Voyager: Travel Writings (32 page)

Read Voyager: Travel Writings Online

Authors: Russell Banks

Tags: #Travel, #Essays & Travelogues, #Biography & Autobiography, #Literary, #Caribbean & West Indies

The narrow, winding trail was very slick. Also, the pitch of the slope had increased considerably in the last hour, and we were moving as if in slow motion. Breathing was difficult and came in short, shallow, rapid puffs, and my legs felt like iron ingots. This was hard going. But when I looked back, I saw that everyone in the group was making it—even Fred, whose decision to wear gaiters and lug his sticks along seemed prescient now. No one looked happy, however, and for the first time, everyone was silent.

We were slogging across a reddish, sandy rise, our boots sunk to the ankles in powdery ash, and might have been climbing the sifting side of a Sahara dune, except that we were at nearly four
teen thousand feet—when, suddenly, powerful beams of sunlight broke through the snow, and the clouds swirled and parted and drew away. We could see! We were above the storm in bright sunlight with a huge blue sky overhead and a long, steep, rock-strewn ridge ahead of us that led straight to the knife-blade summit. This section of the ascent was a hand-to-rock scramble and probably the toughest part of the climb. Yet it seemed almost easy, thanks to the shocking beauty of sky and cliff hovering above and—as the clouds behind us broke and flowed off to the south—the sight of the long, bony ridges and knuckled arêtes and the deep, pale green arroyos thousands of feet below, where the
paramo
spread out beyond like a particolored map. Halfway between us and the
paramo,
two of Ecuador’s seventy-five remaining condors, like black-winged hang gliders, rode the sun-warmed air currents in wide, spiraling loops.

The last few hundred yards to the summit were a hard pull over crumbling plate-sized rocks. Fred, Mark, and Michelle had slowed considerably, evidently suffering from the altitude, but they kept climbing, even if with tiny, numbingly slow steps. They were not to be stopped, not this close to the summit. Alex fell back and watched them closely, checking for signs of AMS, acute mountain sickness. It’s a common enough syndrome, and its mild form causes nausea, headache, breathlessness, and lassitude. Its severe form, however, is characterized by ataxia—loss of balance, loss of muscular coordination, and mental confusion—and can lead quickly to life-threatening pulmonary and cerebral edema. Rapid diagnosis and treatment is essential, and according to Peter Hackett, renowned author of the bible on the subject,
Mountain Sickness: Prevention, Recognition, and Treatment,
there are three cures for AMS: “Descent, descent, descent!”

It’s the guide’s decision, not the climber’s, when to descend, and evidently Alex felt that Fred, Mark, and Michelle were not yet in danger, for they kept coming and finally joined the rest of the group, where we had gathered on a narrow, protected shelf fifteen feet below the table-sized summit. Then, one at a time, in the order
we had arrived at the shelf, we each climbed up to the summit itself and stood there alone. Laurie went up first, and after a few moments came down looking stunned with pleasure, as if she’d interviewed a deity.

Then it was my turn. I reached the top crawling on hands and knees and stood unsteadily up. Despite the cold wind and sunlight basting my body and face, I opened my eyes wide, and in a rapture that was in every way new to me, gazed away like a blissed-out anchorite. When I could think again, I thought, For the rest of my life, I will be trying to regain this feeling! I don’t know how long I stood there bedazzled like that, staring out at the universe—in memory an hour or more, but in fact probably only two minutes. Eventually, I made my way back down to the protected shelf, and when each of the others had taken his turn at the top, we began the descent.

We got back to the main supporting ridge fairly fast and, at Colón’s suggestion, followed an alternate route down to the
paramo,
bypassing the lake, a path that turned out to be easier but longer than our route up, so that by the time we reached the plateau, the sun was heading toward the horizon behind us. We were by now exhausted, and camp was still four miles away. Also, to complicate things, a dense fog was creeping in, and before long we couldn’t see more than fifty feet in front of us.

Cold and wet and bone-tired, we plodded in a southeasterly direction, trusting our guides, Colón and Alex, to bring us through the fog to our campsite. An hour went by, then nearly two. The fog grew thicker. Once in a while huge volcanic rocks like dark gray icebergs appeared out of the mists. But we might as well have been crossing the Arctic in a blizzard—everywhere we looked, it was the same. By now, everyone had a different idea of how far the camp was and in what direction it lay. Even our guides seemed unsure. We were almost too tired to care—in retrospect, a dangerous state of mind—when, suddenly, as we came around the front of a low berm, a coyote loped out of a nearby gully and trotted to the top of
the berm, where it stopped and looked back at us. Was it the same coyote we’d seen at dawn? We peered around at the landscape, which seemed newly familiar. Twice, then, we had accidentally come upon the same coyote’s den, and it hadn’t fled until we were almost upon it, possibly because it had pups there. But we knew where we were now, and where the camp was. In silence, each of us thanked the coyote for pointing the way and passed on.

