They got creakily and protestingly to their feet. Turning, they fell into line and began to follow Cal into the rock debris, which thickened quickly until almost immediately they were walking upon loose rock flakes any size up to that of a garage door, that slipped or slid unexpectedly under their weight and the angle of this slope that would not have permitted such an accumulation under Earth’s greater gravity.
“Watch it!” Cal threw back over his shoulder at the others. He had nearly gone down twice when loose rock under his weight threatened to start a miniature avalanche among the surrounding rock. He labored on up the talus slope, hearing the men behind swearing and sliding as they followed.
“Spread out!” he called back. “So you aren’t one behind the other—and stay away from the bigger rocks.”
These last were a temptation. Often as big as a small platform, they looked like rafts floating on top of the smaller shards of rock, the similarity heightened by the fact that the rock of the cliff-face was evidently planar in structure. Nearly all the rock fragments split off had flat faces. The larger rocks seemed to offer a temptingly clear surface on which to get away from the sliding depth of smaller pieces in which the boots of the men’s warmsuits went mid-leg deep with each sliding step. But the big fragments, Cal had already discovered, were generally in precarious balance on the loose rock below them and the angled slope. The lightest step upon them was often enough to make them turn and slide.
He had hardly called the warning before there was a choked-off yell from behind him and the sound of more-than-ordinary roaring and sliding of rock.
He spun around. With the masked figures of Maury on his left and Doug on his right he went scrambling back toward Jeff Ramsey, who was lying on his back, half-buried in rock fragments and all but underneath a ten by six foot slab of rock that now projected reeflike from the smaller rock pieces around it
Jeff did not stir as they came up to him, though he seemed conscious. Cal was first to reach him. He bent over the blond-topped young man and saw through the faceplate of the respirator mask how Jeff’s lips were sucked in at the corners and the skin showed white in a circle around his tight mouth.
“My leg’s caught.” The words came tightly and hollowly through the diaphragm of Jeff’s mask. “I think something’s wrong with it.”
Carefully, Cal and the others dug the smaller rock away. Jeff’s right leg was pinned down under an edge of the big rock slab. By extracting the rock underneath it piece by piece, they got the leg loose. But it was bent in a way it should not have been.
“Can you move it?”
Jeff’s face stiffened and beaded with sweat behind the mask faceplate.
“No.”
“It’s broken, all right,” said Maury. “One down already,” he added bitterly. He had already gone to work, making a splint from two tent poles out of Jeff’s pack. He looked up at Cal as he worked, squatting beside Jeff. “What do we do now, Cal? We’ll have to carry him back down?”
“No,” said Cal. He rose to his feet. Shading his eyes against the sun overhead he looked down the hanging valley to the Harrier, tiny below them.
They had already used up nearly an hour floundering over the loose rock, where one step forward often literally had meant two steps sliding backward. His timetable, based on his water supplies, called for them to be at the foot of the ice slope leading to the hook glacier before camping for the night—and it was already noon of the long local day.
“Jeff,” he said. “You’re going to have to get back down to the Harrier by yourself.” Maury started to protest, then shut up. Cal could see the other men looking at him.
Jeff nodded. “All right,” he said. “I can make it. I can roll most of the way.” He managed a grin.
“How’s the leg feel?”
“Not bad, Cal.” Jeff reached out a warmsuited hand and felt the leg gingerly. “More numb than anything right now.”
“Take his load off,” said Cal to Doug. “And give him your morphine pack as well as his own. We’ll pad that leg and wrap it the best we can, Jeff, but it’s going to be giving you a rough time before you get it back to the ship.”
“I could go with him to the edge of the loose rock—” began Doug, harshly.
“No. I don’t need you. Downhill’s going to be easy,” said Jeff.
“That’s right,” said Cal. “But even if he did need you, you couldn’t go, Doug. I need you to get to the top of that mountain.”
They finished wrapping and padding the broken leg with one of the pup tents and Jeff started off, half-sliding, half dragging himself downslope through the loose rock fragments.
They watched him for a second. Then, at Cal’s order, they turned heavily back to covering the weary, strugglesome distance that still separated them from the foot of the rock face.
They reached it at last and passed into the shadow at its base. In the sunlight of the open slope the warmsuits had struggled to cool them. In the shadow, abruptly, the process went the other way. The cliff of the rock face was about two hundred feet in height, leading up to that same ridge over which the weather balloon had been sent to take pictures of the fragment of alien ship on the other side of the mountain. Between the steep rock walls at the end of the glacial valley, the rock face was perhaps fifty yards wide. It was torn and pocked and furrowed vertically by the splitting off of rock from it. It looked like a great chunk of plank standing on end, weathered along the lines of its vertical grain into a decayed roughness of surface.
The rock face actually leaned back a little from the vertical, but, looking up at it from its foot, it seemed not only to go straight up, but—if you looked long enough—to overhang, as if it might come down on the heads of the three men. In the shadowed depths of vertical cracks and holes, dark ice clung.
Cal turned to look back the way they had come. Angling down away behind them, the hanging valley looked like a giant’s ski-jump. A small, wounded creature that was the shape of Jeff was dragging itself down the slope, and a child’s toy, the shape of the Harrier, lay forgotten at the jump’s foot.
Cal turned back to the cliff and said to the others, “Rope up.”
He had already shown them how this was to be done, and they had practiced it back at the Harrier. They tied themselves together with the length of sounding line, the thinness of which Cal had previously padded and thickened so that a man could wrap it around himself to belay another climber without being cut in half. There was no worry about the strength of the sounding line.
“All right,” said Cal, when they were tied together—himself in the lead, Maury next, Doug at the end. “Watch where I put my hands and feet as I climb. Put yours in exactly the same places.”
“How’ll I know when to move?” Doug asked hollowly through his mask.
“Maury’ll wave you on, as I’ll wave him on,” said Cal. Already they were high enough up for the whistling winds up on the mountain peak to interfere with mask-impeded conversations conducted at a distance. “You’ll find this cliff is easier than it looks. Remember what I told you about handling the rope. And don’t look down.”
“All right.”
Cal had picked out a wide rock chimney rising twenty feet to a little ledge of rock. The inner wall of the chimney was studded with projections on which his hands and feet could find purchase. He began to climb.
When he reached the ledge he was pleasantly surprised to find that, in spite of his packload, the lesser gravity had allowed him to make the climb without becoming winded. Maury, he knew, would not be so fortunate. Doug, being the younger man and in better condition, should have less trouble, which was why he had put Doug at the end, so that they would have the weak man between them.