Book
Review: THE MOUNTAIN BETWEEN US by Charles Martin A Survival
Novel
I'm
not sure what time it is. It's still dark. I don't know how long I
was out. Snow is spilling in through the broken windshield. Can't
catch my breath. Maybe broke two or three ribs.
He
was dead before we hit the treetops. I'll never understand how he
landed this thing without killing me, too. There's a dog here and . .
. a woman. Trying to get home to her fiancé
and a rehearsal dinner. I'll look . . . .
Chapter
one then flashes back to twelve hours before, at the Salt Lake City
Airport. The weather is closing in; his flight is delayed, passengers
crowding everywhere, and Dr. Ben Payne, an orthopedic surgeon is
catching up on his medical records dictation, sitting on the floor by
an electric outlet. A woman perhaps age thirty asks if she can share
the wall outlet. He agrees, and she begins dictation of a magazine
story. Ben learns that Ashley Knox, a writer, hopes to reach Atlanta
in time for her wedding two days hence.
Their
flight is finally cancelled. Ben rides a shuttle to the private plane
area and finds he can charter a flight to Denver. Thinking about the
girl who will be late for her wedding, he finds her in the long
waiting line for taxis, and offers her the chance to get ahead of the
storm; she accepts. Grover, private pilot, has had thousands of hours
flying over the Rocky Mountains and gets prompt clearance from flight
control. Despite the turbulent flying conditions, he handles his
plane easily, while talking with Ashley about his own more than forty
years of happy marriage. Grover introduces them both to his dog who
is “flying copilot”.
As
the plane rises higher to cross the Uinta Mountain Wilderness, Grover
begins coughing occasionally. He draws a roll of Tums from his
pocket, takes two. Physician sense alerted, Ben taps him on the
shoulder. “Tell me about your bum ticker – how long you been
coughing and popping antacids?” The plane continues to rise as they
approaches the peaks; Grover changes the subject and answers a
question from Ashley. A few minutes later he coughs, grunts, grabs
his chest. Our
speed slowed. Then, as if he'd done it a thousand times, he pancaked
the plane against the mountain snow. That's about the last thing I
remember.
Ben
slowly recovers consciousness, confusing the recent conversation with
memories of his own wife. He's gradually aware of chest pain and
shivering. The plane's tail has broken off, leaving them exposed to
the air, but the rest of the plane is in deep snow, giving a
cocoon-like shelter. Ashley lies comatose but the pulse in her neck
is even. She has a dislocated shoulder and a bad angle to her left
thigh, though the bone hadn't broken through the skin. Her shoulder
goes back into place easily, but the break in her left thigh bone is
a problem. He is finally able to reduce the fracture and fashion two
splints from broken pieces of the plane, tying them with wadded
T-shirts from his luggage. Her thigh has swollen twice its size and
he packs snow around it. He slowly realizes Grover had not been
required to file a flight plan, and that no one knew he even had
passengers. They are in a National Wilderness Area, seventy miles
from anywhere, invisible to the occasional airplane high overhead.
Grover's plane has a few emergency supplies, but they both need
medical attention, especially Ashley.
Rummaging
around, Ben discovers two sleeping bags, a couple small packs of
trail mix, and a small gas heater for water. No one knows their
situation; it's urgent to get to a lower elevation and find food.
They are on their own. With daylight, and after Ashley has regained
consciousness, Ben climbs a small ridge and sees that the only way
showing any hope is to head southeast. He can fashion something like
a stretcher for Ashley from part of the exposed wing, and a shovel of
sorts from a rudder flap with which to dig in the snow and bury
Grover's body.
On
day six, Ben gently lifts Ashley in her sleeping bag onto the sled,
puts the dog beside her and adds Grover's bow, arrows and fly rod.
Ashley grabs his arm. “One question, and I want an honest answer.
Can you get us out of here?”
“Seriously?
No idea.”
Her
eyes narrow. “We've got to work on our communication. I'm not
asking you because I want honest answers. I want you to lie your butt
off. Tell me we've got only a mile to go when there might be a
hundred ahead of us.”
I
laughed. “Okay. Listen. There's a helicopter waiting just beyond
that first ridge. They've got sausage, muffins, and a dozen glazed
donuts. And Starbucks.”
She
patted me on the back. “Now you're getting the hang of it.”
But
the going was slow. Leaning into the harness I had devised, I would
take three steps and stop to breathe. By noon, we had gone maybe a
mile. By dusk, perhaps two. It wasn't just my busted
ribs. The air at 11,000 feet elevation is thin. And our food about
gone. A few finger-sized fish. And one day, a rabbit.
Day
eleven.After an hour we'd come maybe a quarter mile, dropping maybe a
hundred feet in elevation. She was not impressed. “How long do
think you can do this?”
“Don't
know.”
“We
can't do this. You can't. We're in the middle of nowhere.”
I
stopped, sweat dripping off me, breathing deeply. “We can't stay up
here. If we do we'll die. And I can't leave you. If I do, you'll die.
So we're walking out.”
Her
frustration at being helpless bubbled over. She screamed, “It's
been eleven damn days and not a soul has come looking. What's your
plan?”
“One
step at a time.”
“And
how long do you think you can keep that up?”
“As
long as it takes.”
We
didn't speak again for several hours.
Day
fifteen. Overlooking a wide valley in the distance, I could see some
kind of horizontal line half-hidden.
Day
seventeen, we see it closer, a building across a frozen lake. A large
A-frame, empty; evidently a summer campground. No sign of car
tracks, or people. But warm shelter! firewood, water. And big game
nearby. A map on the wall with a “You are here” mark tells us we
are in the Ashley National Forest. But it nearly becomes her memorial
park before anyone finds us.
It
will be another ten days before we will reach civilization. And,
despite all the complications we have encountered so far, the end
will be stranger yet.
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