White. Rosie ThomasЧитать онлайн книгу.
would talk about mountains in the same way, using the very same words. He remembered conversations overheard.
Michael and Mary outside the tent on summer nights when he was supposed to be asleep, and the timbre of his father’s voice in response to Mary’s questions why, and what for – and the always unspoken but equally ever-present words within his own head, danger and falling and dead –
‘I need that reality. If I don’t climb, my grip on reality fades and I feel like nothing exists.’
‘Not me? Or your boy?’
‘Of course. But not in the same way, Mary. Nothing’s the same as the way you feel up there with the rock and space. I’m no good with words, you know that. I can’t explain the need for it, the being more alive than alive. But it’s always there, once you’ve tasted it.’
‘So am I always here, so is Sammy. We don’t want anything to happen to you.’
Sam remembered that he would squirm in his sleeping bag, trying to bury his head, to bring his shoulders up around his ears so that he couldn’t hear any more. But the voices came anyway, as much from within his head as outside it.
Michael would give his warm, reassuring laugh. ‘Nothing will happen. It’s concentration. If you keep your mind on it you don’t make mistakes.’
Sam thought of Michael as he was now, moving painfully around the old house, all alone, with only the television freak shows for company. When I get back, he promised the dim room, I’ll see more of him. Maybe it’s time to move the business a bit closer to home. If there still is a business when I’m through with this caper.
An hour later Adam woke up again. ‘I’ve got a thirst like the desert,’ he whispered.
Sam passed him the water, but held it so that he could only take a sip or two at a time. ‘Otherwise you’ll spew it straight up again.’
‘Thanks, nurse.’ He rubbed his cracked mouth with the back of his hand.
Sam went into the bathroom and found his face-cloth, rinsed it in cool water and handed it to him.
‘Nice. But I’d still rather have the doc to hold my hand.’
‘Fuck you.’
‘Is that what all this is about? You should see me when I’m really looking my best.’
‘She told me to keep an eye on you.’
‘Ah. I see.’ Adam lay back again. ‘I appreciate it. I think I may go back to sleep. Don’t need you to watch me any more. Honestly.’
Sam stood up. ‘I’ll catch you later.’
‘Ahuh.’
There was no one to be seen downstairs. Sam hung around for a minute or two, hoping that Finch might appear again, but in the end he gave up. He found a bar a hundred yards from the hotel gates and sat at a rickety iron table under a bamboo awning, keeping watch.
He didn’t have much of an idea about what he was going to do next.
Al was in a taxi on his way in from the airport. He had been to Kathmandu a dozen times before, so did not have much attention to spare for the congested road and the scrubby concrete housing that lined it. He sat motionless in the back of the worn-out Mercedes, his eyes apparently fixed on the grime-marked collar of the driver’s blue shirt.
Karachi had been a last-minute diversion, a visit to an old climbing friend. They had sat for a long time over too many glasses of whisky, not talking very much, merely pursuing their memories in one another’s company. When it was time for Al to leave again Stuart had come to see him off.
‘Drop in and see me on the way back, when you’ve got the big hill in your pocket.’
‘I might just do that.’
Stuart stood watching Al’s back as he moved in the line of veiled women and men in loose shalwar kameez towards the barrier. He stood a full head taller than anyone else, and he looked fit and relaxed. Just before he disappeared Al glanced round and nodded a last goodbye. Stuart lifted his hand and held it up long after Al had gone. They had known each other for many years and had said casual goodbyes before a score of expeditions. That was what happened and this was no different. History made no difference. It was the present and the future tenses that counted for climbers.
As his taxi approached the Buddha’s Garden Al was acknowledging to himself that the stopoff to see Stuart Frost had been a delaying tactic. He hadn’t wanted to get to Kathmandu, to join this group, until the last moment. But now that he was here he focused his mind on what was to be done. It was a job, like any other, as well as a climb.
As he was checking in, with his weather-beaten packs piled beside him, George Heywood came out of the bar. He shook Al’s hand, enclosing it warmly in both of his. George was bald, with a seamed face and sharp grey eyes.
‘Good to see you, Al. Thought you might be going AWOL at the last minute.’
‘Why?’
George laughed. ‘Now I see you I realise I was worrying about nothing. You look good.’
‘Everyone here?’
‘Yup. You’re the last.’
‘Good.’
‘Ken’s in the bar, with Pemba and Mingma. You want to go and change or something, or will you come and join us?’
‘I’ll come,’ Al said.
The three men stood up when they saw Al’s tall frame following George to the table. Pemba Chhotta and Mingma Nawang were the climbing sirdars – experienced Sherpa mountaineers who would be sharing the guiding duties with Al and Ken. They had worked with Al in the past and they showed their liking for him in broad smiles of greeting.
‘Namaste, Alyn,’ Pemba said formally.
Ken was more laconic. He clasped Al’s hand very briefly. ‘Yeah, mate. Here we are.’
‘Ken. I saw Stu in Karachi. Sends you his best.’
Their eyes met briefly. Everyone sat down and George ordered more drinks. There was the business of supplies and logistics and porters and yaks to be discussed, then George briefly described their six clients, mostly for the benefit of the two Sherpas who would act as second guides to Ken and Al. The two Britons had been on Everest the year before, but with a different company who they believed had let them down. Now they had come to George and his US-based Mountain People to make one more attempt. The two Americans were experienced mountaineers too; the Australian was a less well-known quantity but he had been recommended by previous clients.
The Canadian doctor, George explained, had climbed McKinley in a group led by Ed Vansittart. Everyone at the table nodded. Ed had written to him to say that Dr Buchanan was an excellent medic, who really understood the demands of high-altitude climbing. She was in a unique position in the group because she had a staff role, but she was also a client who hoped to reach the summit with the rest of them. Although not highly experienced herself, she was physically strong and as tough-minded as any mountaineer he had ever met. She was also good company, he had added.
‘I think we’re lucky to have her with us,’ George concluded. ‘Al agreed with me.’
‘Seems A-okay to me,’ Ken said.
Al listened impassively to all of this, with the edge of his thumbnail minutely chafing the corner of his mouth.
George was folding up his lists. ‘And Adam Vries is sick.’
Ken clicked his tongue.
‘What’s the problem?’ asked Al.
‘Just a gut thing. A day or two, the doc says. We leave the day after tomorrow, as planned.’
Once the last pieces of equipment and batches of food supplies had been assembled,