Read Impulse Page 23

Not that we don’t all respect you.

  Sean orders, Okay, everyone

  pay attention. The morning

  routine goes like this: up at

  daybreak, sleeping bags rolled

  up and stashed in your backpacks,

  ten minutes for bodily functions

  (please go in separate directions),

  breakfast, teeth, and then off we go.

  I drag myself out of my cocoon,

  roll it up tightly as I can manage,

  then reach for a cup of coffee to

  fight the black hole of sleeplessness

  I have pushed myself into.

  I hope Sean and Raven will

  take it easy on us the first

  day. I doubt I can cope with

  a marathon.

  Tony

  After a Scrumptious Breakfast

  (Egg McMuffin-flavored

  substance, in a foil pouch),

  Raven and Sean start

  handing us things to stow

  in our packs, on top of

  our already wrinkled clothes.

  Rope. More foil pouches.

  (Guess we have to carry

  our own gourmet goop.)

  One roll of toilet paper

  each. (Guess MREs don’t

  make for megadumps.

  Hope they’ve got laxatives

  along!) Antibacterial

  soap. (For hair and skin,

  safe for the environment.)

  Flint and steel. Fire-starter

  tinder. (We’re trusting this?)

  Featherlight thermal

  blankets. (Thank you,

  NASA.) Pocket hand

  warmers. (Where are

  we going, anyway? To

  the Antarctic?) Lip ice.

  Mosquito repellent. Sunglasses.

  (Awesome idea.

  The glare out here is

  killer. Sure glad someone’s

  got the system down.)

  A minifishing kit, with one

  hook, one bobber, one sinker,

  and a small reel of line.

  (Hope Phillip’s watching

  this. If so, he’s smiling.)

  “Hey, Phillip,” I whisper.

  “Are you there, somewhere?”

  Finally, Sean Gives Each of Us

  A whistle on a long red

  cord, just right to go

  around our necks and

  hang in easy reach.

  Three short blasts

  means you’re in trouble.

  Everyone has to give

  theirs a try. The noise

  scatters a warren of jackrabbits,

  out on a scouting

  expedition. What do rabbits

  eat out here, anyway? Sand?

  Before we head out,

  we’re going to buddy

  up, Raven says. Always

  keep your buddy in sight,

  or at least know where

  he or she is at all times.

  Raven assigns partners,

  choosing Lori for hers.

  Vanessa and Dahlia.

  Justin and Sean. Which

  leaves Conner and me.

  A week ago I would

  have been fine with that,

  ecstatic, in fact. But this

  thing with Conner eighty-sixing

  his meds has me worried.

  He buried his Prozac again

  this morning. I know

  quitting cold isn’t always

  a problem, but it can be

  What if he drops off

  the deep end? “How

  responsible for our

  partners are we?” I ask.

  Conner Shoots a Curious Look

  In my direction. Hell,

  maybe he’s worried

  about looking out for me.

  Good question, replies

  Sean. And the answer

  is: ninety-nine percent.

  “What about the one

  percent? Can you be

  more specific, please?”

  I can. If your buddy

  decides to run off into

  the night, don’t go too.

  Everyone takes a minute

  or two to digest the buddy

  system thing. Now, Q & A:

  Q: What if my buddy breaks a leg?

  A: Blow your whistle. We’ll

  triage on site, call for help.

  Q: What if she won’t participate?

  A: Encourage her. Get in her

  face if you have to.

  Q: What if that doesn’t work?

  A: Blow one long blast on

  your whistle; leave it to us.

  My turn. “And what

  if your buddy flips

  out completely?”

  Sean looks at Conner,

  looks back at me. Is

  that really a concern?

  I turn toward Conner,

  assess the dark circles

  around his sleep-deprived

  eyes. He smiles a very

  strange smile and gives a

  little shrug, and I say,

  “Guess not.”

  Vanessa

  Buddies with Dahlia

  Wonderful. She and I have

  probably exchanged

  a hundred words in

  the last fifteen weeks.

  But hey, I guess

  that’s the point.

  Challenge by Choice—

  the way to form lasting (?)

  friendships. I decide to break

  the ice. “Are you into hiking?”

  You kidding? Most hiking

  I’ve ever done is from

  my house down to

  the corner 7-Eleven.

