abraham pledged to obedience, Muhammad is later whisked on his night journey to the heavens.
Jews, Christians, Muslims, they struggle through the centuries, slay each other in thousands, for the right to lay claim to the heights of Jerusalem. In the name of God, Jews and Arabs, Christians and Moslems, Catholics and Protestants, regularly slaughter one another. Our planet stinks of religious massacres. Have you ever thought why?”
“It has to do with mountains?” I ask.
“One thing to know, before you give your heart to mountains. They are powerfully jealous of each other. Pledge loyalty to one and it expects you to be faithful. “
Pages, 44-55.