Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Ascent

    Page 3
    Prev Next


      still full of her own history and future. She had probably eaten a breakfast yesterday

      much like they had last night, had probably walked on the same river ice and spooked

      the same herd of starving deer and crossed this same glacier. And now they were

      condemning her to infinite darkness.

      'Look,' said the leader. The icy tails of his gray moustache waggled. 'Sometimes this

      is how it goes. You do a triage. You figure the odds. You save the ones you can save.

      And you leave the ones you can't. Now it's going to be a long carry out of here. We're

      leaving. I want you to go saddle up. I'll go tell that girl the news.'

      'No,' said Abe. 'I'll tell her.' He had the right to the last word. He had touched this

      blue rope. He had given this woman light and whatever terrible sights that attended.

      The leader made a few thoughtful stabs at the hard snow with his ice axe, then he

      walked off without saying more. The rescuers at the litter had turned their backs to

      Abe and the hole.

      Abe checked his watch, then shook it. Only twenty-five minutes had elapsed since

      their arrival. Surely hours had passed. He couldn't fathom what was unfolding all

      around him. They hoisted the litter like a coffin, three men to a side, one standing

      back and feeding out a safety rope in case they slipped.

      The wind sucked at Abe's face, then slapped him. The first snowflakes rattled

      against the shell of his new white windjacket. The storm was cracking wide open.

      Their little motions and hopes could do nothing to hold the sky together any longer.

      The rescue was over, at least for the woman inside this mountain. Abe lay down by

      the hole to tell her so.

      'Hello?' Abe called down.

      There was no reply. Abe could feel the blackness down there surrounding that

      solitary light.

      'We have to carry Daniel down,' he called into the hole. 'We're shorthanded, so all of

      us have to go. But we'll come back.' He added, 'I promise.' Immediately Abe wished

      the words away. They had already broken one promise. They had come to save the

      survivors or carry bodies out, and they were only doing half the job. More promises

      could only mean more betrayal to this trapped woman.

      There was still no answer, and Abe started to push away from the crevasse. Then

      Diana spoke.

      'You're not leaving me?'

      Abe shook his head no, but the word wouldn't come.

      'You promised,' she screamed. Then, quickly, as if chiding herself, she said, 'no,' and

      again, more firmly, 'no.'

      'They're shorthanded...' Abe started again.

      'It was my fault,' she said. Her words came to Abe low and awkward with the

      cadence of a last testament. In her weariness or delirium, Abe heard something far

      worse than acceptance. It was a tone of surrender similar to what her rescuers were

      using. 'Tell Daniel that. Can you hear me, Abe?'

      Abe lowered his head deeper into the hole. 'Yes.'

      Now her voice gained strength. 'It was me that fell and pulled us down. It was me.

      Tell him. I'm sorry. I'm sorry for what happened to him. I'm sorry for what happened

      to me. I know Daniel and he'll take this on. Tell him not to.'

      Abe wanted to protest that the fall had been bad luck and was not a matter for

      contrition. But maybe that was how Diana had decided to make her peace with it.

      'Okay,' Abe said. 'I'll tell him that.'

      'Now I want you to tell me something, Abe.'

      'Yes.'

      'How old are you?'

      'Eighteen.' For some reason, Abe felt compelled to add the full truth of it. 'Almost.'

      She took a long minute. 'I thought something like that,' she said. And now Abe saw

      how they'd used him with this woman. They'd used him to buffer the horror to

      interrogate her. And they'd used him for this death sentence.

      'Well, Abe,' she started, then fell silent. After a moment, she finished. 'There's no

      blame on you either. Remember that.'

      Abe's throat clenched at that. She was forgiving him, too. He searched for something

      to say. At last he thought to ask her age.

      'Twenty,'she said.'Almost.'

      'You know, I can wait some more,' Abe offered. 'I don't mind.' Until he spoke it out

      loud, the thought hadn't occurred to him. He could spend an hour here, then race

      down to catch the others who would be moving slow with the bulky litter. And if he

      could spend an hour, why not two?

      Diana didn't give him a chance. 'Is that wind bringing a storm?' she asked.

      'The storm's here,' Abe said.

      'Then get out of here.' There was courage in her voice, but hysteria, too. Then she

      screamed his name. She invoked it. 'Abe,' she cried.

      She needed him to stay. At least until they freed her, this woman wanted Abe with

      her whole heart. That was more than he'd ever known with a woman.

      'I'm here,' he replied. 'I'm not leaving.'

      By staying Abe would make himself hostage to his own promise. By staying he

      would force the rescue team to return and acknowledge the life in this pit of ice. Elated

      by his decision, Abe clambered to his feet. He caught up with the leader as the litter

      team trudged downslope.

      'I'm staying with her,' Abe announced.

      The leader wasted no words. His broad face darkened. He took one step closer and

      shoved Abe hard in the chest, knocking him to the snow. 'You damn cowboy,' he said.

      'I don't take threats.'

      Abe wasn't hurt by the blow, only surprised.

