From the summit came a stirring, as if of great gales not yet aroused to their full fury. The daylight had a diffuse, whitish quality, as though lacking in transparence.
“Listen, Paul!” Nora suddenly made up her mind to speak to him. “In half an hour at the most we’ll be at the top. If darkness or mist catch us here, we’re lost. I don’t know what’s going on with you and I’m not going to ask. But now I want to ask you to wake up. When we get to the top you can do what you like.”
Everything suggested that a blizzard was on the way. Gusts of wind not yet at full force whistled over the snows, raising it into small eddies of powder. The trees became heavy against a leaden grey-white background.
Paul was the first to reach the head of the trail. The final metres of the ascent were the hardest to complete. The lip of the precipice was a nearly vertical frozen parapet. The crampons on their boots gripped like claws to prevent them from sliding. A fall remained a danger until the last moment. In that final moment, their entire struggle was revealed as futile. Wolf’s Precipice, glimpsed from these final infernal steps, had a sombre indifference that awaited the fulfillment of luck.
Having escaped from danger, Paul watched helplessly as Nora took her final steps. He could do nothing for her: offer neither an extended hand nor a word of support. They were only a few paces apart, yet they were on two different coasts, each alone. He watched how she struggled with the snow, the ice, stunned by exhaustion yet with a kind of intent despair. When she reached his side, she threw down her skis from her shoulders, took off her backpack. Only then, uncovering her head, did she run her hand over her face in a gesture that signalled her return to life. They were both pale, with their eyebrows and temples whitened by snow, their stares not yet freed from the intense concentration that had been carrying them forward until now.
“You’re a brave girl, Nora. I want to thank you.”
“What for?”
“For your courage. If I were able to love, I’d love you.”
“I’m not asking you for that, Paul. All I ask is that you be a little less unhappy. That’s enough for me.”
Once again he gave a disillusioned shrug of his shoulders.
“I also ask,” Nora added, “that you stop making that gesture of a guy who’s finished. Is it really so hard?”
“I don’t know. I think you’re wasting your time with me.”
“Yet when we left here yesterday you were a man who’d been cured.”
“I thought I was. But it’s enough for a shadow to step out in front of me on the street for everything to fall to pieces.”
“Are memories that hard to forget?”
“I don’t even know if they’re memories. It’s a terrible tiredness. An enormous repulsion. And a deep disgust.”
“Deeper than Wolf’s Precipice?”
They both turned again in the direction of the precipice that opened in front of them.
“Look how deep it is,” Nora said, “and yet you climbed the whole thing. Don’t you want to try it again some day?”
They arrived at the cabin at nightfall. Gunther, paler than before, was waiting for them at the window. Hagen, who had gone out to meet them on the other trail, wasn’t back yet.
“We have to put on the light in the tower to give him the news that you’ve returned. Why did you come back so late? I’ve been waiting all day. I thought you weren’t coming. I thought I’d lost you.”
He spoke quickly, in broken sentences, with a strange nervous agitation beneath his great pallor. His eyes gleamed feverishly, too intensely to smile. Faffner sniffed their clothes, lay down at their feet, tossed off a curious snarl of pleasure and rediscovery, which, at the same time, was almost despairing. With an effort, Nora succeeded in calming him and making him lie down in front of the hearth with his snout on his paws; but even from there the dog regarded her with his gaze of animal restlessness.
“Faffner knows where you’re coming from,” Gunther said. “You’ve been in the house on Strada Prundului and you’re carrying odours he recognizes…”
Hagen returned later and didn’t speak a word as he came in the door. His cape and hood were white with snow. He stopped in the entrance and, at first, white as he was, with his big boots, his hood pulled down over his forehead, he resembled a Santa Claus who was hiding his face. After he had brushed off the snow and had revealed his sad face and, above all, that cold, white recluse’s gaze, the congenial initial image was extinguished, banished, and in its place stood the severe man with whom they were familiar.
Nora thought of going up to him and telling him: “Relax. We’ve left everything in the house exactly as you like it. Nothing has budged from its place. The door is bolted, the windows are locked. Nobody’s going to cross that threshold and not even a shadow will leave the place.”
But Hagen’s silence asked no questions and invited no friendly words.
The three men fell silent, and Nora felt very alone among them. She looked at each of them in turn, and each seemed to her to have disappeared into his own thoughts. She opened her backpack and took out without pleasure the gifts she had bought them in Braşov. Now they struck her as useless, too childish for men who were so despondent. Next to the window, the fir tree decorated for the modest Christmas celebrations waited to be lit up. Nora hung her presents from its drooping boughs, and then lit the candles one by one. Tapered flames began to play over the insides of the balls of coloured glass.
Gunther was the first to approach the tree. He’s still enough of a child that it makes him happy, Nora thought. She saw a flicker of curiosity return to his pallid cheeks. His eyes recovered their beautiful ironic clarity.
“Won’t you come and stand next to our Christmas tree, Paul?” Nora risked asking.
Over the lighted tree, she saw his old hazy expression of indifference betray a timidity, an insecurity.
Hagen joined them with more difficulty, not even approaching the tree. He stood a few steps away from it, as dark and severe as ever.
They gathered around the fir tree as if gathering around a campfire in the woods.
XV
ON THE MORNING OF THE FIRST DAY OF CHRISTMAS, the ski run resembled a peasant festival. Some devoted skiers were setting out through the morning light for Predeal, descending the slope from Timiş to watch the official competitions. Many more, however, had stayed put, while groups of boys and girls who struggled against the blizzard to reach the top of the hill continued to arrive from Braşov. The forest resounded with the din of people as though it were a holiday town. At the Touring Club, a committee that had been improvised overnight was organizing a few “trials” for downhill racing and the slalom. It was only a game, but they all agreed to play it seriously. Distances were measured, blue pennants were set out, contestants were given numbers, a system of points and classification was established. The judges and site commissioners, with armbands and whistles, walked back and forth among the skiers to give orders and get the teams into formation. A young doctor was setting up a medical station and, to complete the scene, someone had made a small white flag with a red cross that fluttered in the wind. In front of the chalet a rostrum of wooden planks had been hastily constructed for the public and a long table for the jury. The “trophies,” crowns of pine boughs, tin cups, a few bottles of wine and beer, an electric flashlight with batteries and — the first prize! — an alarm clock, had been lined up on the table.