The sun dipped low, painting the Grand Canyon's peaks in golden-red hues. The sky, clear as a mountain lake, glowed with the same warm tones, reflecting off the Colorado River below.
A crimson flush spread across Zoey Parker's cheeks, her sly grin and sparkling eyes brimming with anticipation. Time seemed to pause, the distant river's flow the only sound.
Gus Harper stood, slinging a guitar over his shoulder, tweaking the strings. A mellow strum kicked off, short and fiery, matching the song's vibe—free, reckless, all-in.
Chasing dreams in the city's glow
We burn bright, pay the toll
My heart's yours, girl by my side
Sing with me, roam with me
Through the highs and lows, we'll ride
Now I see it clear as day
It's love and freedom we chase…
No pro singer, Gus's voice was raw, unpolished, but real. It soared over the canyon, syncing with the river's rush, basking in the sunset.
Zoey's gem-like eyes flickered, long lashes trembling. Her gaze, soft as a moonlit breeze on Lake Powell, locked onto Gus—his sharp jaw, squinted eyes, and that cozy camel-colored scarf.
Then, her heart soared with his voice:
I wanna elope with you—
To the farthest town we'll go!
I wanna elope with you—
Be the happiest souls we know!
A desert-rose smile bloomed on Zoey's face, her crescent-moon eyes gleaming. While Gus was lost in the song, she set her chai aside, untied his scarf, and wrapped half around her neck. Her small frame, dwarfed by her oversized windbreaker, leaned into him. Her hand slid through his arm, locking tight like a gamer clutching a controller.
Gus tilted, lowering his shoulder so her head fit just right. The guitar softened, their voices blending in the Grand Canyon's gentle basin.
In this world of wants, you're my truth
A spark of joy, lighting my soul
No more tears, I see the light
Got the guts to run with me tonight?
I wanna elope with you—
Be the happiest souls we know…
As the guitar's echo faded, Zoey nuzzled closer. "Yo, Gus."
"Hm?" He tilted his head, cheek brushing her hair.
"Who am I to you?" she asked.
Gus blinked. "What? You're Zoey."
"Am I Maya? Lila? Jenna?" Zoey pressed, grinning.
She never forgot a thing. Gus's "Elope" cover came from some old novel they'd geeked out over.
Gus shook his head, chuckling. "Maya's too drained, Lila's too tragic, Jenna's too broken."
Zoey peeked up, curious. "So?"
"You're Zoey Parker," Gus said, tucking her head back to his shoulder, voice soft as a spring breeze. "Happy Zoey, chill Zoey, no-worries Zoey. Life's not all drama and heartbreak. Just be you—stoked and free."
The last sunlight ducked behind a peak, but Zoey's blush stayed put. A quiet breeze rustled the grass, mirroring the river's hum.
Click. A Polaroid spat out a photo from Gus's camera—two figures, cozy on a bench, perfectly in sync.
Zoey's shy grin widened as she nudged his shoulder. "Sneaky pics, huh?"
Gus echoed his old line from that night he painted her nails: "Gotta capture you, you're a vibe."
He remembered everything, just like her.
Zoey slipped the photo into her jacket's inner pocket, zipping it tight. From the B&B's front yard, the owner's Southwestern twang rang out, warm and rustic: "Yo, boss! Dinner's up! Bison chili's ready!"
"Let's roll!" Zoey hopped up, hyped for grub.
Gus grabbed her, carefully peeling the scarf off her neck and wrapping it around his own. "Don't wreck it."
Zoey rolled her eyes. "Stingy much? I gave you that!"
"Yup," Gus said, tying it with a smug grin. "Mine now. What if you mess it up?"
"I'll buy you another—" Zoey started, then froze, neck stiff. "I mean… I'll get you a new one."
"Nah, it's not the same." Gus's sly smile hid a secret, teasing her like a troll.
The bison chili steamed, filling the B&B's courtyard with savory warmth. It wasn't a big place, but it hosted a lively mix of global tourists. Ten folks sat around, laughing, swapping stories, the vibe electric.
