Everest Files (eBook)
300 Seiten
Vertebrate Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-906148-93-5 (ISBN)
A thrilling journey to the dark side of Everest. In the deepest Himalaya a story is spreading like wildfire. The story of an Everest expedition unlike any other. An expedition that ended in lies, betrayal, mysterious disappearances ... and death. At the heart of it all - rumours of dark forces at play. This is the mystery that eighteen-year-old Ryan Hart sets out to solve. Ryan is on a gap year adventure, working for a medical charity in Nepal. In his own words he is 'up for anything' and when a local girl begs him to investigate why her sixteen-year-old friend Kami never came back from Everest, Ryan cannot resist the challenge. A solo journey takes Ryan deep into the mountains where his detective work finally pays off. What emerges is a shocking story of fatal human errors, a twisting tale in which life and death decisions are distorted by ambition, ego and greed. All played out on the lethal slopes of the highest mountain in the world. Kami's story seems like an open and shut case but something has changed in Ryan and it turns out the adventure isn't over. Everest is calling ... and Ryan may not be able to resist.
Chapter 1
We must have been about eight hours into the flight when the captain came on the tannoy.
‘Good morning ladies and gentlemen.’
I was awake anyway, much too stoked to sleep.
‘For those of you who are interested, there’s a remarkable view of Mount Everest on the starboard side of the aircraft. Cabin crew, ten minutes to landing.’
I flipped open the plastic window blind and drank in the view. All the other gap year volunteers sitting around me were doing the same and I wished they’d stop yelling dumb stuff like ‘awesome!’ and enjoy it in the silence it deserved.
Because the captain was right: Everest really was some-thing else; bigger and more stunning than I could ever have imagined. The whole plane was alive with it – there was this sort of jet-lagged electric crackle of excitement fizzing about the cabin.
I wondered if the face I was looking at had ever been climbed, and, if so, what type of superhuman hero/nutter would have taken such a risk. It looked insanely dodgy, razor sharp ridges pumping out clouds of billowing ice crystals. Unforgiving chunks of dark rock soaring in vertical steps.
‘Extreme,’ muttered the girl sitting next to me.
I couldn’t have put it better myself.
‘Ladies and gentlemen, we are now on our final approach into Kathmandu. At this time we ask you to ensure your tray table is stowed away, your seat belt fastened and your seat in the upright position. Please note that the toilets are no longer in use.’
The engines started to lose power. I felt my stomach lurch as the aeroplane went into a sharp turn. Now we could see detail in the dark terrain beneath us; wild, forested valleys which were deep and forbidding.
There were hardly any villages. Hardly any roads.
The mood around me shifted quite a bit in that moment; this was the type of wilderness we would all be trekking into over the next six weeks, paired up in teams of two and delivering medical supplies to remote areas of Nepal.
We’d all felt so grown up when we got on the flight back in London. But now it was all real I think we just felt like a bunch of eighteen-year-old kids who had no idea what they were getting into.
As for me, what was I expecting? An adventure? A challenge? A chance to give something back before I went off to uni to study to be a vet?
Well, all of those things, and more. I was up for anything, basically.
The aeroplane lost height. The wilderness gave way to patchwork squares of water, I guessed they must be paddy fields of rice glittering in the early morning sun. We touched down gently and walked down the steps into the humid, smog-filled air of the Kathmandu valley.
A massive wall of grey cloud had already swept across the far mountains.
There was no sign of Everest at all.
A ‘shake-down’ week followed in Kathmandu and we got into the mood of the place. A lot of those early nerves were snuffed out by the realisation of just how friendly and kind the Nepali people are.
The charity put us up in a dormitory place not far from ‘Freak Street’ – the city’s legendary hippy zone, so we were right in the heart of the action.
They taught us how to barter for stuff in the bazaars, never accepting the first price but always haggling it down. We were warned about rabid dogs (carry a big stick), taught how to filter our drinking water, and given a crash course in the local language.
Then, a few days before we were due to start the mountain journeys, my trek partner Liam got sick. He’d been eating kebabs from street stalls so no one was very sympathetic. The head guy at the charity reckoned he’d be ‘all right in twenty-four hours’, but he wasn’t.
In fact it turned out to be amoebic dysentery so that was Liam off the trip.
For a while it looked like my whole mission might be cancelled. There was no one to take Liam’s place. But it really was urgent that the medical supplies got out to their destination and, finally, the head of the charity asked me if I was prepared to do the journey on my own.
‘It’s a big responsibility,’ he warned.
I told him I had no problem with it. I’d grown up on a dairy farm in Northumberland, and, since I was fifteen, my parents had left me in charge when they went on holidays. If I could cope with that, I told him, I reckoned I could cope with anything.
Secretly I was kind of pleased. It meant the whole thing was much more of an adventure.
Four days later I set off on a 6 a.m. bus ride from Kathmandu. It was an amazing feeling to finally be on the road; the world I had come from seemed a million miles away. Cramming for A levels; jamming my head with facts and figures; turning out for the first XV rugby team on wet Saturday mornings. It was all behind me now; I was heading on my own, deep into the Himalaya, to a village called Tanche that I couldn’t even find on Google Earth.
It felt pretty outrageous.
Sepagat was the end of the road, a steamy shanty town which was so plastered with mud that it looked like a muck spreader had gone crazy. It had been raining for twenty-four hours and fast-moving trucks had splattered everything with filth: the people, the street dogs, the tatty goods in the roadside shacks.
A hungry-eyed group of men clustered around me.
‘You need porter, my friend?’
With the amount of baggage I had, there was no way I was going anywhere without some help.
