Next came Nichols, who
Instead of coming down, Mueller pulled the rope up. It took Mosovich a second to figure out what he was doing, but when the Barrett and the master sergeant’s rucksack came down the slope it was fairly obvious. Mueller followed them in rapid succession, dislodging another rock when he hit.
“I dunno, Jake,” Mueller said, looking at the best available tree. It was a twisted white pine that was growing out of the juncture of another decaying quartz vein and the schist it was intruded into, which was weaker.
“I’ll take it,” Mosovich said, throwing the rope over his shoulder. “Sister, on rappel.”
“Okay,” Sister Mary said without demur. If the sergeant major said he could hold the rope, he would hold the rope. She took it and slipped it around her body. “I’m going to cross right away.”
“Oh, yeah,” Mosovich agreed. “And hit the stream. But wait there.”
“Roger,” she said, dropping over the cliff. Her descent, again, was fast and smooth. When she hit the road she crossed quickly, grabbed one of the saplings on the edge of the bank and dropped out of sight into the streambed.
“Nichols,” Mosovich said. “And take the Barrett. Mueller, gimme a hand.”
Both of them bracing were able to support Nichols and his massive load. The weight caused the sniper to drop far faster than he had probably preferrred, but he made it to the road and crossed quickly, dropping out of sight on the far side. There was a faint cry that reached their perch over the chuckle of the river and the two NCOs traded glances and a shrug.
“You sure you can support me, Jake?” Mueller asked. “I could go last.”
“Sorry man, I’d rather trust myself,” Mosovich said. “I can handle it. ‘He ain’t heavy…’ ”
“Right,” said Mueller with a laugh. He dropped over the side of the ledge, but was careful to catch his weight on as many footholds as he could find in the eroded cliff. At the bottom he threw the rope aside and darted across the road.
Which left only Mosovich. Jake looked at the tree he was supposed to depend upon, the eroded hillside and the woods across the way. “What a screwed up situation,” he muttered. Then he coiled up the rope, tucked it in his rucksack, turned around and dropped off the ledge.
The technique was another picked up in too many years of risking his life. On a cliff like this, with outcroppings, brush and trees sticking out all over, it was barely possible to slow yourself by catching various items on the way down. It was not a matter of stopping, that was going to happen suddenly at the bottom, but just slowing yourself enough that you didn’t break anything.
It was not the sort of technique that anyone but mountain troops used, and then only in extremis, because it was so stupidly dangerous.
The cliff flattened out a bit at the bottom from runoff and caught one foot sending him into a backwards roll. He tucked into it and fetched up, hard, against a rock fallen at some previous time. But all the pieces were in place and nothing appeared to be broken. So it was clearly time to cross the road.
He trotted across and grabbed one of the saplings on the edge to swing down on. He was going to drop directly into the streambed and that was damned near as dangerous as going down the slope; the rounded and slimy rocks of the stream would turn an ankle sideways in a heartbeat and with all the gear they were carrying that would mean a broken tibia just as fast.
He slipped down the slope and looked at the team huddled against the streambank. “Everybody golden?”
“No,” Nichols gasped out.
“He broke both ankles jumping off the bank, smaj,” Sister Mary said, putting a splint in place.
“Well, Stanley,” said Mueller leaning back until his head was in the stream. “Isn’t
CHAPTER 12
Near Seed, GA, United States, Sol III