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    The Ascent

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      blow caught him and knocked him flat. The safest thing seemed to be to lie close to the

      epileptic and cover his head, so he huddled against the body and gritted his teeth and

      felt the frozen earth against his cheek.

      Finally someone thought to grab hold of Abe's ankles and pull him free of the

      violence. It was Nima, and he propped him against the stone wall. There Abe panted

      and pinched the blood from his nose and waited out the convulsions. The boy went on

      twitching and fighting his demons in that ill-lit little hovel.

      And then, abruptly, the boy went still. His possession simply ceased. His silence and

      immobility were doubly blunt against the wild moments before. Abe stayed lying

      against the wall in case there were any neural aftershocks. One pummeling was

      enough.

      All around him, Nima and the yakherders were staring at the still, heaped body,

      mumbling and praying. They were horrified. But Abe was not.

      He was relieved. He was cheered even. At least he knew now what was wrong. The

      boy was an epileptic. Somewhere out there in the terra incognita called Tibet, this boy

      had suffered a seizure and fallen and been set upon by animals. Nothing more. Now

      Abe knew. Beyond sewing the torn flesh and treating the infection, there was little

      Abe could do about that. The boy had his own mountain to climb. It was that simple,

      after all.

      With the same patient manner he unraveled knots, Abe worked on the boy's

      wounds one by one. He started an IV to rehydrate the feverish boy and asked Nima

      to recruit one of the herders to keep the bag of saline solution warm with his body, but

      Nima chose to do it himself. While the bag was warming, Abe injected an ampule of

      D-50, pure dextrose, through the IV needle. It was an old paramedic trick to revive

      the unconscious. With diabetics it worked instantly. With this boy it didn't work at all.

      Abe went ahead and connected the saline bag.

      Finally Abe was able to seal the boy's bruised and torn and bandaged body back into

      the warm sleeping bag. He knelt back on his heels and rested his hands on his thighs.

      Abe had felt this helpless before, but never so hopeful at the same time. Still the

      margins of chance were thin in this harsh borderland. Undiluted, destiny was more

      likely to turn out here as it was meant to.

      When Abe emerged from the hut, dawn was just seeping down the western slopes.

      It had been hours since he'd disappeared into the hut's smoke and gloom and now the

      sun was softly peeling away the frost.

      The valley's blue air turned clear and a tiny flock of dawn quail gabbled and

      tuttered. The yaks lay on their curled legs, crunching cud, drowsy.

      In the distance, on the far side of the camp, the liaison officer had risen, as was

      usual, to perform his morning t'ai chi. With slow, fluid sweeps of his hands, Li stalked

      his invisible opponents and defeated them. His motions were more beautiful this

      morning than Abe remembered.

      And up the valley to the south stood Everest. Its jagged right-hand edge was lit

      golden and the mountain was still, not a breath of wind stirring its snows.

      4

      Their calm was broken.

      On the morning of April Fool's Day they cut loose from Base Camp. Abe woke early

      and lay still, smiling. Watching his tent wall come alive with pure tangerine light, he

      felt hope. The yak caravan had left yesterday, taking with them two tons of gear and a

      whole circusful of noise. Only the young herder had remained behind, and though he

      hadn't regained full consciousness, his delirium and fever were abating, and so was

      Abe's pessimism. With bed rest and fluids and Western vitamins, the boy would

      probably recover. Abe had spent an hour instructing Krishna, their cook, on how to

      tend the patient. Krishna had solemnly promised to be devout in his care.

      In this morning's hush it was easy to forget the shock of Daniel's fist on J.J.'s skull

      and the mutiny against Jorgens's plodding ancien régime and the Tibetan boy's

      horrible seizures. Abe thought to himself, Today has promise, today is new. It was the

      kind of thing he used to tell Jamie every morning before they slipped from bed and

      dressed. She had liked to hear it. He had liked to say it.

      Abe hooked on his wire-rims and opened his sleeping bag and piece by piece dressed

      with the clothing he kept warm every night for this very moment every morning. On

      his way to the mess tent, he paid a visit to the expedition's water skull.

      It was a sheep skull nestled into a rocky crevice by the glacier pond which provided

      their water. It was still possessed of a good portion of its flesh, meaning it was in a

      state of slow decay. The grisly head lay rotting within inches of their drinking water,

      and Li had made several complaints, citing the People's Republic's campaign against

      rats, flies and other germ carriers. But the skull served as a sort of Tibetan mousetrap

      for bad spirits, and supposedly kept the water pure on a supernatural level. And since

      Krishna Rai boiled all their potable water, hepatitis or cholera or any other plague

      nesting in the head was rendered more unlikely than demon possession. Despite Li's

      fussiness, the skull stayed in place.

      Abe had come to enjoy waking early and sitting here in wait for the sunshine. It was

      quiet and primeval and satisfied his streak of pantheism. But this morning he didn't

      linger. The camp was alive. Krishna made farewell omelets with the last of their eggs

      and talked about how he would miss them while they were on the mountain. Li

      wagged his finger at the little cook and told him in English, 'Now you will be alone with

      me and I will teach you how to play chess,' and Krishna laughed even though he didn't

      like Li.

