We failed the summit that year Diamond Peak summer of 1974
There on a razor's edge ridge sheer drop to the east thousands of feet certain death on that side no safe path forward
And the way we had come an arduous boulder-strewn ***** Angle of Repose.
As we pondered our next move, I told my friend a story that had just come into my thoughts.
A young man, as we were, promised his friends he would fly.
To their horror he stretched his arms toward the sun and leaped into the chasm.
Most saw a young man in the long arc of his demise falling to earth.
But one sharp-eyed friend saw a fierce bird of prey come rising with the winds and land there on that ridge where we sat and from which he fell.
The story was a presence there between us. We sat together lost in its meaning. And then it happened.
A bird of prey, entirely white, unknown to us, perhaps unknown to Science, came rising with the winds from below from where that boy in the story had fallen. It landed on the outcrop from which he (in the story) had jumped. This magnificent creature turned its impenetrable gaze to us and screamed.
The instant the bird alighted and flew down the mountainside we leapt to our feet to follow.
What came next took place in myth.
In that myth, we were heroes able to run at full speed - some would call it a breakneck pace - down that long mountain ***** Boulder-strewn.
Without fear Without hesitation in full stride one boulder to the next.
Boulders the size of cottages Some the size of a grey whale mysteriously beached on a mountain.
Flying more than running.
With the falcon as a guide we wandered the afternoon through trackless wilderness.
A timeless afternoon in the Garden. And then humbly back to camp.
You might not believe this story. But it is a story as true as myth and every bit as real.