  What about you?

  “I’ve been a few times,

  with my grandma. She’s in

  pretty good shape for her age.

  She likes to hike Mt. Rose

  Meadows, and we did part

  of the Rim Trail, too.”

  Holy crap! She must be

  in pretty good shape.

  Is she old, or what? ’Cause

  my grandma is older than dirt.

  I shrug. “Almost sixty.

  But she always seemed

  younger to me than

  my mom did. My mom

  was born ancient.”

  Your mom is the crazy

  one, right? Straight

  to the point.

  So I’ll give a direct

  answer. “She was.”

  Before I Have to Offer Details

  Raven rounds us up.

  Okay, everyone ready?

  Today’s leg isn’t really

  difficult. It’s more to assess

  what shape you’re in

  than to really challenge you.

  Our goal is ten miles

  before nightfall.

  Ten miles isn’t difficult?

  I’ve never walked more

  than five at any one time

  with Grandma. But I guess

  I’m up to the task.

  Raven and Lori take the lead

  as we start up a gradual grade

  on a wide, well-maintained trail.

  Keep a nice, steady pace

  and watch your posture,

  or your backs will curse

  you. Don’t over compensate

  for the weight of your packs,

  Raven instructs.

  Right about now, I start

  to feel the weight of my

  pack. Immediately, I want

  to compensate—a major

  trick of the mind?

  I glance to my right,

  see Dahlia is fighting

  the same urge. “Wonder

  how long it takes before

  our backs start swearing.”

  I woke up this morning and my

  back was already cussing big-time,

  Dahlia replies. If you can’t h
ear

  it, you need a hearing aid!

  Two Hours Later

  My back is cussing too.

  In fact, with all the spinal

  swearing going on, you almost

  can’t hear the moans

  and groans of our feet.

  Finally Raven directs

  us off the trail, into a little

  clearing in the sage. We’ll

  take a breather here.

  Everyone drink water,

  even if you don’t think

  you’re thirsty. Believe

  me, you are, and staying

  hydrated is vital.

  Water never tasted near

  this good before. I polish

  off a bottle, realize I can’t

  just toss the empty.

  Hang on to those bottles,

  says Sean. We’ll refill them

  when we get to the creek.

  Anyone hungry? Tough!

  Lunch isn’t for an hour.

  Backpacks up. Let’s go.

  Sean and Justin trade

  places with Raven and Lori.

  Conner and Tony move

  behind them, in front

  of Dahlia and me.

  As Tony passes, he touches

  my arm. You okay? ’Cause

  I’m one sore puppy already.

  “Woof, woof,” I joke.

  But right now it doesn’t seem

  too funny.

  Conner

  We’ve Been Walking

  For three days, uphill, loaded

  with heavy packs. Oxen.

  That’s what we are, just like

  those whose time-smoothed tracks

  we follow. I keep wondering

  if we’re going somewhere, or

  just wandering at random, not

  even Sean knowing our final

  destination. The weather

  is typical spring in northern

  Nevada—tepid during the day,

  and that’s a very good thing.

  Hiking these hills in the heat

  of July would be insane.

  So far the grade isn’t bad,

  the trail well marked and dry.

  But we haven’t covered near

  the distance Sean and Raven

  expected to, mostly due to

  Lori’s insistence that she

  “can’t take another step.” That’s

  bull, of course, but her less-than-

  adequate speed has kept us from

  taking full advantage of

  the relatively easy terrain.

  Things only get harder from

  here—steeper, more slippery—so

  unless the bitch grows wings

  our progress will slow even

  more. Not sure why it matters,

  especially if wandering at

  random actually is the score.

  I Decide It Isn’t

  Because as we set up camp for

  the night, I hear Raven and Sean

  discussing tomorrow. Seems

  our first real test is in sight.

  So what do you think? Are they

  all up to the gorge? asks Raven.

  Guess we’ll find out, answers Sean.

  Anyway, we haven’t had a fall yet.

  I’m a little worried about

  Lori. She’s not exactly fit.

  She will pose a challenge,

  but hey, no guts, no glory.

  “Glory” is not in her dictionary.

  I hope “vertigo” isn’t either.

  She’s your buddy, sweetheart.

  Just show her the rope-a-dope.

