In the shadows of history, where silence holds more power than the sword, one man learns to listen to the dark.
In the year 1080, deep within the shifting sands of Egypt, the scholar Hassan-i Sabbah stumbles upon an ancient force buried beneath the ruins - a force that has waited three thousand years for the right mind to wield it.
The Cube does not command. It listens. It echoes. It waits.
With each revelation, Hassan's vision sharpens. From the deserts of Persia to the fortress of Alamut, he weaves a secret brotherhood - an empire unseen, where faith is sharper than steel and assassins are not mercenaries but believers. Crusader kings learn the order's name in dread. A sultan begins to suspect that his enemies are not the men he fights. A poet named Mas'ud al-Din writes the prayers that turn boys into knives.
But power has a cost. The Cube does not give without taking, and Hassan understands what is happening to him long before he stops. The horror is not that the whispers possess him. The horror is that he listens, recognizes the trap, and walks in anyway.
The Old Man of the Mountain is Book Two of The Architect, a trilogy that follows an ancient prisoner across five thousand years - from the first Pharaoh to the present day. For readers of Umberto Eco's Baudolino, Robert Harris, Steven Pressfield, Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code, and the world of Assassin's Creed.
Some empires are built in cities. This one was built in silence.