Authors: Roland Smith
Tags: #Miscellaneous, #Young adult fiction, #Family, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Bildungsromans, #Survival after airplane accidents; shipwrecks; etc, #Sports & Recreation, #Fiction, #Coming of age, #Mountaineering, #Parents, #Boys & Men, #Everest; Mount (China and Nepal), #General, #Survival, #Survival skills
"
JOSH IS SO CUTE!
What do you think he'd do if I snuck into his tent one night?
"
"
I don't think that's included in the permit fee.
"
"
If you wait until you're above twenty thousand feet nothing will happen. More than your lungs shut down at—
"
THE MOST INTERESTING PART
of my grist gathering got cut off by the entrance of Holly Angelo.
"Hello everyone!...
gasp
... My name is Holly Angelo. I'm a journalist from New York and I'll be joining you ...
gasp
... on top of the world!"
Holly did not mingle, she mangled. Her gasps were met with other gasps, but not because of the thin air, although a lot of the oxygen was sucked out of the mess tent when she walked in.
All conversation stopped.
A plate of food dropped.
A Sherpa nearly swallowed the cigarette he was smoking, then made a mad dash for the back entrance with five or six other Sherpas. I was going to join them, but I was too slow. Talons with bright red fingernail polish latched onto my parka.
"Where ...
gasp
... do you think ...
gasp
... you're going?"
Holly whipped me around to face her with surprising strength.
"Uh...,"I stammered.
"I need to talk to you."
"Uh ... okay."
"Now ...
gasp
... I have seen your pitiful ...
gasp
... tent and I think you will be a lot ...
gasp
... more comfortable ...
gasp, gasp
... in my tent."
I thought I would faint.
"I have a lot ...
gasp
... of room ...
gasp
... an extra cot..."
No one hauled a cot all the way up to Base Camp, but she had a spare.
"...and my food is much better than ...
gasp
... this swill. Pierre is creating something right now ...
gasp
... and Ralph has his massage table set up if you need a rubdown."
"Uh..."
"Your father said it was up to ...
gasp
... you."
Thanks, Dad.
Coughing fit
...
I thought about sneaking out while she was coughing.
She would straighten up and ole Peak would just be gone. Poof! Then I thought about what Josh had told me:
Be very careful about what you say
... and figured that it also applied to what I did. It's rude to disappear when someone is hacking their lungs out.
"We have so much to discuss," she said when the fit was over, which seemed to have helped her gasping. "Your mom and I go way back. We've been friends for years."
If that had been the case I would have recognized her name the first time I saw it in the byline above the article she'd written.
"She would never forgive me if I didn't watch out for you up here."
"I appreciate the offer," I said, trying to give her my version of Josh's charming grin (which probably looked more like a scowl), "but I think I'll stay in my own tent."
This was returned with a genuine scowl. I didn't care. There was no way I was going to become her tent mate.
"But you will have your meals with me," she said, as if this wasn't even open to question.
I was holding the plate of noodles, which had cooled and congealed and wasn't looking its best at that moment.
"Not every meal," I hedged. "But yeah, I'll eat with you once in a while."
Her scowl deepened and I think she was about to say something nasty, but I was saved by Josh coming into the tent.
"Okay, people," he announced. "Tomorrow we head up to ABC."
A cheer went up.
"It'll take us three days and two nights to get up there if everything goes well. We'll spend two nights at ABC, then come back down. You know the routine."
"Climb high, sleep low," the team chanted in unison.
"Leah will check you tonight to get a baseline on your blood, et cetera, then check you again up at ABC to see how you're doing."
This news was met with much less enthusiasm.
"She's waiting for you in the Aid tent." He pinned a sheet of paper on the tent pole. "She wrote down your exam times. Don't be late."
"Heil Hitler," a climber muttered under his breath.
Josh shot him a look and he turned bright red. Nobody got up to the summit unless the expedition leader said they were going up. It was best to stay on the captain's good side.
"What about the
puja
ceremony?" someone asked.
A
puja
is a Buddhist blessing ritual that most climbing parties went through prior to going up the mountain.
