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Ayesha
CHAPTER IV - THE AVALANCHE
H.Rider Haggard
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       _ On the morning of the second day from that night the sunrise found us
       already on our path across the desert. There, nearly a mile behind us,
       we could see the ruined statue of Buddha seated in front of the
       ancient monastery, and in that clear atmosphere could even distinguish
       the bent form of our friend, the old abbot, Kou-en, leaning against it
       until we were quite lost to sight. All the monks had wept when we
       parted from them, and Kou-en even more bitterly than the rest, for he
       had learned to love us.
       "I am grieved," he said, "much grieved, which indeed I should not be,
       for such emotion partakes of sin. Yet I find comfort, for I know well
       that although I must soon leave this present life, yet we shall meet
       again in many future incarnations, and after you have put away these
       follies, together tread the path to perfect peace. Now take with you
       my blessings and my prayers and begone, forgetting not that should you
       live to return"--and he shook his head, doubtfully--"here you will be
       ever welcome."
       So we embraced him and went sorrowfully.
       It will be remembered that when the mysterious light fell upon us on
       the peak I had my compass with me and was able roughly to take its
       bearings. For lack of any better guide we now followed these bearings,
       travelling almost due north-east, for in that direction had shone the
       fire. All day in the most beautiful weather we marched across the
       flower-strewn desert, seeing nothing except bunches of game and one or
       two herds of wild asses which had come down from the mountains to feed
       upon the new grass. As evening approached we shot an antelope and made
       our camp--for we had brought the yak and a tent with us--among some
       tamarisk scrub, of which the dry stems furnished us with fuel. Nor did
       we lack for water, since by scraping in the sand soaked with melted
       snow, we found plenty of fair quality. So that night we supped in
       luxury upon tea and antelope meat, which indeed we were glad to have,
       as it spared our little store of dried provisions.
       The next morning we ascertained our position as well as we could, and
       estimated that we had crossed about a quarter of the desert, a guess
       which proved very accurate, for on the evening of the fourth day of
       our journey we reached the bottom slopes of the opposing mountains,
       without having experienced either accident or fatigue. As Leo said,
       things were "going like clockwork," but I reminded him that a good
       start often meant a bad finish. Nor was I wrong, for now came our
       hardships. To begin with, the mountains proved to be exceeding high;
       it took us two days to climb their lower slopes. Also the heat of the
       sun had softened the snow, which made walking through it laborious,
       whilst, accustomed though we were to such conditions through long
       years of travelling, its continual glitter affected our eyes.
       The morning of the seventh day found us in the mouth of a defile which
       wound away into the heart of the mountains. As it seemed the only
       possible path, we followed it, and were much cheered to discover that
       here must once have run a road. Not that we could see any road,
       indeed, for everything was buried in snow. But that one lay beneath
       our feet we were certain, since, although we marched along the edge of
       precipices, our path, however steep, was always flat; moreover, the
       rock upon one side of it had often been scarped by the hand of man. Of
       this there could be no doubt, for as the snow did not cling here, we
       saw the tool marks upon its bare surface.
       Also we came to several places where galleries had been built out from
       the mountain side, by means of beams let into it, as is still a common
       practice in Thibet. These beams of course had long since rotted away,
       leaving a gulf between us and the continuation of the path. When we
       met with such gaps we were forced to go back and make a detour round
       or over some mountain; but although much delayed thereby, as it
       happened, we always managed to regain the road, if not without
       difficulty and danger.
       What tried us more--for here our skill and experience as mountaineers
       could not help us--was the cold at night, obliged as we were to camp
       in the severe frost at a great altitude, and to endure through the
       long hours of darkness penetrating and icy winds, which soughed
       ceaselessly down the pass.
       At length on the tenth day we reached the end of the defile, and as
       night was falling, camped there in the most bitter cold. Those were
       miserable hours, for now we had no fuel with which to boil water, and
       must satisfy our thirst by eating frozen snow, while our eyes smarted
       so sorely that we could not sleep, and notwithstanding all our wraps
       and the warmth that we gathered from the yak in the little tent, the
       cold caused our teeth to chatter like castanets.
       The dawn came, and, after it, the sunrise. We crept from the tent, and
       leaving it standing awhile, dragged our stiffened limbs a hundred
       yards or so to a spot where the defile took a turn, in order that we
       might thaw in the rays of the sun, which at that hour could not reach
       us where we had camped.
       Leo was round it first, and I heard him utter an exclamation. In a few
       seconds I reached his side, and lo! before us lay our Promised Land.
