mountaineer with his mountain. He felt saved.

And then he was saved. Impossibly, he was saved.

Hands, voices, light – he was wrenched from the tomb and brought back to the

world. No one asked if he wanted to come out to face it all over again. They simply

hauled him kicking and bawling into the blistering gray light and cold wind.

It started with his face. Someone's hand scooped away the snow from his eyes and

cheeks and hair. Abe looked up from the bowels of his tomb and saw a woman looking

the way angels must, torn by the elements, with her long blond hair torn loose of its

braid and guttering through the jet stream. The storm raged all around her.

'Abe,' Kelly screamed in the wind and snow. 'Abe.' How she had survived, he did not

know. She rocked back upon her heels, blind and spent.

Abe's head was trapped in the snow, but even so he could see the summit, or where

it had been. The sky had atomized, blue to gray. The color had leached out, the border

between earth and heaven was erased. The summit was gone forever.

Above and behind her a dark shape loomed. Daniel came into view fully equipped,

from his helmet to his crampons to the axe in his hand. As Abe squinted up at him in

the driving snow, he noticed the black figure-eight brake dangling from Daniel's

harness. The brake was for descent. Abe did not need to ask. They had been on the

verge of leaving him buried.

'Is he still alive?' Daniel yelled in the wind. He had shucked his mask, and Kelly's,

too. There was no more bottled oxygen up here.

Weeping as if Abe had been lost, not found, Kelly reached down into the pit. She

fumbled blindly and pulled off his mask and the smell of freshly mined rock poured

into his lungs, raw and pungent.

'Are you alive?' Kelly shouted at him. Abe tried to speak, but the lining of his throat

felt flayed. He tried to nod his head but it was lodged in place. With her glove upon his

mouth, he managed to move his jaw.

'He's alive,' Kelly shouted.

Daniel seemed disoriented by her answer. He looked almost shattered by the news.

'We've got to hurry,' Daniel shouted. 'There's more coming.'

Dear God, thought Abe, more avalanches. His serenity crumbled. He tired to yell

and beg and pray, but his vocal cords had done all they could. All over again he fought

his lost battle with the snow binding his limbs. Snowflakes fell from the sky and bit at

his eyes.

'Please,' Abe hissed at Daniel. By whispering, he got the word out.

'Keep it together. We've got you now.' Daniel was talking at him, not to him. It was

rescue rap, the kind of chatter you used to keep a bleeder from going under. Abe

didn't feel any wounds. But Daniel seemed repulsed by him, and for the first time Abe

wondered how badly injured he might be.

Daniel dropped to his knees beside Kelly, practically knocking her to one side.

Without a word, he grabbed her ice axe and began chopping and scraping at the snow

with the adze. He worked desperately.

'How long was I gone?' Abe whispered.

Daniel pawed at his sleeve and mitten. 'It's nine-fifteen,' he said, and went back to

work. Abe had been under for more than three hours. Avalanche victims rarely lasted

over thirty minutes. After an hour you quit digging. But these people had not quit.

'Thank you,' Abe whispered.

'Don't thank me,' Daniel said, and kept digging. He was angry.

'I'm sorry,' Abe said.

Daniel paused, panting for air. His mood seemed closer to guilt than anger now. It

was guilt, of course. He had nearly left another partner to die. Daniel resumed the

task of resurrection. His pace was furious.

For the most part, Kelly lay hunched against a pile of snow. Now and then she

summoned the strength to crawl forward on her knees and scoop away snow, but her

efforts were feeble and only put her in range of Daniel's axe strokes. 'Move away,'

Daniel ordered her and she obeyed.

Daniel freed Abe's head first. That let Abe look around at the devastation. The

avalanche had scythed across the slope and chunks of slab snow and raw limestone lay

everywhere. It was a miracle any of them had managed to claw their way from the

jumbled debris. Their tent had ruptured like a balloon and been churned under by the

slide. Orange tatters flashed in the air.

Overhead, the band of yellow limestone was fat with snow. Even the portions that

had emptied onto them were rapidly accumulating a new white covering. A long,

heavy bosom of snow hung immediately above, menacing them. Daniel was right to

work with such desperation. They had to leave this area or stay forever.

Daniel widened the pit, unearthing more of Abe's body. Abe's ice axe turned up,

then Daniel found the radio, but it was broken. Grimly he placed these relics to one

side and went on digging. Abe understood that they were in grave danger, but he

could not understand Daniel's severity and gloom. The man didn't speak. He didn't

smile. In Daniel's place, Abe would have been rejoicing to discover a friend alive. Abe

felt strangely unwelcome.

Then the screaming started. It was a keening almost too high to hear. Abe decided it

couldn't be screaming. The wind must have found a sharp stone to whistle on. But it

came again. This time he caught the animal note in it and there was only one kind of

animal up here. It was human. It was a woman.

'Gus,' Abe whispered. No one answered.

Again the banshee squealing laced the wind.

Eyes squeezed shut against the gray light, Kelly bared her teeth. She clenched her

jaw and aimed her head away from the sound. Daniel was equally callous. He didn't

say anything, just kept chopping and slashing at the snow. The axe hit chunks of

limestone. Sparks flew among the the falling snowflakes.

Daniel freed Abe's right arm all the way to the shoulder. 'Lift it,' he told Abe. 'Bend

it. Move it.' Then he worked lower to excavate a leg.

'What's wrong with Gus?' Abe demanded.

'You better be whole,' Daniel stated. 'We can't afford more broken bones.'

Now Abe saw the blood on their cherry red parkas. It smeared pink on the white

avalanche debris.

Abe grew alarmed. 'What happened?'

But Daniel wouldn't say any more. Kelly seemed close to hysteria.

It wasn't hard to answer his own question. The avalanche had mauled Gus badly.

Judging by the blood and Daniel's remark, she had sustained at least one compound

fracture. They had found her and then packaged her for the descent. And just as

Daniel was preparing to go, Kelly had discovered Abe. Daniel had been forced to leave

Gus screaming in the snow and dig Abe out. Don't thank me.

Abe waited for one of Daniel's downstrokes and caught at the axe shaft with his free

hand. Daniel tried to pull away, but Abe hung on. 'Start down,' Abe whispered up at

him from the bottom of the pit. 'I can do this alone.'

'I wasn't leaving you,' Daniel exploded at him. But he had been leaving, that was

plain to see. Until this moment Abe hadn't known how utterly wrecked the man was.

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