After our long trudge back to camp, we were almost too exhausted to complain of a cold supper (malfunctioning stoves) eaten standing around in the dark. And at the end of another freezing, bumpy night in my pathetic sleeping bag, while Mark snored comfortably beside me, I woke at six thirty determined to enjoy in my own way the one free day of our expedition. Luckily, the weather cooperated. It was a splendid day, warm and sunny, and after breakfast George, Laurie, and I lit out together—a four-hour hike across the
paramo
to a distant set of grass-topped hills, where we picnicked and basked in the reflected light of gleaming Cotopaxi. Later, we followed the meandering Rio Hualpaloma out onto the rolling plain, where brown rabbits bounded across our path and disappeared into the high silver-tipped grass. In the distance we saw bands of wild horses being rounded up by gauchos and moved to fresh grazing land. We passed several small herds of llamas—whose pursed lips and long-lashed, soulful eyes reminded me of Uma Thurman—tended by lone native shepherds who nodded solemnly at us.

On our way back to camp, we looped out toward the center of the broad plain and visited an Inca ruin, a long, rectangular mound fifty feet high. We climbed to the top, where the cut-stone remains of a mostly unexcavated fortress gave a commanding view of the entire valley, and for a long while stood there with the fresh southerly breeze in our faces and traveled backward in time to when these lovely mountains and the wide valley between them were new.

Later, back at the camp, where only Elias, the watchman, had stayed the day, we went upstream a ways and bathed under a heavy, cold waterfall and dried in the sun like contemplative turtles. Afterward, we changed into clean clothing, aired out tents and sleeping bags, tended to our gear, and packed for tomorrow’s trek to the top of Sincholagua. It had been a much-needed, rejuvenating interlude. We three felt pleased with ourselves, for we had grown stronger and more confident with each new day’s test. And we were beginning to learn how to look at this landscape, so unlike anything we had seen before, to understand its logic and scale and to anticipate its forms, and consequently it did not seem as intimidating as it had. Also, more personally, we had needed, in a sense, to renew our friendship, to get away from the others for a while and talk about people and places and notions that only we were familiar with.

Roused at 5
A.M.
by Alex—after another long night of having my back pummeled by the lumpy ground and my blood curdled by my cold-pack sleeping bag—I was ready and eager to climb Sincholagua. We had prepared our packs the day before. They were heavier than on Rumiñahui—this time we were carrying serious cold-weather clothing and gear, as well as rain gear. On the IGM 1:50,000 map, Sincholagua is shown with a permanent, mile-long ice cap, but in recent years the snow line has receded and there is no longer any glaciation at the top. Still, the fog and rain on the plain down here turned into snow and ice up there, and at 16,400 feet, the temperature would be much lower than on Rumiñahui.

We left camp and crossed the darkened plain at a brisk pace, set purposely by Alex, who explained that this was going to be a longer, tougher climb than any we’d yet attempted, so we’d have to move fast to make it out and back by nightfall. Which was fine by me, Laurie, and George—we were feeling like Sherpas this morning. Gradually, the dawn light spread silver and gold wedges across
the
paramo
and slowly gilded the mountains from the top down. Behind us, Cotopaxi filled the sky, dominating the landscape, and every now and then I peered back at her and tried to pick out the route that we would follow, tracing how, three days hence, at midnight, we’d leave the
refugio,
its tin roof a tiny, shining dot situated just below the bottom edge of the glacier at 16,500 feet, and from there follow a spiraling route over the snow, pass to the right along the lower lid of a large, shaded, eye-shaped break in the glacier, where we’d turn back and cross up and over the brow of the eye, then slowly switchback across the ice in the fading dark, until at dawn, just as the sun cracked the eastern horizon, we would reach the top.