       Far beneath us, ten thousand feet at least--for it must be remembered
       that we viewed it from the top of a mountain--it stretched away and
       away till its distances met the horizon. In character it was quite
       flat, an alluvial plain that probably, in some primeval age, had been
       the bottom of one of the vast lakes of which a number exist in Central
       Asia, most of them now in process of desiccation. One object only
       relieved this dreary flatness, a single, snow-clad, and gigantic
       mountain, of which even at that distance--for it was very far from us
       --we could clearly see the outline. Indeed we could see more, for from
       its rounded crest rose a great plume of smoke, showing that it was an
       active volcano, and on the hither lip of the crater an enormous pillar
       of rock, whereof the top was formed to the shape of a loop.
       Yes, there it stood before us, that symbol of our vision which we had
       sought these many years, and at the sight of it our hearts beat fast
       and our breath came quickly. We noted at once that although we had not
       seen it during our passage of the mountains, since the peaks ahead and
       the rocky sides of the defile hid it from view, so great was its
       height that it overtopped the tallest of them. This made it clear to
       us how it came to be possible that the ray of light passing through
       the loop could fall upon the highest snows of that towering pinnacle
       which we had climbed upon the further side of the desert.
       Also now we were certain of the cause of that ray, for the smoke
       behind the loop explained this mystery. Doubtless, at times when the
       volcano was awake, that smoke must be replaced by flame, emitting
       light of fearful intensity, and this light it was that reached us,
       concentrated and directed by the loop.
       For the rest we thought that about thirty miles away we could make out
       a white-roofed town set upon a mound, situated among trees upon the
       banks of a wide river, which flowed across the plain. Also it was
       evident that this country had a large population who cultivated the
       soil, for by the aid of a pair of field glasses, one of our few
       remaining and most cherished possessions, we could see the green of
       springing crops pierced by irrigation canals and the lines of trees
       that marked the limits of the fields.
       Yes, there before us stretched the Promised Land, and there rose the
       mystic Mount, so that all we had to do was to march down the snow
       slopes and enter it where we would.
       Thus we thought in our folly, little guessing what lay before us, what
       terrors and weary suffering we must endure before we stood at length
       beneath the shadow of the Symbol of Life.
       Our fatigues forgotten, we returned to the tent, hastily swallowed
       some of our dried food, which we washed down with lumps of snow that
       gave us toothache and chilled us inside, but which thirst compelled us
       to eat, dragged the poor yak to its feet, loaded it up, and started.
       All this while, so great was our haste and so occupied were each of us
       with our own thoughts that, if my memory serves me, we scarcely
       interchanged a word. Down the snow slopes we marched swiftly and
       without hesitation, for here the road was marked for us by means of
       pillars of rock set opposite to one another at intervals. These
       pillars we observed with satisfaction, for they told us that we were
       still upon a highway which led to the Promised Land.
       Yet, as we could not help noting, it was one which seemed to have gone
       out of use, since with the exception of a few wild-sheep tracks and
       the spoor of some bears and mountain foxes, not a single sign of beast
       or man could we discover. This, however, was to be explained, we
       reflected, by the fact that doubtless the road was only used in the
       summer season. Or perhaps the inhabitants of the country were now
       stay-at-home people who never travelled it at all.
       Those slopes were longer than we thought; indeed, when darkness closed
       in we had not reached the foot of them. So we were obliged to spend
       another night in the snow, pitching our tent in the shelter of an
       over-hanging rock. As we had descended many thousand feet, the
       temperature proved, fortunately, a little milder; indeed, I do not
       think that there were more than eighteen or twenty degrees of frost
       that night. Also here and there the heat of the sun had melted the
       snow in secluded places, so that we were able to find water to drink,
       while the yak could fill its poor old stomach with dead-looking
       mountain mosses, which it seemed to think better than nothing.
       Again, the still dawn came, throwing its red garment over the
       lonesome, endless mountains, and we dragged ourselves to our numbed
       feet, ate some of our remaining food, and started onwards. Now we
       could no longer see the country beneath, for it and even the towering
       volcano were hidden from us by an intervening ridge that seemed to be
       pierced by a single narrow gulley, towards which we headed. Indeed, as
       the pillars showed us, thither ran the buried road. By mid-day it
       appeared quite close to us, and we tramped on in feverish haste. As it
       chanced, however, there was no need to hurry, for an hour later we
       learned the truth.
       Between us and the mouth of the gulley rose, or rather sank, a sheer
       precipice that was apparently three or four hundred feet in depth, and
       at its foot we could hear the sound of water.
