The sun rose over Mount Rigi, painting the sky pink and gold. Polly had spent the night in a pine tree, thinking about Kaspar's problem.
"You're up early," she said when the alphorn player came out of his small house.
He smiled sadly. "I can't sleep well these days." He put down his instrument case carefully. "I've been thinking about what you said yesterday."
Polly flew down to join him. "And?"
"I think you're wrong. This problem can't be solved with positive thinking or—" He stopped talking when another person appeared through the morning mist.
She was about twenty-five years old, with red hair and old hiking boots. Strange equipment was strapped to her back - metal tubes and recording devices that made her look unusual.
"Herr Brunner?" she called in German with a British accent. "I'm Emma Hartley from the University of Edinburgh. I'm studying alpine sounds for my doctoral thesis."
Kaspar looked angry. "If you want to record me before I embarrass myself on Saturday, you can—"
"Actually," Emma interrupted, her eyes bright with excitement, "I'm here because of your music notation system. Professor Zimmermann showed me your published arrangements. The way you connect emotions to sound - it's amazing."
Polly watched as the young woman's enthusiasm met Kaspar's defensive attitude.
"It doesn't help when I can't play properly," he said bitterly, but his grip on the case relaxed.
Emma adjusted her equipment. "That's exactly it - I don't think you need to play traditionally." She pulled out a tablet showing sound wave patterns. "I've been studying this mountain's acoustic properties. What if your dystonia isn't a curse, but a gift pushing you to discover something new?"
Kaspar laughed harshly. "A gift?"
"Listen," Emma continued. "What if we work with your limitations instead of against them? Short sounds, using the mountain's natural echo chambers as part of the music?"
"Show her your composition," Polly urged.
Reluctantly, Kaspar showed his journal. Emma's eyes widened as she studied the pages.
"This is extraordinary. You're creating a conversation between human and mountain." She looked at him with respect. "What if your body is telling you that old ways aren't enough for what you want to express?"
Finally, Kaspar spoke quietly. "What do you have in mind?"
Emma grinned. "How do you feel about turning the entire mountain into your instrument?"