Having now landed, Luo Feng's eyes narrowed as they scanned the surroundings, finally settling on two worn and weathered objects, half-buried in the soil, only their surfaces exposed. These remnants, which appeared to have been chiseled away by repeated blows, resembled a dumbbell, but Luo Feng recognized them as something else entirely.
"They look like stone locks," he chuckled to himself, realizing that he had stumbled upon the mysterious stone lock mentioned in the ancient poem.
But a question lingered in his mind. The stone lock was there, but where was the stone goose? As Luo Feng climbed into the helicopter and gazed toward the west, understanding washed over him. Without a doubt, the stone goose must be the other half of the Taiji diagram, and it was not on Lou Mountain.
The following morning, Luo Feng led everyone onto the helicopter early, heading west.