       Right to the edge of this precipice ran the path, for one of the stone
       pillars stood upon its extreme brink, and yet how could a road descend
       such a place as that? We stared aghast; then a possible solution
       occurred to us.
       "Don't you see," said Leo, with a hollow laugh, "the gulf has opened
       since this track was used: volcanic action probably."
       "Perhaps, or perhaps there was a wooden bridge or stairway which has
       rotted. It does not matter. We must find another path, that is all," I
       answered as cheerfully as I could.
       "Yes, and soon," he said, "if we do not wish to stop here for ever."
       So we turned to the right and marched along the edge of the precipice
       till, a mile or so away, we came to a small glacier, of which the
       surface was sprinkled with large stones frozen into its substance.
       This glacier hung down the face of the cliff like a petrified
       waterfall, but whether or no it reached the foot we could not
       discover. At any rate, to think of attempting its descent seemed out
       of the question. From this point onwards we could see that the
       precipice increased in depth and far as the eye could reach was
       absolutely sheer.
       So we went back again and searched to the left of our road. Here the
       mountains receded, so that above us rose a mighty, dazzling slope of
       snow and below us lay that same pitiless, unclimbable gulf. As the
       light began to fade we perceived, half a mile or more in front a bare-
       topped hillock of rock, which stood on the verge of the precipice, and
       hurried to it, thinking that from its crest we might be able to
       discover a way of descent.
       When at length we had struggled to the top, it was about a hundred and
       fifty feet high; what we did discover was that, here also, as beyond
       the glacier, the gulf was infinitely deeper than at the spot where the
       road ended, so deep indeed that we could not see its bottom, although
       from it came the sound of roaring water. Moreover, it was quite half a
       mile in width.
       Whilst we stared round us the sinking sun vanished behind a mountain
       and, the sky being heavy, the light went out like that of a candle.
       Now the ascent of this hillock had proved so steep, especially at one
       place, where we were obliged to climb a sort of rock ladder, that we
       scarcely cared to attempt to struggle down it again in that gloom.
       Therefore, remembering that there was little to choose between the top
       of this knoll and the snow plain at its foot in the matter of
       temperature or other conveniences, and being quite exhausted, we
       determined to spend the night upon it, thereby, as we were to learn,
       saving our lives.
       Unloading the yak, we pitched our tent under the lee of the topmost
       knob of rock and ate a couple of handfuls of dried fish and corn-cake.
       This was the last of the food that we had brought with us from the
       Lamasery, and we reflected with dismay that unless we could shoot
       something, our commissariat was now represented by the carcass of our
       old friend the yak. Then we wrapped ourselves up in our thick rugs and
       fur garments and forgot our miseries in sleep.
       It cannot have been long before daylight when we were awakened by a
       sudden and terrific sound like the boom of a great cannon, followed by
       thousands of other sounds, which might be compared to the fusillade of
       musketry.
       "Great Heaven! What is that?" I said.
       We crawled from the tent, but as yet could see nothing, whilst the yak
       began to low in a terrified manner. But if we could not see we could
       hear and feel. The booming and cracking had ceased, and was followed
       by a soft, grinding noise, the most sickening sound, I think, to which
       I ever listened. This was accompanied by a strange, steady, unnatural
       wind, which seemed to press upon us as water presses. Then the dawn
       broke and we saw.
       The mountain-side was moving down upon us in a vast avalanche of snow.
       Oh! what a sight was that. On from the crest of the precipitous slopes
       above, two miles and more away, it came, a living thing, rolling,
       sliding, gliding; piling itself in long, leaping waves, hollowing
       itself into cavernous valleys, like a tempest-driven sea, whilst above
       its surface hung a powdery cloud of frozen spray.
       As we watched, clinging to each other terrified, the first of these
       waves struck our hill, causing the mighty mass of solid rock to quiver
       like a yacht beneath the impact of an ocean roller, or an aspen in a
       sudden rush of wind. It struck and slowly separated, then with a
       majestic motion flowed like water over the edge of the precipice on
       either side, and fell with a thudding sound into the unmeasured depths
       beneath. And this was but a little thing, a mere forerunner, for after
       it, with a slow, serpentine movement, rolled the body of the
       avalanche.
       It came in combers, it came in level floods. It piled itself against
       our hill, yes, to within fifty feet of the head of it, till we thought
       that even that rooted rock must be torn from its foundations and
       hurled like a pebble to the deeps beneath. And the turmoil of it all!
