The trail quickly steepened and soon took its toll on Elizabeth, nearly nine months pregnant. The feet were measured in minutes, the yards in quarter hours. Merrien glanced up to the summit. Two thirds of the way. Just a little more. She looked sideways at Elizabeth as they struggled up the rocky path. Sweat poured down Elizabeth’s beet red face in tiny rivers and she gasped for breath with each step. She slowly staggered to a stop and started teetering. Merrien scrambling to her side and grabbed her by her shoulders, then sat Elizabeth down on a log. Her eyes looked dazed and disorientated.
“I…I can’t…m…make it,” Elizabeth mumbled.
Merrien sat down next to Elizabeth. Jane slumped on the rock next to her with Teapot Mary sound asleep in her backpack. Merrien’s arms and legs throbbed. She felt the sweat run down her back where Sarah squirmed against her, whimpering. She looked up at the sun and felt its rays pierce her face like needles. Merrien took a couple of deep breaths and pointed up the trail to Jane. “It’s getting steeper and narrower.”
Merrien looked at her dress. Brambles and foxtail haphazardly stuck out from all over her bloomers. Several three and four inch slits in the fabric fluttered in the breeze.
“Even the trees cannot stand straight.” Merrien motioned to a tree, although larger than most, it leaned heavily down towards the bottom of the mountain. She slowly shook her head, stood up and turned to Elizabeth.
“Listen to me, Elizabeth” Merrien moved in front of her. “I’m going to make a rope for you. Do you understand? I will pull you up while Jane pushes.” She glanced over to Jane, who nodded in understanding.
Merrien turned back to Elizabeth “Don’t speak, just breathe.” She reached for the leg of her bloomers and tore off several strips. “Owww!” A thorn, hidden on the underside of her garment, protruded from her hand. She pulled it out and put her hand in her mouth for a moment to stem the blood. She ripped several more strips, then tied the ends together. She looked at her shredded bloomers. What is the point? I’ll just trip over the dangling pieces of material. She reached down and tore off the rest of the fabric all the way to her knees.
“See, I’m going to tie this around my waist and under your arms. Just hang on as tight as you can.” Merrien tied the tether between her and Elizabeth. She looked to her right but couldn’t see the wagons or men through the cloud of dust, but she did notice a steady stream of small rocks and boulders running down the mountain below the cloud of dust. Don’t think about them, just get Elizabeth to the top. From somewhere near the peak came the shrill cry of an eagle calling its mate.
“Come on, Elizabeth, let’s get to the top so we can rest. It’s not much further now.”
Merrien started up the mountain with Sarah on her back. With each step, Merrien pulled. Jane pushed. Elizabeth moaned. Heads down. Step, then another. Tree branches whipped at them and the rocks cut their hands.
“Merrien!” The muffled moan carried fear.
Merrien whipped around. Jane had fallen face down with Teapot Mary screaming from her back. Elizabeth was on her hands and knees, trying to reach back as Jane slowly slid down the mountain.
“Jane!!!” Merrien screamed, then plopped down. With shaking hands she untied her shawl. Sarah slid to the ground. “Stay here, Sarah.” Sarah stared at her wide eyed and nodded.
Merrien, pointed her feet downhill and started scooting and sliding down the mountain on her bottom. The jagged rocks tore into her hands and legs. She cried out when a gnarled, exposed root left a long gash in her left calf.
Faster. Must go faster. “Jane!!” Her lungs felt on fire. Jane seemed to be sliding faster and Teapot Mary’s cries grew louder. Jane looked up at Merrien as she slid on her stomach, her chin bouncing off the ground.
Five feet! Jane’s hands stretched toward her. Twenty feet below Jane, Merrien saw a drop off. OH GOD! NO! Merrien straightened her legs and dug her heals into the ground. Her momentum catapulted her to her feet and she leaped head first at Jane. She felt her head bounce off a rock, then time seemed to stand still.
She noticed Teapot Mary’s little hand sticking out from the shawl, fingers reaching to grasp something. Merrien focused on Jane’s hands. Will I push us both over the edge?
GOT HER!! “Jane, hold my hand tight,” Merrien yelled. She would not have let go if fire swept the mountainside or if red ants had swarmed over her from head to toe. She dug in her heals and spread out her other hand to slow their descent. They bounced, then seemed to find softer soil and Merrien dug in. They slowed, but not fast enough. God help us, please! She looked at Jane. Five feet below her, a three foot sapling clung to the earth and not far after that the ground disappeared from sight. Merrien grabbed the sapling with her left arm as she skidded by.
“AHHHHH!” The tremendous jerk on her arm, as their combined weights and momentum pulled them to a stop, jolted through Merrien’s body. She slowly twisted her head to the right. Jane lay shivering with her feet dangling over the drop-off with eyes as wide as a full moon, still gripping Merrien’s hand. Blood dripped from an ugly gash on Jane’s chin. Mary cried loudly.
Every part of Merrien’s body felt on fire. Her left arm wouldn’t move. Her right hand still grasped Jane’s. She tried to get up…
“Merrien…Merrien can you hear me?” a voice sounded far away. She thought she heard gurgling water. A drink would be nice…darkness engulfed her.