"We'll be going up to ABC two more times in the next few weeks," Josh said. "We'll hold our
puja
before one of those. I want to get an early start tomorrow."
A couple of the Sherpas didn't look too happy about skipping the
puja.
"Pack just enough food for the trip," Josh continued. "It will be a hard climb and you don't want to be carrying any more weight than necessary."
The speech ended and the climbers gathered around the sheet. Josh walked over to Holly and me.
"You two won't be coming," he said. "I'm holding JR, Jack, and Will back, too. You haven't acclimatized enough to go higher."
"Then why don't you wait a few days?" Holly asked. "We can ...
gasp
... all go up together."
It was a good question. Mostly because I couldn't imagine being stuck in camp alone with Holly for the next several days.
Josh lowered his voice. "I'd like nothing better than to wait, but most of these people have been here for weeks. If I don't get them higher they'll riot. A third of them have only signed up for ABC. When we come back down they're gone, which will make things a lot easier around here. I'll take you up to ABC as soon as I get back down. I can't hold them back because of latecomers."
LATECOMERS
JOSH'S ABSENCE WASN'T AS BAD
as I thought, although Zopa worked Sun-jo and me like dogs.
The morning Josh headed up the mountain he had us build a six-foot-tall cairn out of rocks around a central flagpole for the
puja
blessing ceremony. We then placed smaller poles in the ground around the main pole and strung up dozens of prayer flags between them on strings. The flags come in five colors—red, green, yellow, blue, and white—representing the earth's five elements: fire, wood, earth, water, and iron. As the flags flutter in the wind they release the prayers written on them and pacify the gods.
When we finished Josh had Sun-jo and me gather gear from our team's tents and lean it against the cairn to be blessed.
Zopa held the ceremony that evening for a German and Italian climbing party going up the next morning, and for our group in absentia, which he said wasn't ideal, but it sometimes worked. He recited several Buddhist prayers, then asked the mountain for permission for us to climb it—in German, English, and Italian, which was impressive.
The ceremony took about three hours, and just as it was ending, a black bird landed on the main flagpole, which Zopa said was very auspicious.
"What kind of bird was that?" I asked as we headed back to camp. It looked kind of like a crow or a raven.
Sun-jo shrugged.
IT TURNED OUT
that even though Holly Angelo was right next door to me, she was relatively easy to avoid.
She never left her tent before ten. I was out of mine by seven every morning. Because there were so many people in the camp, it was easy to get lost among the tents, unless you were Holly, who wore the most garish-colored snowsuits on the slope. I could pick her out a mile away and hide.
She did manage to snag me for dinner the fourth night Josh was gone. I made the mistake of heading back to my tent to drop off my ice ax before dinner (Zopa had been giving Sun-jo and me self-arrest lessons), and Holly was waiting for me like a guard dog.
The food was better than what they offered in the mess tent, but the atmosphere was grim. Ralph sat on his massage table with a permanent pout on his face, as if he were waiting for customers he knew would never come.
Chef Pierre watched every bite of food I took and muttered about the barbaric cooking conditions at 18,000 feet.
And Holly ... Well, my headache came back, but it wasn't from the altitude. Inside a tent her voice was shrill enough to sour yak butter. She was no longer gasping, which I missed because the pauses gave my ears a chance to rest.
I thought she was going to interview me, but it turned out that I was there to listen to her interview herself. During the two-hour nonstop monologue she filled me in on her life, year by boring year. I didn't really start tuning in until she turned eighteen, but even then it wasn't very interesting.
She'd been married three times and her current husband lived in Rome and she rarely saw him. She came from a wealthy family and didn't have to work for a living. She became a "journalist" (as she called it) against her father's wishes because she felt it was her "moral responsibility to tell the truth." (I didn't mention that in the article she'd written about us there were several things that were blatantly untrue.) I also think she exaggerated her climbing conquests, because when I asked her what mountains she had climbed, she said, "You know, all the big ones," and quickly changed the subject to dreams, asking if I ever have them.
"Yes."
