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
Francis was the guy who grunted at the noodles. A Gamow bag (pronounced "GAM-off") was invented by Igor Gamow in the late 1980s and has saved a lot of climbers from dying of HAPE. It's like an airtight body bag. At high altitudes the air pressure is extremely low. You zip the victim inside a Gamow bag, pump it full of air until it's about the same pressure as it would be at sea level, and bingo, the climber can breathe again ... hopefully.
"We'll start looking for the first climbers in about eight hours, then," Sparky said. "Be careful coming down. Avalanche risk is high."
"Keep us posted on the weather."
"Roger."
I DUG MY TENT OUT
of the snow, then Zopa asked Sun-jo and me to dig out Holly's tent, which took us hours. She didn't help us, but she did keep us supplied with hot tea and cookies.
Late that afternoon the first of our team members started to straggle in, looking like zombies from
Night of the Living Dead.
It took them each three mugs of steaming sweet tea in the mess tent before they were finally able to put a coherent sentence together.
"It was a nightmare.... The snow started a thousand feet below ABC. It was so thick we had to fix a rope and tie ourselves together so we didn't lose anyone."
"Couldn't see a bloody thing past your eyelashes. Then it
really
started snowing."
"Twenty-two below at ABC without the windchill. We nearly froze to death trying to get our tents up."
The guy talking gingerly pulled the glove off his right hand. Three fingers were discolored and blistered. "Krieger says I'll keep the digits, but the little toe on my left foot is going to slough off in about a week. Never liked that toe, anyway." He laughed, but it wasn't a merry sound. "I'd show it to you, but it would just make you sick."
"The blizzard wasn't the worst of it," another climber said. "Not by a far sight." He was a cowboy from Abilene, Texas. "An avalanche hit us at about two in the morning. Sounded like the biggest dang stampede you ever heard. Wiped out seven tents. Didn't lose a soul, thank the Lord, but we had to double and triple up in the remaining tents like sardines."
"Then the food ran out," the man with the frostbitten fingers said. "Josh only had us bring enough for the trip up and back. This morning there wasn't a raisin to eat between us. We're lucky it cleared up. A couple more days and we would have starved to death."
"You're right about that, partner," the Texan agreed. "When I crawled out this morning I was eyeing one of them yaks with murder in my heart. Guess we should have had that dang
puja
ceremony before we started up the hill."
"Where's my—where's Josh?" I asked.
"Him and Krieger are still haulin' Francis down," the Texan drawled. "They didn't leave till late, from what I hear. Turns out Francis is claustrophobic. Should have guessed it. He's always sleeping with half his head outside the tent door. He about went plumb crazy when they zipped him into that bag. The only thing that saved him was that he passed out after a bit."
You might be thinking that the above conversation was a little coldhearted. And you'd be right. It was ten below zero outside, slightly warmer in the mess tent but not by much. When you are exhausted, having a hard time catching your breath, freezing, starving, waiting for your little toe to drop off, you have other things on your mind than the welfare of your fellow climbers.
Zopa waved Sun-jo and me over to him and told us to get our gear. We were going up the mountain to help Josh and Leah.
JR, WILL, AND JACK
joined us. They had been filming our climbing lessons with Zopa the past few days, and I wasn't sure they were coming with us to help or to get footage of the Gamow bag in action.
I didn't think a thousand feet would make that much of a difference, but at that altitude even a hundred feet made a difference. Having to plow through freshly fallen snow didn't help. About every twenty steps I stopped, sucking in ragged breaths of freezing air. At this stage, my hope of getting to the summit, a mile and a half above where I was currently suffocating, seemed about as likely as me flying a Gamow bag to Jupiter. My only consolation was that Sun-jo and the film crew were having as much trouble as I was.
The one person who wasn't affected was Zopa. He'd wait for us until we were about fifty yards behind him, then continue up the Rongbuk Glacier like a mountain goat breaking trail.
By late afternoon there was still no sign of Josh and the others. If we didn't find them soon, we'd be searching in the dark, but even worse, clouds were starting to come in.
Zopa let us catch up to him just as the sun started slipping behind the mountain.
"Maybe they're spending the night at Camp Two or the intermediate camp," JR suggested between gasps.
