The Basalt Pulse Vol II — Diana Deak | Launch May 31 2026
The Basalt Pulse
Volume II
Where the Chasm Speaks and the Water Remembers
A self-discovery expedition across 7 countries — 4,130 km from Lyon to the living waterfall of Mount Kazbek, Georgia. The second pulse is deeper than the first. And far more dangerous to ignore.
⏳ Official Launch Countdown
What Sam and Albert Felt
The essential truth of the expedition — in their own words
Sam cupped his hands under the waterfall. The cold arrived first — absolute, geological, ten thousand years underground. And then, through the cold, something else moved into his palms. Not warmth. Something older than warmth.
"I was full of something. I had not known I was empty."
Albert's knee had ached since Turkey. He placed his hands in the water. When he lifted them, the pain was gone. Not reduced. Gone. He flexed the joint three times, methodically, the way an athlete checked a diagnosis.
"It was not there anymore. I have no explanation. The water does."
At 3,800 metres on the shoulder, the full Caucasian panorama opened east. Sam pressed his hand to the basalt and felt the mountain respond. Not metaphorically. Through the stone, through the skin, into the chest.
"The mountain didn't call us. We called ourselves. The mountain only answered."
Dato placed an 1839 Imperial map in Sam's hands at the square before departure. Given only to those the mountain had truly received. 186 years old. The same annotations as today's research.
"Open eyes. Open hands. That is who this map belongs to."
The pulse had never stopped since Monte Pompeii. For 14 months it ran below hearing — patient, certain of its outcome. At the waterfall on the third morning, it was no longer below anything. It was the loudest thing.
"His signal. His frequency. Running at the voltage it was designed for."
Back in Lyon, stepping into the academy, Sam felt it underneath everything — the voices, footsteps, the daily life of an institution doing its work: a frequency. Quiet. Constant. The pulse of things built correctly.
"The pulse was not the mountain's. It had always been his."
"The mountain does not call the exceptional.— Dato Beridze, guide, Mount Kazbek · The Basalt Pulse Vol. II
It calls the ones who became quiet enough to hear it.
The only question is — when will you be quiet enough?"
The Road They Drove
4,130 km across the spine of the world
Lyon, France — Departure
Saturday, 06:00. Gloria points east. The playlist: Second Pulse. The mountain is 4,130km away and already pulling.
km 0Sofia, Bulgaria
The Rotunda of St. George. The Shopska salad. Kavarma in a clay pot. The accumulated knowledge of a very good meal and the mountain that Dato calls "a circuit."
km ≈ 1,800Ankara, Turkey
The Anatolian plateau at 1,400m. Ancient basalt used by the Hittites for sacred vessels. The Copper Age people already knew what the stone held.
km ≈ 2,800Daryal Gorge, Georgia
300m walls of basalt. The Terek river fast and grey-green with meltwater. The Greeks called this the Caucasian Gates. Prometheus was chained above it.
km ≈ 3,700Mount Kazbek — Stepantsminda
The village at 1,700m. The mountain filling the northern sky. The pulse — no longer below hearing. The actual thing. The waterfall that no map has ever marked.
km 4,130 · DESTINATIONThe Living Water of Kazbek
At the foot of Kazbek's eastern face, in a hollow that appears on no tourist map, a waterfall fed by ancient basalt channels has been running since before anyone was keeping records.
Research by Dr. Kvaratskhelia (Tbilisi) confirms: the water carries a bioelectromagnetic charge that resonates at the frequency of the human heart. Peer-reviewed geophysics — not metaphor.
The rainbow appears every clear morning. The colours hold. The water is always new. The light is always the same.
"The water and the body speak the same language.
The mountain holds the memory. The water returns it cleaned."
— Dato Beridze, 30 years on Kazbek
⭐ What Readers Are Saying
The launch is May 31 — be among the first to feel the pulse
"I started reading at midnight and finished at 4am. The waterfall chapter did something to me I cannot explain. I sat with my hands in my lap for twenty minutes after the last page."
— Sarah M. ARC Reader
"This is the book Paulo Coelho readers have been waiting for since The Pilgrimage. The science is real, the road is real, the characters are real. And the waterfall is real in the way that changes something."
— Marco T. ARC Reader
📣 Did the Mountain Find You?
Your Amazon review takes 2 minutes and it helps the next reader — the one who is already quiet enough to hear the pulse but hasn't found the book yet — find it.
"Leave the mountain a message. The basalt holds everything it receives."
⭐ Leave Your Review on AmazonEvery star is someone else finding their frequency. Thank you.
⚡ Official Global Launch
4,130 kilometres. 7 countries. One mountain. The waterfall no map shows — and the frequency that was always yours, waiting for the silence to return it.
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