Part 9 (1/2)
”And you cross that pa.s.s to-day?”
There was still more hesitation in Chayne's voice as he answered:
”Well, no! You see, this is your first mountain. And you have only two guides.”
Sylvia looked at him seriously.
”How many should I have taken for the Aiguille d'Argentiere? Twelve?”
Chayne smiled feebly.
”Well, no,” and his confusion increased. ”Two, as a rule, are enough--unless--”
”Unless the amateur is very clumsy,” she added. ”Thank you, Captain Chayne.”
”I didn't mean that,” he cried. He had no idea whether she was angry or not. She was just looking quietly and steadily into his face and waiting for his explanation.
”Well, the truth is,” he blurted out, ”I wanted to go up the Aiguille d'Argentiere with you,” and he saw a smile dimple her cheeks.
”I am honored,” she said, and the tone of her voice showed besides that she was very glad.
”Oh, but it wasn't only for the sake of your company,” he said, and stopped. ”I don't seem to be very polite, do I?” he said, lamentably.
”Not very,” she replied.
”What I mean is this,” he explained. ”Ever since we started this morning, I have been recapturing my own sensations on my first ascent. Watching you, your enjoyment, your eagerness to live fully every moment of this day, I almost feel as if I too had come fresh to the mountains, as if the Argentiere were my first peak.”
He saw the blood mount into her cheeks.
”Was that the reason why you questioned me as to what I thought and felt?” she asked.
”Yes.”
”I thought you were testing me,” she said, slowly. ”I thought you were trying whether I was--worthy”; and once again humility had framed her words and modulated their utterance. She recognized without rancor, but in distress, that people had the right to look on her as without the pale.
The guides packed up the _Rucksacks_, and they started once more up the moraine. In a little while they descended on to the lateral glacier which descending from the recesses of the Aiguille d'Argentiere in front of them flowed into the great basin behind. They roped together now in one party and ascended the glacier diagonally, rounding a great b.u.t.tress which descends from the rock ledge and bisects the ice, and drawing close to the steep cliffs. In a little while they crossed the bergschrund from the glacier on to the wall of mountain, and traversing by easy rocks at the foot of the cliffs came at last to a big steep gully filled with hard ice which led up to the ridge just below the final peak.
”This is our way” said Jean. ”We ascend by the rocks at the side.”
They breakfasted again and began to ascend the rocks to the left of the great gully, Sylvia following second behind her leading guide. The rocks were not difficult, but they were very steep and at times loose.
Moreover, Jean climbed fast and Sylvia had much ado to keep pace with him. But she would not call on him to slacken his pace, and she was most anxious not to come up on the rope but to climb with her own hands and feet. This they ascended for the better part of an hour and Jean halted on a convenient ledge. Sylvia had time to look down. She had climbed with her face to the wall of rock, her eyes searching quickly for her holds, fixing her feet securely, gripping firmly with her hands, avoiding the loose boulders. Moreover, the rope had worried her. When she had left it at its length between herself and the guide in front of her, it would hang about her feet, threatening to trip her, or catch as though in active malice in any crack which happened to be handy. If she shortened it and held it in her hands, there would come a sudden tug from above as the leader raised himself from one ledge to another which almost overset her.
Now, however, flushed with her exertion and glad to draw her breath at her ease, she looked down and was astonished. So far below her already seemed the glacier she had left, so steep the rocks up which she had climbed.
”You are not tired?” said Chayne.
Sylvia laughed. Tired, when a dream was growing real, when she was actually on the mountain face! She turned her face again to the rock-wall and in a little more than an hour after leaving the foot of the gully she stepped out on to a patch of snow on the shoulder of the mountain. She stood in sunlight, and all the country to the east was suddenly unrolled before her eyes. A moment before and her face was to the rock, now at her feet the steep snow-slopes dropped to the Glacier of Saleinaz. The crags of the Aiguille Dorees, and some green uplands gave color to the glittering world of ice, and far away towered the white peaks of the Grand Combin and the Weisshorn in a blue cloudless sky, and to the left over the summit of the Grande Fourche she saw the huge embattlements of the Oberland. She stood absorbed while the rest of the party ascended to her side. She hardly knew indeed that they were there until Chayne standing by her asked:
”You are not disappointed?”