‘I have donkey, mister, very strong donkey.’
The scrum was getting a bit lively. So, needing to sort the situation out before things got out of hand, I picked the strongest looking man for the task.
His name was Dhorjee.
We agreed on a price of two thousand rupees to transport the supplies to Tanche. More or less twenty dollars. Dhorjee and I would each carry a rucksack. The heavy barrel of medical equipment would, he said, go by donkey.
‘How many hours trekking is it to Tanche?’ I asked him.
‘Plenty hours,’ he replied vaguely. ‘Up and down, up and down!’
Dhorjee proposed a quick visit to a local bar and, not wanting to offend him, I agreed. Three beers later (I stuck to Sherpa tea), we quit the bar and put on the rucksacks ready for the trek.
‘Where’s the barrel?’ I asked him, seeing no sign of the heaviest luggage.
‘Gone ahead,’ he told me. ‘Donkey very fast! Very strong.’
‘OK.’
We set out into the early afternoon, the trail quickly getting steep as we began the haul up the valleyside. I soon began to overheat. After just ten minutes my T-shirt was already soaked with sweat.
‘How far did you say it was?’ I asked Dhorjee again.
‘We will be there before night,’ he replied. Then he slapped me on the back with a meaty fist. ‘You have cigarette for me, my friend?’
‘No.’
The lack of tobacco seemed to put Dhorjee in a bad mood and he gradually pulled ahead of me, never looking back. I soon lost sight of him and there was no sign of the promised donkey. Or my barrel. Still, I kept on up the side of this huge valley, quite enjoying the trail as it punched through the forest.
A couple of hours went past and I was surprised not to have made it to the village and even more surprised that Dhorjee seemed to have totally vanished. The path had changed in a bad way, the stones becoming treacherously slippery and sharp.
At 5.30 p.m. it began to rain. A nasty wind kicked off and, to my surprise, I found I was starting to feel chilled. The temperature had dropped a lot with the gain in altitude and a cold front had swept in.
If I’d had my extra clothes I could have done something about it but, stupidly, my personal gear was in the bag that Dhorjee had on his back.
Where was the village? What was going on? I was beginning to wonder if I had made a big mistake with this dodgy porter.
The antibiotics alone would be worth a fortune on the black market. I could just see myself returning to Kathmandu, my tail between my legs, having blown the whole mission.
Finally, after a climb that had to have been a thousand metres or more, I reached a high col and was able to see ahead. I was pinning my hopes that Tanche would now be in view but instead there was this second vast valley, perhaps even wilder and deeper than the one I had just got across.
And still there was no sign of Dhorjee.
I was starting to get stressed, fearing that the situation was getting out of control. Briefly I thought about turning round, but it was too far to go back.
I would just have to keep going.
I started trekking again but the track quickly became a muddy mess.
Then I saw a splash of red.
Blood.
Someone ahead of me was bleeding and it was only natural for me to wonder about it.
Was it Dhorjee? If so, what had happened to him?
I started walking faster, curious to catch up with whoever it was. A short while later I saw an even bigger splash of red, as if the wounded one had rested there for a bit.
A few more switchbacks on the trail. Six or seven more bloodspots and I had the wounded one in sight; well at least I had a blurred vision of a small figure dressed in a blue cape. It looked like a kid carrying a massive load and it was obvious they were exhausted.
‘Hey!’ I called. ‘Are you OK?’ The figure stopped and I saw it was a girl, sixteen or seventeen years old at a guess. She was wearing a pair of worn-out canvas sneakers which were totally ripped and torn. She had a deep cut on her ankle and it was still bleeding.
On her back was a massive load. She was literally...
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 10.3.2014 |
---|---|
Reihe/Serie | The Everest Files |
The Everest Files | The Everest Files |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Kinder- / Jugendbuch ► Jugendbücher ab 12 Jahre |
Kinder- / Jugendbuch ► Kinderbücher bis 11 Jahre | |
Kinder- / Jugendbuch ► Spielen / Lernen ► Abenteuer / Spielgeschichten | |
Naturwissenschaften ► Geowissenschaften ► Geografie / Kartografie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-906148-93-7 / 1906148937 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-906148-93-5 / 9781906148935 |
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
Größe: 1,1 MB
DRM: Digitales Wasserzeichen
Dieses eBook enthält ein digitales Wasserzeichen und ist damit für Sie personalisiert. Bei einer missbräuchlichen Weitergabe des eBooks an Dritte ist eine Rückverfolgung an die Quelle möglich.
Dateiformat: EPUB (Electronic Publication)
EPUB ist ein offener Standard für eBooks und eignet sich besonders zur Darstellung von Belletristik und Sachbüchern. Der Fließtext wird dynamisch an die Display- und Schriftgröße angepasst. Auch für mobile Lesegeräte ist EPUB daher gut geeignet.
Systemvoraussetzungen:
PC/Mac: Mit einem PC oder Mac können Sie dieses eBook lesen. Sie benötigen dafür die kostenlose Software Adobe Digital Editions.
eReader: Dieses eBook kann mit (fast) allen eBook-Readern gelesen werden. Mit dem amazon-Kindle ist es aber nicht kompatibel.
Smartphone/Tablet: Egal ob Apple oder Android, dieses eBook können Sie lesen. Sie benötigen dafür eine kostenlose App.
Geräteliste und zusätzliche Hinweise
Buying eBooks from abroad
For tax law reasons we can sell eBooks just within Germany and Switzerland. Regrettably we cannot fulfill eBook-orders from other countries.
aus dem Bereich