      'It's no threat,' Abe said. But it was, clearly. And now he saw that he threatened

      their tranquility. They had already reconciled themselves to their forsaking the

      woman. The rescuers were good and decent men, that went without saying. But by

      staying, Abe seemed to expose them as something less or different or just more

      complicated.

      'Get your pack. Or leave it, I don't care. But get your ass down this mountain. I don't

      want you on this mountain. I don't want you on this team,' the leader yelled over the

      wind. 'You don't know anything.'

      Without that last insult, Abe might have obeyed.

      One of the rescuers, an older man with bad knees, came gimping up to see what the

      disturbance was about. 'The cherry think he's staying,' the leader said to the older

      man. 'He thinks he's going to save the day.'

      Now Abe was angry. 'You didn't leave her food or water. You didn't even talk to her.'

      'That's because she's already dead.'

      'But she's not.'

      The older man took a minute to study Abe's earnest face. There was no friendliness

      in his look, but no hostility either. He was measuring Abe the way he would a

      mountainside or an approaching storm or any other obstacle. 'Leave that poor girl

      alone,' he counseled Abe. 'There's not a thing we can do now except let her go. Have

      some mercy.'

      Abe heard the logic there, but he had decided. 'No, sir,' he said.

      'Listen to me. All you'll do is torment her. With food and water, she could drag on for

      days. Don't do that to her.'

      'That's not the point,' Abe said. 'If it was me...'

      'If it was you, you'd pray to God I had a gun to finish you quick.'

      Abe shrugged. He was afraid to argue because he knew they were probably right.

      But he was staying.

      'I admire your chivalry,' the older man said, and Abe blushed because the man was

    &nbs
    p; talking about naïveté'. 'Just the same, you'll put everybody at risk all over again, and

      all to rescue you. Not her. She's gone. Now come on with us.'

      'No sir.'

      'Damn it,' the leader blew. 'You see?'

      'I don't want to leave her either,' the older man said. 'If you ask me, it ought to be

      that one over there' – he jerked a thumb at the litter – 'who's stuck in the hole. As far

      as I'm concerned, he as good as killed that girl. All the same, it's her who stays and

      him that gets saved.'

      'There's no right or wrong in the mountains,' the leader added. 'There's just

      whatever happens.'

      'What's your name?' the older man asked.

      'Abe Burns.'

      'Well, Abe, if we were down in the World, I'd have you tied up. But we don't have the

      manpower to carry you out. So that's no good. All we can do is rely on you to do what's

      right.'

      'Yes sir,' Abe said. 'I'm trying.'

      'Quit your jacking off,' the leader shouted. 'We got an avalanche overhead and a

      storm and a hurt man. And no time for you to get a hard-on for a dead woman.'

      Abe didn't hesitate. He knocked the leader backward onto his pack and would have

      kicked him, too, except he had on crampons and the teeth would have cut the man.

      'Jesus,' the older man hissed at the leader, 'Jesus.' Then he turned to Abe. 'You

      know, you can't save her.'

      'I don't care,' Abe admitted.

      'Then why?'

      Abe didn't answer. He couldn't.

      The older man looked around at the peaks. 'Have it your way,' he said. 'I just wish

      you wouldn't do this to yourself.'

      'It's your funeral,' the leader cursed Abe, struggling to his feet. He pointed at the

      hole. 'She's already had hers.'

      The older man shouted the litter crew to a halt two hundred yards down the glacier

      and Abe trailed him down. The team set down the wounded man, who was delirious

      with the morphine and warmth. The rescuers all went through their packs, donating

      food and an extra sleeping bag and a bivouac tent and a little kerosene stove for

      melting water. They did it quickly, with little respect for Abe but no discourtesy. They

      thought him a fool, that was plain, but no one said it out loud. They simply left him

      their surplus. To a man, the rescuers were sullen. Clearly they did not relish carrying

      Daniel down at the expense of the woman in the crevasse. But the decision had been

      made. One went so far as to wish Abe well. Then they were gone.

      Abe trudged back up the slope with the supplies. In all, their charity weighed about

      twenty pounds, and suddenly that seemed very little against the dark mass of storm

      and twilight.

      Abe lay the things beside the crevasse and assembled the bivouac tent as best he

      could before the wind blew everything away or the snow buried it or he got too cold.

      He set the tent door inches from the mouth of the crevasse, which made for an

      awkward entrance. But it would facilitate communication, and that was the whole

      point. Once inside the tiny tent and burrowed into the sleeping bag, Abe felt like he

      was the one trapped. Only then did he call down into the hole and tell Diana what he'd

      done.

      The woman didn't answer. Not a whisper issued up from the crevasse.

      'Diana?' he called. Abe had prepared himself for resistance, which was why he'd

      waited to set camp before announcing his presence. Her silence confused him.

      'Well, I'm here,' Abe said.

      Hours passed. The storm swallowed them alive. What light remained was scooped

      away by the wind.

      Abe fell asleep and began dreaming he'd fallen into the crevasse. He couldn't move

      his arms or legs and it was hard to breathe except in shallow birdlike bursts. He woke

      from the dream to find himself smothering in complete darkness. The tent had

      collapsed beneath a heavy mantle of snow and his limbs were lodged tight inside the

      cocoon of the sleeping bag.

