Val looked up at the pointed cone standing over the town. Yes, there was the round curve of a tent. “Thanks, Joyce. I see them.”
She walked up the road to the BFC building. As she neared it Wade joined her, huffing and puffing.
“Hi, Val.”
“Oh hi.”
“What do you think of the meetings?”
“Very interesting.”
They stopped outside the BFC.
“What do you think of Mr. Smith?”
Val raised her eyebrows. “I think he’s the one, myself.”
“The mastermind?”
“Yeah. Or for that matter even the whole operation. At least he could be. It only took a few bombs and radios and satellite dishes to do everything they did, after all. He could have done it from New Zealand, or his boat.”
“I don’t know,” Wade said. “It would be a lot of places to get to.”
“I suppose. Probably he has some friends working with him, sure. But he’s not just a lawyer, I don’t think.” She shrugged. “Or maybe he is. I doubt we’ll ever find out for sure.”
“No.”
He was looking up at her, intent and serious; considering whether to say something to her. He hesitated; gestured at Ob Hill. “Going up to take a look around?”
“To see the ferals,” she said.
“Ah.”
He registered immediately that he wasn’t invited. A lot of men would have taken a lot longer to see that. Oh well. She liked him; but he would be leaving any day now, and then he would be back in the world, where who knew what would happen. So now she watched his face framed in its furs, that owl look hiding all.
He said, “You know, we’re going to need to have people who know Antarctica well, back in Washington. To work out a protocol that stands a chance of being accepted by all the parties involved. No matter what happens here at the Chalet, there will still be a lot of work to do.”
“Yes. I’m sure you’ll do very well for us on that.”
But that wasn’t what he had meant, she saw immediately.
“Oh,” she said stupidly.
He saw that she understood him, and stared at her. Wind whistled through the gap and down onto them.
She shook her head. “I couldn’t,” she said. Then: “I like you a lot.” He blinked, smiled just a little. “But I wouldn’t be happy in Washington, you know. And then, well …”
He frowned. “It’s no worse a bureaucracy than here. You could live outdoors—my boss already does.”
She shook her head. “I’m going to ask the ferals if I can join them.”
“Ah.”
She said, somewhat mischievously, “You could join them too! You could do your job from down here, telecommute like your boss does.”
He had to smile, just for a second. They both laughed, briefly.
“I take your point,” he said. Then: “Can I walk up with you part of the way?”
“Sure. I’d like that.”
They hiked up the spine together, crisscrossing over the broken lava steps of the ridgeline. A couple hundred feet below the summit Val stopped, and Wade caught up with her. She took a step down and around, so that he was on the spine just above her, where she did not have to lean down to give him a kiss. Two cold mouths and noses. He put an arm around her to steady himself. She had learned long ago that there were certain times when you knew it was only going to be a single kiss; and that knowing that made it different. He was a good kisser.
He let her go. His face was flushed. He looked at her like it was the last chance he was ever going to have.
“That was nice,” she said. Ice around her hot heart.
“You’ll have to come north sometimes,” he said, “even if you do join the ferals.”
“Maybe. Sometimes.”
“You’ll visit?”
“I don’t know. I’ll make it to New Zealand, I guess. I don’t know.” Again she tried turning the tables. “You’ll be one of the Antarctic experts in Washington—you’ll have to come down to DV things from time to time, right?”
“Right. Very true.”
She nodded. “We’ll stay in touch.”
He nodded, thinking it over. Looking wan. She shrugged. He nodded again. A last brief hug. Then he was off, back down the rough trail, heavy-footed, looking out at the Ross Sea and the Western Mountains: the perfect way to trip and go flying. But he managed not to. Val turned around and hiked up the final section, going hard. She nearly tripped herself.
She stood outside the ferals’ little tent, a patched old Northface mountaineering dome, blue nylon faded almost to white. The familiarity of it brought her up short. Scavenging for one’s means of subsistence: was she ready for that?