      At the end of breakfast, Stump said, 'Let's do it to it,' with the enthusiasm of an

      original thought. Outside the mess tent, Robby and Carlos started singing the

      Rawhide theme, lashing the cold dirt with hanks of loose sling.

      They loaded their packs and hefted them for weight, then added or subtracted

      things and closed the packs and slung them on. In the coming week, some of the

      yakherders were scheduled to make a second trip up with any mountain supplies still

      remaining in the dump. By the middle of April it was projected that the next camp,

      Advance Base Camp, would be self-sufficient. The climbers kept their loads light for

      the trail and so Abe did too – a sleeping bag, some food, and his streamlined jump kit,

      his trauma box for mishaps along the trail. On second thought he went ahead and

      stuck a twelve-pound cylinder of oxygen in his pack just in case someone crashed.

      It was going to take three days to trek up to their next camp, four days for the yaks.

      It was only ten miles away, but the altitude was going to slow them. If all went well,

      the climbers would arrive at Advance Base Camp – ABC – on the same day their gear

      did. Some of them would immediately return to Base Camp to recover from the

      altitude and to escort the final yak carry back up. Others would get ABC up and

      running. Still others would begin climbing toward the next camp. The siege was now

      begun.

      In bunches, the climbers left camp and aimed for the throat of the Rongbuk Glacier,

      a huge body of ice left behind by the last ice age. On maps, the glacier resembled
    a

      white octopus with its tentacles flung out among all the surrounding valleys. Abe set

      off with the last wave. Li stood by the trail and wished them good luck.

      Five minutes out of Base Camp, Abe turned around to take a photo of their

      comfortable little tent city, but it was already gone. When he looked back up at

      Everest, it, too, had disappeared, blocked from view by the Changtse, the satellite

      peak.

      Single file on the trail, the climbers were swallowed whole by a maze of looming mud

      walls and loose stone and deep, icy corridors. Once again Abe had no idea where they

      were going or what to expect. Li was right, they truly had come to the edge of the

      world.

      It would have been hard to get lost on that twisting path, at least on the first part of

      it, for dozens of expeditions had been here before them, and the trail was clearly

      imprinted. Where the tracks disappeared on long, jumbled fields of scree, they simply

      had to follow heaps of old frozen yak dung. But even with the sun out and the air

      warm, it seemed to Abe that a careless soul could wander forever in this labyrinth,

      and he was glad to have Daniel leading them.

      At a prominent fork in the glacier, they found a huge, thirty-foot arrow made of

      piled rocks. It pointed left.

      'Mallory and his bunch went that way,' Daniel said. The Brit's body had never been

      found, and the mountaineering community was still divided over whether he had

      summited.

      'It takes you to the North Col,' Daniel said. That was what climbers called the 'trade

      route' up the north side. It was by far the easiest climb up Everest's north side, and

      for that reason was the most often repeated. With huge sums of money and

      oftentimes national prestige at stake, most expeditions to Everest opted for a sure

      summit rather than a new or more difficult route. Part of Abe wished they were

      heading for the North Col's well-known terrain and relative safety.

      'That's also the trail you take to the Chengri La,' Daniel added. Chengri Pass, which

      James Hilton had turned into the fictitious Shangri-La in his Lost Horizon, crossed

      south into Nepal at a height of 18,000 feet. Over that la, Daniel and his Lepers'

      Parade had escaped during the '84 debacle.

      'We go this way,' Daniel pointed, and they turned right into the shadows, moving

      quietly, as if giants had built this stone arrow and might still be lurking nearby.

      The trail roller-coastered up and down, mostly up. For some reason a sense of

      vertigo kept sneaking up on him. From minute to minute, he couldn't shake the sense

      of being out of control. Usually he only felt this way on steep rock, and yet it was plain

      to see that both his feet were planted on flat ground. Abe tried to reason with his

      fears. Finally he just accepted that he was going to have to live with them.

      The climbers gained elevation. A day passed, then two, then three. In between they

      suffered two long, cramped nights of too many people sharing too few tents. Despite

      the bitter cold, Abe ended up sleeping outside under the stars both nights.

      Their pace slowed, and so did their thoughts, or at least Abe's did. He tried to

      remember Jamie's face, but to his dull alarm it eluded him. The more he tried, the less

      he remembered. Before it was too late and she was altogether erased from memory,

      Abe decided to quit searching for her and instead concentrated on Carlos's heels in

      front of him, plodding, mindless.

      'Eventually we'll acclimatize,' Robby told Abe. 'This will seem just like sea level.' Abe

      listened to Robby's words but watched his lips. They were bright blue, a symptom of

      the hypoxia all of them were enduring. As their bodies cued to the altitude, some of

      the blue would return to pink, but Abe doubted 20,000 feet could ever feel like sea

      level.

      Their third morning on the trail, the climbers penetrated a long bank of penitentes,

      or seracs. These were tall pinnacles of ice that had been sharpened to a point by the

      sun. Some had warped into grotesque shapes. Others had collapsed. One had toppled

      and speared the earth.