There are two camps on the way up to ABC: an intermediate camp, and Camp Two, which lies three-quarters of the way up to ABC. The intermediate camp was nowhere in sight, which meant we weren't nearly as far up the mountain as it felt.
"And if they are not at the intermediate camp or Camp Two?" Zopa asked. (Meaning if Josh and Dr. Krieger had passed the camps, or hadn't reached them yet, they could freeze to death.)
"Good point," JR conceded. "What should we do?"
Zopa looked down the glacier, then squinted up at the darkening sky.
"A storm is coming," he said. "You can get down to Base Camp in an hour and a half, maybe two hours. If you leave now you can beat it."
JR gave him a skeptical look. We had been climbing for over four hours now.
"Downhill," Zopa said by way of explanation. "The trail is broken. Don't wander off it."
"What about you?" I asked.
He pulled his headlamp out of his pack and strapped it around his parka hood, then started to slip his pack back on. "I know your father. He will not watch that man die. He will try to get him off the mountain."
I think all of us wanted to go back down to Base Camp (I know I did), but none of us wanted to go down without Zopa, especially with bad weather moving in.
We put on our headlamps and followed Zopa's light.
Two hours later, in the dark, with the snow beginning to fall, we spotted two headlamps flickering a few hundred yards above us.
Josh and Leah looked completely done in. I don't think they would have made it much farther on their own. And I don't know who was happier to see who. They were happy we were there to help get Francis down, and we were happy to find them because it meant we got to go down.
"Did you bring Os?" Josh asked, kind of slurring his words.
Zopa pulled an oxygen tank and mask out of his pack. Josh cranked up the regulator and handed it to Leah, who took in several deep lungfuls. Josh was next. When he finished he offered it to us, but we all bravely shook our heads. We hadn't been up as long or as high as he and Leah, and the only reason they took hits was because they were exhausted. Climbers usually didn't start sucking Os until they got to Camp Five.
Zopa pointed to the bag. "How is he?"
"Alive ... at least the last time we looked. But he has HAPE bad."
JR pointed his headlamp at the transparent window on the top of the bag, but it was too fogged up to see inside.
"You still with us, Francis?" Josh shouted.
I thought I heard a muffled reply, but it was hard to tell in the howling wind.
"He's writing a message," Leah said.
We stared as a feeble, backward
sey
appeared in the condensation on the window.
Josh managed to laugh, then looked at Leah. "Should we let him out?"
She shook her head.
"You're the doctor." He squatted and got closer to the bag. "Help has arrived, Francis! We'll have you down to Base Camp soon!"
Soon turned out to be four more hours. The glacier was steep and icy. We had to place ice screws and lower the bag on ropes a few feet at a time so it didn't take off like a toboggan.
We stumbled into Base Camp long after midnight. The camp was usually lit up like a Christmas tree with blue, red, and green tent lights, but this late, most of the climbers were asleep. We hauled the Gamow into the Aid tent and laid it on a cot. Leah pulled off her outer and inner thermal gloves with her teeth, then slowly unzipped the bag.
"How are you feeling?" she asked.
Francis was the color of a corpse. He blinked his eyes open and managed to give her a weak smile. He whispered, "I'm not claustrophobic anymore."
Leah smiled and put a stethoscope to his chest. "But you still have HAPE."
"I'm not going to the summit?"
"Not this year," Josh said, looking just as disappointed as Francis. He had another opening on his climbing permit.
WE LEFT FRANCIS AND LEAH
and went into the mess tent. A handful of the team, staff, and Sherpas were still up drinking tea and playing cards. Josh reported on Francis's condition. When he finished he asked how Bill was.
"Not too good," the Texan answered. "He doesn't want to go back up."
Josh swore. Another climber down—and no one had climbed higher than ABC yet.
The mess tent cleared out pretty fast after that, leaving me, Sun-jo, Zopa, and Sparky. It felt good to drink hot tea and to breathe and have air actually fill my lungs. I felt like I was sitting in an oxygen tent, not a mess tent.
"Peak and Miss Angelo need to get up to ABC," Zopa said.