"Well, let me tell you about one I had just last night," she said.
I hate hearing about people's dreams, but I was spared by the arrival of William Blade and three bodyguards the size of yetis.
In his films William Blade had been shot, stabbed, starved, beaten, and tortured, but he had never looked worse than when he hobbled into Holly's tent.
"His back went out," one of the bodyguards explained. "We were wondering if your massage therapist can put him right."
"Of course!" Holly said, pushing things out of the way (including me) to make room.
Ralph smiled for the first time since he had arrived on the mountain and gleefully began laying out liniments and lotions and flexing his muscles (which weren't very impressive).
I stayed long enough to watch them get Blade out of his clothes and onto the table, where he started yelling and swearing at everyone in the tent as if we were personally responsible for his bad back.
I didn't see what happened the next day (Zopa had Sun-jo and me climbing a treacherous icefall outside camp) but we heard all about it when we got back that afternoon.
After Ralph worked his magic on the film hero's back, Blade offered to pay him twice as much as Holly was paying to move over to his camp. Apparently, Ralph couldn't get his gear together fast enough. When Pierre saw this he begged Blade to take him, too, which he did, leaving Holly absolutely alone in her giant pink tent screaming in rage.
The bet was she was going to quit the mountain. The only person who put cash down on her staying was Zopa. He met everyone's wager with the money he had gotten from his cigarette sales.
It was hours after the incident before Holly emerged from her tent. It turned out that she wasn't about to head home to her Upper East Side penthouse apartment.
We were in the mess tent waiting to hear from Josh and the team up at ABC. They were supposed to leave that morning for Base Camp, but got pinned down by a snowstorm. We had heard that some of the people up there had HAPE, but the storm had knocked out further radio communication, so we didn't know who was sick or how bad it was. If the team wasn't able to start down the next day, the situation would turn critical. They had brought only enough food for two days at ABC.
A couple of the Sherpas were talking about hauling up some food for them.
"Not tonight," Zopa said. "The storm is moving down the mountain."
The Sherpas and a small group of other climbers were arguing with Zopa about his weather prediction when Holly sauntered into the mess tent.
"I'm going to the top," she announced calmly, then walked over and got a plate of food.
The only person smiling was Zopa. And why not? He had just won a pot of money—literally. The mess cook had been keeping the bets in a ten-gallon rice cooker, which was now overflowing with rupees.
Sun-jo had told me that if Zopa won the bet he would give the money to the Tibetan monks.
They would have to wait to get their cash. I didn't know this yet, but just like Holly, Zopa had no plans to go home anytime soon.
"The snow is here," one of the Sherpas said.
"That's impossible," I said. I hadn't been in the tent more than twenty minutes. When I'd walked over from HQ there wasn't a cloud in the sky.
The cook pulled the flap back and we stared outside in disbelief. The snow was so thick I wasn't sure how I was going to find my tent.
GAMOW BAG
I MADE IT AS FAR
as the HQ tent, but no farther that night. The storm dumped about four feet of snow on Base Camp. It was much worse up at ABC.
Josh managed to get through on the radio only once during the night. It was scratchy and broken-up, but we think he said there were sustained winds of seventy-three miles an hour and gusts of over a hundred. The team members were hunkered down in their tents, but there was no way for Josh to check on them because of the weather.
At first light he dug out and reported in again. "Base, we're all accounted for, but we have two cases of HAPE. Francis and Bill. One severe, one mild. How's the weather down there?"
"Clear," the radio operator, Sparky, answered. "I just checked the meteorological maps and there's nothing new coming in until tonight."
"When?"
"Storm's ETA is nineteen hundred, give or take several hours."
Josh gave a harsh laugh, followed by a coughing fit. When he finally recovered he said, "I hear you on that weather window. I'll start everyone down as soon as we get them rehydrated. We're giving Bill extra Os and he's responding well. I think he'll be able to make it down on his own. Leah and I will follow behind him with Francis and a couple Sherpas. We'll give Bill a hand if he needs it. We're trying to get Francis into a Gamow Bag."