      Abe looked around, startled by the unnatural quiet in this place. He knew what

      these penitentes were but had never seen them up close like this. Abe rubbernecked

      until Gus came up behind and nudged him onward.

      If ever nature had erected a sign to warn away man, the penitentes were it. It was

      like an evil forest in there. The thirty-foot fingers of turquoise ice were utterly

      beautiful and seductive, but they were also deadly and looked it.

      Here and there, big boulders sat five and ten feet above the ground, balanced atop

      thin sun-carved columns of ice like huge petrified mushrooms. 'I feel like Alice in

      Wonderland,' Abe said to Gus.

      Gus glanced up at him sharply and hushed him with a finger. 'This place is

      booby-trapped,' she whispered, and pointed at the hair-trigger stones and penitentes.

      'If one of those bastards collapses, it could bring the whole place down.' There was no

      way to tiptoe with a fifty-pound pack on, but Abe did his best to walk more gingerly.

      Soon they came upon a horribly twisted animal dangling from an ice wall. Half of it

      lay outside the ice, the other half still frozen into the blue glass. Birds had pecked

      away the eyes, and the elements had stripped much of the rest down to bone.

      'Road kill,' Gus whispered, poking at the hide and bones with her ski pole.

      It had long matted hair and thick joints, and the ice and wind and sunlight had

      rendered it almost shapeless. Though it looked like the thawing remains of a

      mastodon, Abe knew it was a yak.

      'Is that one of ours?' he whispered. Gus shook her head no.

      'Did a rock fall on it?'

      'Nah,' whispered Gus. She opened her pocketknife and stepped closer to the thing.

      'If a rock fell on it, the yakkies would have butchered it for the meat. This poor thing

      probably fell down a crevasse, probably during some expedition. Now the glacier's just

      getting around to belching it up. Everest does that a lot, turning out its dead.'

      Gus reached forward and grabbed one of the horns and wrenched the animal's head

      up. With her free hand, she snaked her knife under the neck and sawed away with the

      blade. After a minute, a fist-sized cup of metal fell out of the filthy hair and hit the

      ground with a clank.

      Gus picked the bell up. She let the clapper strike the metal cup once, gently. The

      solitary note trembled through the glass forest. 'For my collection,' she said, stuffing

      one of her gloves inside to muffle the clapper.

      Abe was glad when they finally reached the end of that hour-long bed of crystal

      thorns and stone mushrooms. The rest of the group was waiting for them on a

      clearing, lounging against their packs or stretching sore shoulder muscles. J.J. was

      reading one of Robby's old Silver Surfer comics, and the Sherpas were sharing some

      tsampa, or roasted barley, with Daniel. When Abe and Gus appeared, the climbers all

      got to their feet and started loading up.

      Only then did Abe realize that the group had divided itself into pairs and trios to

      pass through the penitentes, one team at a time. Nobody had told them to do it, they'd

      just split up and staggered their own ranks so that if there had been an accident

      among the penitentes,
    there would have been a minimum of victims and a maximum

      of rescuers. Abe's confidence in the group soared.

      They headed higher up a series of glacial steppes, holding close to a wall of blue and

      white ice. Another two hours' ground away and the natural terracing grew steeper.

      Here and there they had to grab at outcrops to clamber higher. The party slowed to a

      crawl, gasping and resting their hands on their knees.

      'I must be getting old,' Kelly said. Abe remembered she was just thirty. Her hair

      hung in long golden rags, partly braided.

      'Twenty-one thou,' Stump consoled her, referring to the altitude.

      'Twenty-one seven,' J.J. corrected him. He looked jolly and warm and primitive in a

      big fur Khampa cap he'd bought from a nomad in Shekar. His black eye was buried

      behind glacier glasses. 'We're getting up there.'

      'No excuses,' Robby threw in, gasping along with the others. 'You are getting old,

      Kelly. Especially for a woman.' Kelly delighted in having her beauty deflated, but no

      one else was particularly amused. They were too tired.

      'It's only a little more,' Daniel told them. As if to confirm him, some of the yak

      caravan appeared, wending its way back down to Base Camp. Unburdened of their

      loads and with gravity helping them along, the yaks and their herders were practically

      running downhill. Their rapid descent made Abe feel that much slower.

      Soon the afternoon winds began. The trail's corridor funneled blasts straight down

      into their faces. Without breaking stride, Abe zipped his jacket closed to the throat

      and fished some thin polypro gloves from a pocket. They wound through the

      convolutions.

      Abruptly, as if bobbing to the sea's surface after a deep dive, they emerged onto a

      flat mesa, perhaps an acre wide.

      And suddenly the whole earth just halted. And so did Abe.

      With no warning, the gigantic gleaming body of Everest was rearing up in front of

      them. They had lost sight of it for three days and now it jutted one and a half miles

      above them, stabbing into the jetstream. Its curtains of afternoon light hung before

      them like a dream.

      At first the mountain distracted all attention from ABC, which lay in shadow at the

      back of the mesa. The mesa was butted snugly against a soaring rock wall, and the

      wall had shed copious piles of limestone down onto it. Including Daniel's pioneering

     


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