He looked down, at the tops of the pine trees and the waters of Big Lake, and he knew that this system would not work. It was taking too long, and he did not dare keep her out on the mountain for another night. He decided to go for broke. Shedding every ounce of unnecessary equipment, and stripping down to his climbing shorts and T-shirt, he strapped her to his back, with her arms dangling down at her sides, her crushed yellow helmet resting on his own shoulder, and started climbing down. Either he would make it to the bottom and carry her out of the forest below, or they would die together, falling out of the sky.
All the way down, he whispered to her. “Now, hang on,” he’d say. “I’ve just got to find a toehold.” Or “Don’t let this worry you, but I think my shoulder is starting to separate again.” Or “What would you say to a nice big steak at the Ponderosa? You’re buying.” Her head would loll around his shoulder, and sometimes he could feel her warm breath on his neck, but that was enough—he knew that she was with him, that she was alive, that he would get them out somehow. By late afternoon, the storm clouds had completely filled the sky, but they hadn’t burst. There was only a faint mist in the air—its coolness actually felt good—and an occasional drop or two of rain. “Please, God, do me one favor—hold the rain till I get off this damn mountain.”
And God had kept his part of the bargain. Michael had made it across the slope at the foot of Mount Washington and into the shelter of the pine forest before all hell broke loose. Thunder clapped and sheets of rain poured out of the sky. Briefly, he knelt on the wet earth, breathing in the rich scent of the pine needles, letting the rain wash over him. He had used it to wash the grime off Kristin’s face, and wet her lips with it. Her eyelids quivered when the droplets fell on them. But otherwise, there was no sign of life.
He tried to pick her up again, but all his limbs were quivering with exhaustion and he could barely move. He didn’t care. He pulled Kristin up into his arms and leaned back against the trunk of a tree, his face lifted toward the branches above, and lay there, for how long he never knew. When he stirred again, soaking wet and shivering, it was dark. The rain had stopped, and a full moon was out. He draped Kristin across his back once again, and staggered in the moonlight back toward the Big Lake parking lot, where he’d left his Jeep. When he broke out of the trees—filthy, wet, and bleeding, with an unconscious girl on his back—he saw two young guys in U. of Washington sweatshirts, unloading a pickup truck. They watched him coming toward them as if he was a Sasquatch. “Help,” he mumbled. “We need help.”
And then, according to the two frat brothers, he had passed out cold.
The moment Darryl had seen the two figures in the ice, he knew it was time for him to step in. Enough of the ice had been cut away—or melted away by Michael’s lights—that he could actually see, when he crouched in front of the block, the pommel of a sword at the man’s side. Its gold tassel was frozen in an upside-down position.
“You’ve done great work,” he said again to Betty and Tina, “but let’s get this inside my lab now and finish the job.”
Michael had gone for the phone, but Betty and Tina acted as if they wanted to wait for his verdict. “Michael will be back in a few minutes. Let’s talk about it then.”
But Darryl was no fool, and he knew what was afoot. Give scientists—even glaciologists, why should they be any different?—a taste of something really extraordinary, and they’ll never let go. So much of science was routine lab work, endless experiments, blind tests, statistical breakdowns, that when they found something groundbreaking, something that had come out of nowhere—and that, in addition, had the potential to make some headlines in the outside world—there was a natural reluctance to let go.
He had to work fast, and decisively. He scurried back toward the equipment sheds, where the snowmobiles and Sprytes and augers were kept, and rounded up Franklin and Lawson, who were already privy to the find. He brought them back with an industrial dolly, the ones they normally used to transport drums of diesel fuel, and while Betty complained that Darryl was moving too fast, and Tina fretted about the scientific integrity of the specimens, Darryl had his two recruits throw the tarp back over the substantially diminished ice block, then tip it back onto the dolly. Carting it around the corner, they pushed it up the ramp that led into the safe harbor of the marine biology lab.
“Now what?” Franklin said, looking around at the cluttered space, packed with hissing oxygen tubes, clattering instruments, and tanks filled with alien creatures bathed in lavender light.