For days, every time I looked at Cotopaxi, I had traced out that path, and each time it had seemed inhumanly high and steep, impossible for any but a professional climber like Alex to follow. But this morning, finally, I believed that I could do it. We crossed the Rio Hualpaloma, and when the trail started to rise from the plain toward the base of Sincholagua, I realized that our pace had slowed considerably. We passed over an ancient Inca stone wall, then crossed a bridge, and after negotiating a shortcut through a large, walled paddock of llamas guarded by a pair of native shepherds, we hit the first real hill since leaving camp. No longer worried about my own chances—or George’s or Laurie’s, either—of completing this or any other climb, I had started worrying some about the others, especially Fred, whose rapid heart rate was alarming his wife, Doctor Beth, who took his pulse at every rest stop and wrinkled her brow with concern, and Michelle, who was clearly suffering from the altitude. Her pretty, heart-shaped face was taut with strain, and she was walking at a much slower pace than on Rumiñahui. Mark, too, showed symptoms of altitude sickness; he was moving very slowly today and seemed dispirited.

Soon the group was undergoing fission. Alex walked ahead with me, Laurie, and George, climbing the grassy hills and ridges
at what felt to us a useful, enjoyable pace, while Colón, our second guide, fell back with the others. Whenever we reached the top of a long slope or came to an arroyo or cliff that marked a transition between ascending zones of difficulty, we would stop and wait for the others to join us. Then, in a discreet way, Alex would check them for altitude sickness and decide anew whether to push on.

We had gathered on a rocky shelf where the trail dropped down a vertical twelve-foot embankment to a narrow arroyo and led across a dry streambed to the main ridge up Sincholagua. For the last half hour, Alex and I had been chatting optimistically about my joining him next year, perhaps with George and Laurie, and climbing Rainier. Just like the others, I, too, was now yakking obsessively about equipment and training regimens and other mountains than the one we were on—a result, I suppose, of my growing confidence and pleasure in my ability to meet this challenge, and perhaps the vanity of a middle-aged man surprised to find himself keeping pace with people in their twenties and thirties. It was a pleasant discovery, and I was savoring it.

First Alex went over the embankment and swung down to the rock-strewn bottom. Mark followed, making it to the bottom safely, but with difficulty. Handholds and footholds were hard to locate without help—he had to descend with his balance tipped by the weight of the pack, his belly facing the rock, his hands clamped on to slippery rotten-rock outcroppings, and his feet hidden from sight, except to the person below. Michelle went over next, with Mark and Alex spotting, and made it safely down. Then it was my turn. I proceeded exactly as the others had. I got halfway down the wall, so that my head was at the level of the shelf, with my weight held solely by my grasp on the crumbly rock there, while my feet groped blindly somewhere below for a hold. Finally, my left foot managed to find a cleft in the wall. Then, just as I transferred my weight—off balance, due to the pack—onto that foot, the cleft gave way, and I was falling. I remember turning in my fall, watching the
rocks at the bottom speed toward me, and I remember rolling in midair to avoid hitting my head and spine, hoping instead to land on my shoulder, and then I remember a sound that I recognized as the snap of bone. I was flat on my back, looking at sky. A second later, Alex’s face, dark with fear, hove into view, and I knew at once that my trek to Cotopaxi was over.

EPILOGUE

My right collarbone was broken in two places. Up there on the sloped shoulder of Sincholagua, Doctor Beth and Alex fixed me up with a homemade clavicle splint, and I walked slowly back down to the camp, four hours below, lugging my pack on my left shoulder while the others continued on. Depressed and slightly disoriented from the fall and the pain, it was hard to grasp what had happened and, maybe more important, what wouldn’t happen. I might just as easily have fallen and broken my collarbone while stepping from the shower at home—my accident was in no way a consequence of the difficulty of the climb or of my being out of shape or ill equipped. Right stuff or wrong stuff had nothing to do with it. Bad luck was all. Okay, maybe overconfidence had made me slightly less cautious for a few seconds than I should have been, but still, that’s the sort of mental state I deal with every day of my life. It could have happened to anyone, especially me, anywhere, even at sea level.

Given what I’d set out to do—climb at high altitude in the Andes—I’d succeeded. I’d made myself fit enough to keep pace and sometimes even to exceed the pace and endurance of serious climbers still in the bloom of youth, and getting myself into that condition hadn’t required a significant sacrifice of time or energy. In the last few days, my fellow trekkers, affectionately and without irony, had taken to calling me “The Beast”—no small compliment for an aging boomer.

Other books

Valentine's Day Is Killing Me by Leslie Esdaile, Mary Janice Davidson, Susanna Carr
Crematorium for Phoenixes by Nikola Yanchovichin
Offside by Shay Savage
Volle by Gold, Kyell, Sara Palmer
A Curious Courting by Laura Matthews
Milk Chicken Bomb by Andrew Wedderburn
Second Skin by Eric Van Lustbader