Post-dinner, the owner lit a bonfire out back, teaching everyone local line dances. Cheers and laughter mingled with the Colorado River's endless rush. Firelight danced on Zoey's beaming face and Gus's easy grin. Amid the rowdy singing, their hands locked tight.
"Another day, no news, same old," Pew muttered in his Seattle-based Twitch stream.
Since WindyPeak "ghosted" a month ago, Pew's chat had turned their silence into a daily betting pool: would WindyPeak or Gus Harper post on X today? The "No News" bets dominated, odds tanking to an all-time low, while "News Dropped" bets dwindled, payouts soaring.
As midnight neared, the chat clowning intensified:
"Wooo, free cash again!"
"Why even bet on news?"
"It's like betting on an upset in esports—crazy payouts if it hits."
"The longer this drags, the closer they are to dropping something."
"They're not bankrupt, just lurking."
"A month with nada? Wild."
"They gotta tease something for a new project."
"Maybe they're cooking a game no one's ever seen."
"Post-Sekiro? Nah, they can't top that."
"Unless they're doing a racing or sports game."
"Sports games? Lame. Their motion tech killed it in Sekiro, not some jock sim."
"Midnight's close. Another two cents down the drain."
"Haha, you actually bet? Thought it was all bots."
Pew shrugged, ready to close the betting page and reset at midnight. But as his cursor hovered over the red X—
Ding! A browser alert popped up: Your follower "WindyPeakV" posted a video on X.
Pew froze. "Wait… what?!"
WindyPeak… dropped a video?
"Holy—! No way, no way!" Pew yelped, eyes wide.
Waiting for WindyPeak's posts had become a ritual—hopeful at first, then routine. Silence was the norm. But now? A video?
The chat lagged for five seconds, then erupted:
"OHHHH—WHAT THE—?!"
"Fifteen-times payout?! FIFTEEN TIMES?!"
"What day is this?!"
"Browser glitch, bet."
"Yo, check it, Pew!"
"Hurry up, man!"
Pew snapped out of it, clicking the link. WindyPeak's official X account had a fresh post—a video, no caption, no text. Pure focus on the clip.
What was it? After a month of nothing, WindyPeak was surfacing like a submarine breaching the waves. What bomb were they dropping?
Pew took a deep breath, full-screened the video, and hit play.
Rustle. The screen faded from black to light.
Tick, tick. A clock ticked in the quiet. A blond dude slept on a bed, one hand dangling, surrounded by empty beer bottles—a guy who'd hit rock bottom.
Sunlight crept through the curtains, lighting up a poster: an extreme athlete in a wingsuit, geared up, soaring through clouds.
An alarm-like riff blared, joined by thumping drums, spiking the vibe with urgency.
Pew screamed, "WHAT THE—?!"
He clutched his head, yanking his hair. That riff… he knew it.
No, it couldn't be!
That iconic alarm string and rock-drum surge—too familiar!
"NO WAY—IMPOSSIBLE!" Pew yelled.
The screen flashed wild cursive: Nothing Is Impossible!
[WindyPeak x Linkin Park]
Peak Nation
[BGM: Faint]
Linkin Park! The first international Peak Nation trailer was a nuke. One of the biggest rock bands ever, a must-know for any music head.
Thanks to Tetsuya Moritan's connections and Gus's Warner hookup, "Faint"—Linkin Park's banger—was the trailer's heartbeat.
I'm a spark of loneliness
A shade of don't-care
Facing truth, I'm stuck
Can't change what's there…
The poster's gear—helmet, wingsuit, GoPro—trembled, then flew off the wall. The sleeping dude floated up, CG armor snapping onto him like Iron Man. A colorful vape pen capped it off.
As the music raged, a plane door swung open. The dude, in a blazing red wingsuit, leaped out, spreading his gear like wings. Chester Bennington's roar hit with the song's climax:
I can't feel the way I did before!
Don't turn away from me!
I won't be ignored!
Drums exploded, bass thumped, vocals tore through. A human defied the sky, wings spread, chasing life's limits.
The red wingsuit ignited a flame of freedom.
The chat lost it.