      It took all Abe's strength to jackknife his body up and down and punch the tent and

      himself free of the snow. Frenzied with claustrophobia, he managed to claw open the

      door. There he lay with his bare head extending into the blizzard, gulping huge,

      searing lungfuls of air and snowflakes, overjoyed to find himself free of the dream

      even if not the mountain.

      It was only then that he heard singing. The song was eerie and distant and sounded

      like nothing human, and Abe guessed the wind was playing through the high towers.

      That or some animal had been driven up from the forest. Or spirits were on the loose.

      Abe listened harder. Between the howl of wind and the hiss of corn snow guttering

      off his tent wall, he found a rhythm and a tune and a sunniness to it. It was a Beach

      Boys song.

      Even as he listened, Abe felt the storm layering him with snow all over again. He

      shook the tent hard but carefully, for after all his shaking around there was no telling

      where the crevasse lay now. Rooting through the folds of the tent, Abe found a

      flashlight and shined it outside. He was horrified and at the same time enchanted by

      how the falling snow actually devoured his light. The beam reached a few feet beyond

      his little nylon cave, then vanished.

      It took him several minutes to locate the crevasse. The hole had closed to a small

      circle, as if stealing its catch away from the world for good. Still lying inside his

      sleeping bag and tent, Abe edged closer. The singing became more distinct, but that

      only made it more alien because Diana wasn't singing real words, only jibberish.

      Now Abe found the ice axe they had left him. In thrashing around, he'd landed on

      top of the axe. The pick had slashed his sleeping bag and down feathers had spilled

      everywhere. There was blood on the metal head, and for a bad moment Abe thought

      he'd cut himself and was too cold to feel the wound. Then he realized this was Daniel's

      axe and Daniel's blood.

      Reaching his arm outside, Abe poked at the edges of the hole to widen it. He began

      chopping, methodically cutting away at the snow even though the debris poured down

      the crevasse, adding to Diana's misery. 'I'm sorry,' he shouted to her, 'I'm sorry.' It

      was for himself that Abe cut at the snow. He needed to keep open this doorway to the

      underworld. He was afraid to lose contact, quite certain that without Diana's company,

      he would never make it through this ordeal.

      When Abe had finally cut down to the blue rope and gained proof of his companion,

      he rested. He slept. When his eyes opened again, it was day, but it might as well have

      been night still. The storm was raging more fiercely than before. Abe couldn't see

      anything outside the tent and he couldn't see anything inside it, either, without the

      flashlight.

      Abe turned to rebuilding his tent. Section by section, he propped the walls up with

      the broken poles and taught himself to rustle the fabric every few minutes to shed the

      snow. And all the while, he listened to Diana's mindless singing.

      'You're going to make it,' Abe shouted down the crevasse. He found some cheese and

      a chunk of wet bread and a plastic bottle of mostly frozen water. 'You want some

      food?' he yelled.

      Diana made no answer. She just sang on and on.

      While Abe ate and drank, he listened. It was essentially the same tune over and


      over. The words weren't real words. They were sounds to mark a path. Locked in

      place, Diana was circling around and around. Soon the vortex would suck her into its

      deepest part. Abe knew he was listening to the sound of death.

      Finally Abe joined in the singing. He'd heard this song many times before, but he

      couldn't remember what the words were either. With the woman's same abandon,

      Abe threw his voice out into the void all around them.

      After a while Diana seemed to notice the extra voice. Somewhere in her benighted

      skull, Abe's singing freed Diana to depart from the song and actually talk. She began to

      emit bursts of story. Abe labored to hear what she had to say. It was a freewheeling

      autobiography, woven together from memories and fictions and pleas for her mother's

      comfort. It made Abe weep sometimes, and other times just bored him.

      The stormy day passed. Night moved in again.

      As the darkness stretched out and Abe drifted into delirious catnaps, it was hard to

      tell what was real anymore. He grew colder and a little crazy himself, and it was hard

      to know what was even spoken. Much of what Abe heard he may have imagined.

      Diana may or may not have been a college student with a bad job and a drafty

      trailer-home and allegiance to some crazy woman. She seemed to have three brothers

      named John and Wes and Blake, which Abe began to suspect because those were his

      own uncles' names. Her talk about mountains was probably real, because she

      described spring wildflowers Abe had never heard of. She wanted to climb Everest

      someday, though that might as easily have been Abe's overlay. Abe gave up trying to

      keep the woman – or himself – lucid with questions or dialogue.

      Abe finally concluded that the name of her dogged savior was completely lost to her,

      for she'd quit saying his name altogether. He accepted that she had ceased to

      understand he was lying on the surface above or even that she was caged inside the

      mountain. Abe's presence had not loaned one ounce of dignity to her long and ugly

      dying, and he resigned himself to anonymity. It was then, during a lull in the gale, that

      she cried out.

      'I love you,' she yelled.

      Abe knew she meant someone else, yet all he could think to reply was the same. 'I

      love you,' he shouted into the crevasse, and so she wouldn't think it was just her own

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026