You want to move away from the stone but you just can't do it. Then you think why do I want to move away? Just because it's unusual? If someone offered you gold would you turn it down because it's unusual? Here you have a chance to enter another universe. Here you have a chance at eternal paradise. Why would someone turn that down? With renewed conviction, you do everything in your power to reach the stone. Your sole purpose is to reach the stone. Closer, closer, you strain to reach it. Your fingertips are an inch away. This is the fulfillment of your life. This is it. You stetch your arm, and you finally physically touch the stone. Yes! Yes! Yes! The music changes. It sounds like it's being sung. It sounds familiar. What does it sound like. It sounds like women singing. It also somewhat sounds like birds singing. People often refer to birdsong as metaphorical for the music of the celestial spheres. You pay closer attention to the music. It sounds more like something of the physical world than the celestial or divine realm. You notice that you're not entering another universe. Why did you think you would? Where'd you get that idea from? You look up. You're astonished at what you see. Two giant gold birds. Each is about the size of an ostrich and the shape of a dodo. They are bright gleaming gold, as if they were gold statues. They are singing. It was them that sang the music you heard. Something is wrong. A chill goes down your spine. It occurs to you to get away but the thought in your mind remains simply that. The birds come closer to you. What are they? Suddenly, you remember something one of the faeries said about something called the Stentor. Was this them? You make up your mind to get away but you can't find the strength. You reach for your sword but it's to late. One of the birds lunge at you. It's beak plunges deep into your left side. You scream uselessly. The other bird grabs hold of your leg in its beak. The pain courses through you and becomes surreal. Your last thought before you pass out is an awareness of the birds tearing apart your body and devouring the flesh off your bones.