  Should be an interesting

  day. I’ll be sure to let Lori

  and Raven go first. That

  way I won’t miss a thing.

  I unroll my sleeping bag,

  smoothing the sand beneath

  best I can, wishing the stone-free

  surface was soothing

  enough to actually let me

  sleep. Four nights without

  drifting all the way off into

  deep REM refreshment

  has left me disoriented.

  So far only Tony has

  a clue, but with my thought

  processes bordering on bizarre,

  that’s likely to change any

  time. Maybe exhaustion will

  conquer my brain tonight, beat

  it into sublime submission.

  With a Nod

  Toward early homo erectus,

  Tony lights this evening’s

  fire, using only flint and steel.

  Around bites of pepperoni paste

  he asks, How did humans

  ever survive? I mean,

  people consider themselves

  so clever, but really,

  learning to light a fire like

  this had to be an accident,

  or a direct communication

  from our Great Dad Above.

  Sitting close to the blossoming

  fire, Justin squirms visibly.

  I wish you wouldn’t use

  terms like “Great Dad Above.”

  Tony smiles. Why not? Do

  you really think He cares

  about terminology? I bet He

  worries more about how few

  of His greatest experiments

  believe He exists. With just

  that mustard seed of faith, think

  what people might achieve.

  “Faith is for little children

  and giant fools. Don’t tell

  me you believe in Santa, too!”

  Defiant, I hardly slur at all.

  Tony grins. Of course, and

  the Tooth Fairy, too. All fairies,

  in fact. Then he grows serious.

  I’m sorry you’re afraid of truth.

  Me too.

  Tony

  I Am Firestarter

  And I feel powerful.

  Strange, because I

  never felt that way

  lighting a match,

  which really is an

  awesome invention.

  But conquering flint and

  steel gives me a kind

  of primal satisfaction.

  So far only Conner,

  Dahlia, and I have

  figured out how to do it.

  Vanessa comes over,

  gives me a high five.

  Way to go, Tony. If

  I ever decide to go

  camping again, I’ll

  invite you to come.

  “Promise? Maybe we

  could bring along

  a sleeping bag for two.

  It would have to be

  a whole lot warmer than

  these half-ass units.”

  No doubt about that.

  She sits beside me,

  real close, and for about

  the thousandth time,

  I’m amazed at how

  she makes me feel.

  As inconspicuously

  as possible, I slide

  my arm around her

  waist, put my mouth

  against her ear. “I don’t

  ever want to lose you.”

  Losing Her

  Would snuff the light

  out of my life—a light

  I never believed I

  could find again after

  Phillip died. Yet here it

  is, sitting right next to me.

  Shit. Damn. Fuck.

  On the far side of

  the flames, Dahlia

  is working her hiking

  boots off swollen feet.

  Check out this blister!

  Raven moves into

  paramedic mode,

  rushing to Dahlia’s

  side as if she’s having

  a baby or something.

  She pokes and prods.

  It’s ugly, all right

  Vanessa, get the
first

  aid kit. First, we need

  some rubbing alcohol.

  Okay, this is going

  to hurt a little….

  Quit screaming. It

  can’t hurt that bad!

  Now, use this

  ointment Dab it

  all over the blister,

  then leave it exposed.

  Dahlia keeps yelling.

  You want me to go

  barefoot? I’ll freeze.

  A blister like that needs

  air. Later we’ll fix you

  up with a moleskin.

  Dahlia Bitches Until Bedtime

  I could kick her ass,

  but not because she’s

  causing a major scene

  over a minor problem,

  making a mountain (ha-ha)

  out of a moleskin.

  No, I’d like to wring

  her scrawny neck for

  taking Vanessa from

  my side to go play

  nurse’s aide. I can still

  feel the warmth of her.

  I settle into my sleeping

  bag, wondering at this

  change that has come

  over me. Not only do

  I love Vanessa, I think

  I want to make love to her.

  Next to me, as if reading

  my mind, Conner says,

  You’re really in love with

  her, aren’t you? Do you

  want to be with her … I

  mean … you know?

  I keep my voice very

  low. “I’m really in

  love with her, yes.

  She makes me feel

  like no one ever has.

  As for the rest, maybe.”

  I think you should. You

  told me once you weren’t

  really sure who you are.

  Being with Vanessa