“Hello?” she said.
A head popped out. Lars.
“Is Mai-lis here?” Val asked.
“Moment.”
He moved aside, and Mai-lis appeared in the doorway.
Val said, “I wondered if I could join you.”
Mai-lis saw what she meant. “One moment,” she said, and the tent door closed. Rustles inside; she was getting dressed. Val looked down at McMurdo spread below her, feeling bleached. She realized that Mai-lis’s face reminded her of her grandmother Annie. They looked nothing alike, but still.
Mai-lis unzipped the tent door and crawled out. She stood, gestured at the peak above them. They climbed together in silence, like pilgrims. On the peak they stood under the old wooden cross, in the wind.
“You have a great view here,” Mai-lis observed, looking across the sea at Mount Discovery and the Royal Society Range; Black Island, White Island; the giant bergs of the collapsing shelf.
“Yeah.”
They stood looking at it.
“It is no easy life,” Mai-lis said.
“I know. That’s not what I’m looking for.”
“What are you looking for?”
Val tried to express it. She waved down at McMurdo. “I want to be free of all that. All but my friends. I want to be in Antarctica, but not like that. I want to try it your way.”
“It is no easy life,” Mai-lis warned again. “It’s not like expeditioning. You would have a lot to learn, even with all you know already.”
“That’s good.”
“It is not all good.”
“No, I know that. I’m ready for that.”
“It is no easy life.” Three times, as in some ritual, some rite of acceptance.
“I know,” Val said. “I’m ready.”
Mai-lis nodded then. “All right. We talked about you already. We hoped you might be interested. We were going to ask you.”
“Really?”
Mai-lis nodded. “You’re a mountaineer.”
“Yes.”
“We need more mountain people. There are never enough of them.”
Mai-lis took up Val’s gloved hand, and put it against the post of the cross. “They said, to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
“To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
Not to yield. Like Annie climbing her ladder. Val swallowed, tried to smile at Mai-lis. Off with strangers, into the icy wilderness: a strange fate to choose, really. She knew that.
“Go back down and arrange your affairs,” Mai-lis said. “See if this feels right to you. No one will be angry if you decide this was a mistake. This is a hard road for a life to take.”
“I know. I want it. I’ve always wanted something like this, really. Guiding was just the closest thing I could find. I’ll be ready in a day or two, I guess.”
“We’ll be here still. There is a lot to talk about with the people in the Chalet.”
“True.”
And so Val started back down Observation Hill.
Energized by the possibility of return, of a home at last, X continued to make the rounds of his little town, talking to one acquaintance or friend after the other. He took breaks in the Coffee Hut, and downed quadruple espressos while talking at the bar with whomever was in there, even trying darts at the dart board when asked. He was declared the worst dart player who ever lived, a danger to people in the full 360 degrees around him. No one minded this, however, except for the one that bled; rather it was cause for celebration. “You know I’m the worst basketball player in the world too,” X said, happily tossing darts into the wall or the side of the espresso machine. “A biathlete I guess you have to call me.” And the players talked on through all the games and the shift changes, fueled by caffeine, and sleep deprivation, and frustrated hatred of ASL, and frustrated love for Antarctica, until it began to seem to the giddy and hoarsening X that they would certainly be able to count on the support of most of the caffeine addicts in town; and that was everybody, right? They might even consider making a bid for the whole contract and not just part of it. Although that would be a logistical nightmare. But he thought they could make a compelling case that they had the best people and the best system for the field ops, thus augmenting the pure economic rationality of their expertise and efficiency with what X was now calling the Antarctic factor—not the magnitude-order leap in Murphy’s Law that people used to mean by the phrase, but rather the ecological issues that the new co-op could address better than ASL, because of increased worker tenure, involvement, satisfaction, awareness, esprit de corps, and so on. Treating people like free adult human beings: NSF could indeed consider it a kind of experiment.