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Near the end of the afternoon the mountain top loomed above, a wide door of smooth rock with neither path nor footholds for fully loaded men. “It’s too steep to scale,” Odgeson said, and Brian followed his gaze between mosses and lichen, up and into grey sky. They shed packs and rifles to sit wearily between trees, wedging themselves so as not to slide down the steep ground. Knotman looked done for, smoked a cigarette: “To get around that cliff could mean another six hours. Even then, it might not be possible,” he said. “We might go round in circles and still find a slice of cliff facing us.”

Brian opened the map. “We’d have to go south-east for two or three miles. There’s a gap there.”

“Count me out,” Baker said. “It’d take days.”

“I’ve had my whack,” Kirkby said.

“And me, man,” said Jack.

“Maybe there’s still a way from here,” Brian persisted. To get up there seemed important again — now that hopes of being able to were fading. It was loony not to get to the top after struggling so far. Admittedly, they were all shagged out, but maybe with one last shin-up (an hour at the most) they’d be on that peak and making camp. He lifted Knotman’s kukri — feeling let-down by both him and Odgeson, who were, after all, supposed to be leading this foray. They were lost in some half-dream of cigarette smoke: “I’m off to see what I can find,” he said.

Knotman offered him a fag. “Have a smoke first.”

“When I come back.”

“Suit yourself.”

“You’ll be wasting your time,” Baker chipped at the tree-bole with his knife. Its sharp blade, digging with nonchalant dull strikes at the wood, sounded vicious and useless, an acknowledgment of defeat. “As long as I’m not wasting yourn,” he threw back. “It’s barmy to come all this way and then turn back.”

Knotman listened, sat back without interfering. He’d brought them this far and now they could make up their own minds about reaching the top. If they found it collectively important to do so, they’d see a way there — though as far as he was concerned there was no point in taking risks. The three-mile detour was impossible because it would mean perhaps two days without water. “I’m knackered,” Kirkby said. Jack suggested they bed down for the night and have a bash in the morning: “Once we’re over the summit there’ll be plenty of water.”

“I think we can call it off,” Odgeson said, and he was taken up on it: “Suits me,” Baker agreed quickly. “I didn’t like this picnic from the beginning.”

“Why did you come then?”

“For the experience.” Brian couldn’t argue against such an answer, unwilling to admit that his own reasons were felt to be deeper, if more diffuse.

From tracking the contours, he edged upwards, tunnelling like a collier through thick undergrowth, clambering over the fallen five-foot girth of trees that blocked his way. There was too much silence, and he wielded his kukri against ironwood to create the rough companionship of noise. Such a tree-filled wilderness put fear into him, and now and again he stopped in his crashed pathway as if to listen for its full effect, looked for ants, leeches, a snake maybe, but could see nothing except the swinging of his own arm when he went on. Kota Libis camp was years away, England a dream before he was born, Pauline walking to the shops on Aspley Lane a dim apparition; maybe since I came up here all the rest of the world’s turned to jungle and there’s nothing to go back to.

He climbed towards the summit, came by a green rockface blocking his way. He thought, among the claustrophobic desolation of this high jungle, of the waterfalls and pools several miles down towards the plain, of the stream’s noise, which had seemed so tormenting at the time but which now was remembered as a sort of heaven. Both places mixed before his eyes. He leaned to light a cigarette.

A clump of trees overhung the summit, rag-mops giving him the glad-eye from too far up. Maybe if I edge farther along I’ll find a chimney that’ll get me through in ten minutes. Above the rag-mops were grey and water-bellied clouds settling in for afternoon and evening. He was determined to reach the summit and, looking along the way he might take, saw a coiled python placed a dozen feet away.

He was protected by a screen of horror, within which a hand went to his shoulder only to find that he had forgotten his rifle. As he backed away, the stripes and diamonds began to move, to perform a colourful oscillation along the ground, over trees and roots; it was bigger than any he’d seen in the snake temples of Pulau Timur or the paddy field at Kota Libis. He went downhill, from tree to tree-bole, still watching the snake, which wound back into its sluggish coils now that he wasn’t too close. His fear of it went, for somehow being without a rifle there seemed no need to hurry or panic, and in the shadowy gloom he lost sight of it. Then his fear came back and he fled towards the others, no longer feeling alone in the jungle. He didn’t mention having seen the python: “I can’t find any way round or up,” he grumbled, before sinking down for a rest, glad that no one retorted: I told you so.

Knotman hitched up his pack and rifle, and the rest followed, threading a way between trees and bushes. A different set of muscles came into play for the descent, and Brian’s legs ached and stung as he steadied himself on the steep slope so as not to be slung forward against some hard tree. A slow drizzle fell, and in the dusk Brian and Kirkby spread their blanket into a rough cradle between two bushes, sat down to chew biscuits. Jack rammed a bayonet into a tin of jam and handed it around, but there was no energy to forage among the tins for a more elaborate meal — and no dry wood on which to cook it. “The sooner we get back to camp now, the better,” Kirkby said.

“Maybe they’ll rustle up something good at the cookhouse when we do,” Knotman laughed, “like hummingbirds’ foreskins on toast, or some such thing.” On their bleak dark four-thousand-foot ledge Brian felt as if the party had shrunk in numbers, they were so isolated and dispirited. He counted them: six, yet wouldn’t have been surprised to have seen only two or three, thinking that maybe a fire would have made a bigger crowd out of them. Perched high in the saturated air and mountainous vegetation, miles from the nearest spark of light, he couldn’t fight through the steel band of exhaustion towards sleep, was afraid that if he did he would roll off the ledge and perhaps spill against some tree.

He lay all night with a built-in sensation of closed eyes roaming through some demanding wilderness of half-sleep, the trammels of an exhausted mind and body searching for something impossible to find, then grieving over the fact that it might never be found even in a thousand hours of real sleep. The hard curve of rocks and soil under the blankets troubled him distantly, though less than the damp mist coldly moistening his face. Such uneasy rest was a variation on great silences, broken by fire within and a furious crashing of noise that often dragged him half-back to consciousness, as though a force over which he had neither control nor resistance fastened itself at his entrails and sent him into more coughs until the sound of it woke him up. Kirkby grunted and nudged, causing someone else to curse at the dearth of real sleep. Aware of his aching bones, he opened his eyes on the off-chance of encouraging sleep should he close them again decisively, but then found he had no desire to close them, and lay for what he could have sworn was a long time, looking into the silhouettes of bush leaves and humped bodies roundabout.

It often seemed that dawn was about to appear: when the shape of bush leaves began imperceptibly to change, he kept his eyes closed for as long as he could bear it, imagining that when he opened them the leaves would have taken on colour, and hoping that before he could witness this miracle of change no voice would yell that it was time to get up, or that Baker’s buckshot-gun wouldn’t start the day like a newly sharpened tin-opener ripping across the dark sky to let in sunlight. But he never slept more than a few minutes (which had nevertheless seemed like hours), so that the leaves before him were still outlined with the same blackness against tree-boles behind.