Epilogue
Still, the last sad memory hovers
round, and sometimes drifts across like floating mist, cutting off sunshine and
chilling the remembrance of happier times. There have been joys too great to be
described in words, and there have been griefs upon which 1have not dared to
dwell; and with these in mind I say: Climb if you will, but remember that
courage and strength are nought without prudence, and that a momentary negligence
may destroy the happiness of a lifetime. Do nothing in haste; look well to each
step; and from the beginning think what may be the end.
Edward Whymper,
Scrambles Amongst the Alps
We sleep to time's hurdy-gurdy;
we wake, if we ever wake, to the silence of God. And then, when we wake to the
deep shores of time uncreated, then when the dazzling dark breaks over the far
slopes of time, then it's time to toss things, like our reason,and our will;
then it's time to break our necks for home. There are no events but thoughts
and the heart's hard turning, the heart's slow learning where to love and whom.
The rest is merely gossip, and tales for other times.
Annie Dillard, Holy
the Firm
The
helicopter labors upward, thwock-thwock-thwocking over the shoulder of
Mt. Healy. As the altimeter needle brushes five thousand feet, we crest a
mud-colored ridge, the earth drops away, and a breathtaking sweep of taiga
fills the Plexiglas windscreen. In the distance I can pick out the Stampede Trail,
cutting a faint, crooked stripe from east to west across the landscape.
Billie
McCandless is in the front passenger seat; Walt and I occupy the back. Ten hard
months have passed since Sam McCandless appeared at their Chesapeake Beach doorstep
to tell them Chris was dead. It is time, they have decided, to visit the place where
their son met his end, to see it with their own eyes.
Walt
has spent the past ten days in Fairbanks, doing contract work for NASA, developing
an airborne radar system for search-and-rescue missions that will enable searchers
to find the wreckage of a downed plane amid thousands of acres of densely forested
country. For several days now he's been distracted, irritable, edgy. Billie,
who arrived in Alaska two days ago, confided to me that the prospect of
visiting the bus has been difficult for him to come to terms with.
Surprisingly, she says she feels calm and centered and has been looking forward
to this trip for some time. Taking a helicopter was a last-minute change of
plans. Billie wanted badly to travel overland, to follow the Stampede Trail as
Chris had done. Toward that end she'd contacted Butch Killian, the Healy coal
miner who'd been present when Chris's body was discovered, and he agreed to
drive Walt and Billie into the bus on his all-terrain vehicle.
But
yesterday Killian called their hotel to say that the Teklanika River was still
running high—too high, he worried, to cross safely, even with his amphibious,
eight-wheeled Argo. Thus the helicopter. Two thousand feet beneath the
aircraft's skids a mottled green tweed of muskeg and spruce forest now blankets
the rolling country. The Teklanika appears as a long brown ribbon thrown
carelessly across the land. An unnaturally bright object comes into view near
the confluence of two smaller streams: Fairbanks bus 142. It has taken us
fifteen minutes to cover the distance it took Chris four days to walk.
The
helicopter settles noisily onto the ground, the pilot kills the engine, and we
hop down onto sandy earth. A moment later the machine lifts off in a hurricane
of prop wash, leaving us surrounded by a monumental silence. As Walt and Billie
stand ten yards from the bus, staring at the anomalous vehicle without
speaking, a trio of jays prattles from a nearby aspen tree.
"It's
smaller," Billie finally says, "than I thought it would be. I mean
the bus." And then, turning to take in the surroundings: "What a
pretty place. I can't believe how much this reminds me of where I grew up. Oh,
Walt, it looks just like the Upper Peninsula! Chris must have loved being
here."
"I
have a lot of reasons for disliking Alaska, OK?" Walt answers, scowling.
"But I admit it—the place has a certain beauty. I can see what appealed to
Chris."
For
the next thirty minutes Walt and Billie walk quietly around the decrepit
vehicle, amble down to the Sushana River, visit the nearby woods. Billie is the
first to enter the bus. Walt returns from the stream to find her sitting on the
mattress where Chris died, taking in the vehicle's shabby interior. For a long
time she gazes silently at her son's boots under the stove, his handwriting on
the walls, his toothbrush. But today there are no tears. Picking through the
clutter on the table, she bends to examine a spoon with a distinctive floral
pattern on the handle. "Walt, look at this," she says. "This is
the silverware we had in the Annandale house."
At
the front of the bus, Billie picks up a pair of Chris's patched, ragged jeans
and, closing her eyes, presses them to her face. "Smell," she urges
her husband with a painful smile. "They still smell like Chris."
After a long beat she declares, to herself more than to anyone else, "He
must have been very brave and very strong, at the end, not to do himself in."
Billie
and Walt wander in and out of the bus for the next two hours. Walt installs a memorial
just inside the door, a simple brass plaque inscribed with a few words. Beneath
it Billie arranges a bouquet of fireweed, monkshood, yarrow, and spruce boughs.
Under the bed at the rear of the bus, she leaves a suitcase stocked with a
first-aid kit, canned food, other survival supplies, a note urging whoever
happens to read it to "call your parents as soon as possible." The
suitcase also holds a Bible that belonged to Chris when he was a child, even
though, she allows, "I haven't prayed since we lost him."
Walt,
in a reflective mood, has had little to say, but he appears more at ease than
he has in many days. "I didn't know how I was going to react to
this," he admits, gesturing toward the bus. "But now I'm glad we
came." This brief visit, he says, has given him a slightly better
understanding of why his boy came into this country. There is much about Chris
that still baffles him and always will, but now he is a little less baffled.
And for that small solace he is grateful.
"It's
comforting to know Chris was here," Billie explains, "to know for
certain that he spent time beside this river, that he stood on this patch of
ground. So many places we've visited in the past three years—we'd wonder if
possibly Chris had been there. It was terrible not knowing—not knowing anything
at all.
"Many
people have told me that they admire Chris for what he was trying to do. If he'd
lived, I would agree with them. But he didn't, and there's no way to bring him
back. You can't fix it. Most things you can fix, but not that. I don't know
that you ever get over this kind of loss. The fact that Chris is gone is a
sharp hurt I feel every single day. It's really hard. Some days are better than
others, but it's going to be hard every day for the rest of my life."
Abruptly,
the quiet is shattered by the percussive racket of the helicopter, which spirals
down from the clouds and lands in a patch of fireweed. We climb inside; the chopper
shoulders into the sky and then hovers for a moment before banking steeply to the
southeast. For a few minutes the roof of the bus remains visible among the
stunted trees, a tiny white gleam in a wild green sea, growing smaller and
smaller, and then it's gone.
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