"I know," Josh said. "I was going to take them and the film crew up when I got back, but I'll have to wait a few days now. I'm wiped."
"I'll take them all up tomorrow," Zopa offered.
I couldn't even imagine walking back up the glacier in a few hours, but I couldn't protest in front of Josh or Zopa. I wished that JR, Will, and Jack hadn't headed to their tents after filming Francis being freed from the Gamow bag. If they had been there to hear Zopa's suggestion, I'm sure they would have protested for me.
"I can't ask you to do that," Josh said.
"You didn't ask me," Zopa said. "I offered. They need to go up. The weather will break in a few hours."
"Not according to the satellite maps I just looked at," Sparky said.
Zopa shrugged. "The maps are wrong."
"What about Holly?" Josh asked.
"I had a doctor from another camp look at her earlier today," Zopa answered. "She can go."
Josh grinned. "So, you already had this figured out before you came up to get me."
Zopa ignored the comment. "We will take some of the porters and yaks," he said. "Resupply what was lost in the storm. There are some Sherpas I would like to visit at ABC before I leave the mountain."
"Did you talk to Pa-sang?"
Pa-sang was Josh's sirdar, who I had seen around camp but had never officially met. He was constantly rushing around, yelling at the porters, arguing with Sherpas, or in the HQ tent talking to the Base Camp crew.
"He had the porters pack what was needed this afternoon," Zopa answered.
Josh looked at me. "Are you ready for twenty-one thousand feet?"
I said I was, but I had some serious doubts. I hoped Zopa was wrong about the weather.
ABC
THE NEXT MORNING
I poked my head through the tent flap.
Crystal clear, twenty-eight degrees, no wind—by far the best weather we'd had since getting to Base Camp—and I could not have been more disappointed.
I had a sore throat and it felt like the muscles and joints inside my skin had been replaced with broken glass.
Sun-jo was sitting outside waiting for me, dressed in my former clothes, including my so-called junk boots. And there was an added touch: The Peak Experience logo had been sewn on both the parka and his stocking cap. I thought Zopa had traded all that stuff away. Why was Sun-jo wearing my clothes?
"You do not look well," he said.
"I do not feel well," I croaked back at him. "What's with the clothes?"
"They didn't fit you," he answered. "Zopa gave them to me."
I was too out of it to pursue it any further. I reached back into the tent for my water bottle and found it was frozen solid. I was so tired the night before, I had forgotten to put it in the sleeping bag with me to keep it from freezing. I'd spent hours packing and repacking my gear for the trip up to ABC.
Sun-jo pulled his water bottle out of his backpack. I took a deep swig and handed it back, wondering why he had a backpack.
"Are you going up to ABC with us?"
"Yes," he answered. "And I would like to leave before the herders. I don't like stepping in yak dung."
"Me either," I said, although I had never seen yak dung. The porters kept yaks corralled at the far end of camp. I hadn't been over there yet, but you could sure smell the shaggy bovines when the wind blew from that direction.
I wondered why Zopa hadn't mentioned Sun-jo going up to ABC with us the night before, but I was too tired, hungry, and worried about the climb to ask Sun-jo about it right then. "Guess we'd better try to wake up Holly."
"She and Zopa have already left," Sun-jo said.
I looked at my watch in a panic, but it was only nine o'clock. "When did they leave?"
"Two hours ago."
"Why didn't Zopa wake me up?" I asked (although I was glad for the extra sleep).
"Miss Holly is a slow climber. We will overtake them."
I grabbed my gear and checked it one last time, then we went over to the mess tent to get something to eat. The only person inside was the cook. I was disappointed Josh wasn't there to see me off, but considering what he had been through the past few days, I couldn't blame him for sleeping in.
Halfway through my breakfast, JR, Will, and Jack dragged in, blurry-eyed and irritable, but after half an hour of coffee and carbs they began to perk up.
"Let's get this over with," Will said, smearing glacial cream on his face to prevent it from burning.
***
AT FIRST IT APPEARED
that Holly was a faster climber than Sun-jo thought, but her speed was explained a few hours later when we finally caught up to her near a stream of glacial meltwater: Zopa had been carrying both his and Holly's heavy backpack as they made their way up the steep glacier.