       The screaming of the blast caused by the compression of the air, the
       dull, continuous thudding of the fall of millions of tons of snow as
       they rushed through space and ended their journey in the gulf.
       Nor was this the worst of it, for as the deep snows above thinned,
       great boulders that had been buried beneath them, perhaps for
       centuries, were loosened from their resting-places and began to
       thunder down the hill. At first they moved slowly, throwing up the
       hard snow around them as the prow of a ship throws foam. Then
       gathering momentum, they sprang into the air with leaps such as those
       of shells ricocheting upon water, till in the end, singing and
       hurtling, many of them rushed past and even over us to vanish far
       beyond. Some indeed struck our little mountain with the force of shot
       fired from the great guns of a battle-ship, and shattered there, or if
       they fell upon its side, tore away tons of rock and passed with them
       into the chasm like a meteor surrounded by its satellites. Indeed, no
       bombardment devised and directed by man could have been half so
       terrible or, had there been anything to destroy, half so destructive.
       The scene was appalling in its unchained and resistless might evolved
       suddenly from the completest calm. There in the lap of the quiet
       mountains, looked down upon by the peaceful, tender sky, the powers
       hidden in the breast of Nature were suddenly set free, and,
       companioned by whirlwinds and all the terrifying majesty of sound,
       loosed upon the heads of us two human atoms.
       At the first rush of snow we had leapt back behind our protecting peak
       and, lying at full length upon the ground, gripped it and clung there,
       fearing lest the wind should whirl us to the abyss. Long ago our tent
       had gone like a dead leaf in an autumn gale, and at times it seemed as
       if we must follow.
       The boulders hurtled over and past us; one of them, fell full upon the
       little peak, shattering its crest and bursting into fragments, which
       fled away, each singing its own wild song. We were not touched, but
       when we looked behind us it was to see the yak, which had risen in its
       terror, lying dead and headless. Then in our fear we lay still,
       waiting for the end, and wondering dimly whether we should be buried
       in the surging snow or swept away with the hill, or crushed by the
       flying rocks, or lifted and lost in the hurricane.
       How long did it last? We never knew. It may have been ten minutes or
       two hours, for in such a scene time loses its proportion. Only we
       became aware that the wind had fallen, while the noise of grinding
       snow and hurtling boulders ceased. Very cautiously we gained our feet
       and looked.
       In front of us was sheer mountain side, for a depth of over two miles,
       the width of about a thousand yards, which had been covered with many
       feet of snow, was now bare rock. Piled up against the face of our
       hill, almost to its summit, lay a tongue of snow, pressed to the
       consistency of ice and spotted with boulders that had lodged there.
       The peak itself was torn and shattered, so that it revealed great
       gleaming surfaces and pits, in which glittered mica, or some other
       mineral. The vast gulf behind was half filled with the avalanche and
       its debris. But for the rest, it seemed as though nothing had
       happened, for the sun shone sweetly overhead and the solemn snows
       reflected its rays from the sides of a hundred hills. And we had
       endured it all and were still alive; yes, and unhurt.
       But what a position was ours! We dared not attempt to descend the
       mount, lest we should sink into the loose snow and be buried there.
       Moreover, all along the breadth of the path of the avalanche boulders
       from time to time still thundered down the rocky slope, and with them
       came patches of snow that had been left behind by the big slide, small
       in themselves, it is true, but each of them large enough to kill a
       hundred men. It was obvious, therefore, that until these conditions
       changed, or death released us, we must abide where we were upon the
       crest of the hillock.
       So there we sat, foodless and frightened, wondering what our old
       friend Kou-en would say if he could see us now. By degrees hunger
       mastered all our other sensations and we began to turn longing eyes
       upon the headless body of the yak.
       "Let's skin him," said Leo, "it will be something to do, and we shall
       want his hide to-night."
       So with affection, and even reverence, we performed this office for
       the dead companion of our journeyings, rejoicing the while that it was
       not we who had brought him to his end. Indeed, long residence among
       peoples who believed fully that the souls of men could pass into, or
       were risen from, the bodies of animals, had made us a little
       superstitious on this matter. It would be scarcely pleasant, we
       reflected, in some future incarnation, to find our faithful friend
       clad in human form and to hear him bitterly reproach us for his
       murder.
       Being dead, however, these arguments did not apply to eating him, as we
       were sure he would himself acknowledge. So we cut off little bits of his
       flesh and, rolling them in snow till they looked as though they were
       nicely floured, hunger compelling us, swallowed them at a gulp. It was a
       disgusting meal and we felt like cannibals: but what could we do? _