November 2012

26

San Francisco, California

The sound of my phone chirping wakes me from a deep sleep, and I roll over, pulling the comforter over my head to block out the sunlight. I’m starting to slip back into sleep again when there’s another chirp. I feel around on the nightstand for my phone and open my eyes to back-to-back texts from Brooke:


Good morning!

Hey, what r u doing tonight?

My eyes are still adjusting when another message appears.


Party at our apartment. Come!

I stare at the screen as I consider it. Aside from a somewhat loose plan to meet up with the guys and loiter around Lafayette Park later, I really don’t have anything else to do this weekend. But social conflicts aren’t the real reason I think I should stay away. I only have one more week before I can go see Anna again and I’m not about to do anything to jeopardize it. Another message:


I want my roommates to meet you!

A groan escapes my mouth as I fall back into the pillow. I lift the phone above my head and text her back.


I think I’d better stay put.

I toss the phone onto the comforter and close my eyes. It hasn’t even been five minutes when my phone chirps again. I’m expecting to see another overly enthusiastic message from Brooke, but this one’s from Sam.


Sup?

I type back:


Sleeping.

Then I clarify:


Was.

Sleep might be impossible at this point, but I let my hand fall to my side and the phone lands on the bed again. I’m lost in a restful daze when another text arrives, followed by another. I sigh and reach for the phone.


Wake up.

We’re climbing.

Outside.

On real rocks.

Pick me up in 20.

The sun’s peeking in between the curtains. I haven’t been climbing outdoors since last summer. Pretty soon the rain will start falling and Sam and I won’t have any other option but the climbing gym. And it sounds so…normal. I could use a day of normal.

I throw off the covers and force myself into the shower, and ten minutes later, I’m feeling like this was the right call. I pour coffee into a travel mug, load my stuff into the Jeep, and pull into Sam’s driveway right on time.

I have no idea where we’re going, but he has our destination all figured out, and before I can even back out of the driveway, he’s programming it into the GPS. The route starts with a short drive to the Golden Gate Bridge and ends at the base of a mountain three hours away.

“We’re climbing Donner?” I ask as I pull up to a stop sign and consider the map.

Sam gives me an exaggerated shrug and gestures out the front window. “Have you seen this day?” He gives me a hard stare like he can’t believe I’d suggest anything else.

I crane my neck to get a better view. It’s one of those near-winter days: deep blue sky, bright sun, crisp wind. I hit the gas pedal with my foot and roll down the window, and as we cruise down the hill toward the bay, the car floods with cold air.

At the next stop sign, I turn left onto a residential street and pull over to the side. Sam looks at me sideways as I climb out, but it doesn’t take him long to figure out what I’m doing, and when he does, he hops out and starts helping me unbuckle the Jeep’s soft top. We pull it back and secure it in place. And then we’re off again.

“Now it’s a road trip.” Sam crosses his arms behind his head and reclines the passenger seat. As he searches on my iPhone for music, we make small talk about the tutoring job I’m starting on Monday. He tells me about the kids, and how he’ll point out the troublemakers, as well as the ones who seem to really care about being there.

I was great in the interview. The head of the organization offered me the job on the spot. Now I’ve pushed my start date back twice, like I’m avoiding it, and the more Sam says, the more I start to realize that I don’t want to hear about it. There’s something offputting about the whole thing.

The Jeep creeps forward until we finally arrive at the entrance to the Golden Gate Bridge. Out of nowhere, I remember the organization I stumbled upon when I was first researching community service projects. The one in the Tenderloin, down the street from the apartment that burned down but didn’t take the lives of two kids.

I’ve don’t even give it another thought, and I hear the words just slip out. “I’m going to pass on the job, Sam.”

“What? You can’t pass on it. You already took it.”

I keep my eyes on the traffic in front of me. “I know. I’m going to un-take it.”

I can feel him looking at me. “You need to do something for your transcripts,” he says, and I assure him that I plan to. As we drive onto the bridge, I tell him everything I learned from the online video that day, and with every word, I’m more and more excited about getting home tonight and filling out the application.

“Whatever you want.” Sam falls back into the headrest and stares through the open roof. “Check it out,” he says as we pass under the dark orange gates that span the bridge. “Ah, best part…”

Without looking away, he tosses my phone into the console. “It’s not too early for Jack White, is it?”

“It’s never too early for Jack White.” I hear the first song on the playlist I made a few months ago. It’s a solid mix of the White Stripes, the Raconteurs, the Dead Weather, and White’s solo stuff. The four electric guitar notes kick off “Sixteen Saltines.”

Saltines. I smile as I picture Anna nibbling on the corner of one and I turn up the music as loud as it will go.

Over the next three hours we make our way to Donner, listening to a lot of music, talking very little, and stopping only once along the way for lunch at In-N-Out. We down our shakes and stuff french fries into our mouths, but leave our burgers wrapped so we can eat them at the summit.

After we arrive at the parking area off the freeway, we grab our gear and walk thirty minutes to the base of the first route. Neither one of us has been here before and Sam’s giddy, rattling off everything he learned during his Internet research last night. Clean granite. Lots of routes. Incredible views from the summits.

At the base of the first rock, I ready myself. I tie my shoes, clip my chalk bag to the loop on my pants, and stuff my sweatshirt into my backpack. I open one of the granola bars I grabbed out of the pantry this morning before I left and eat it in three bites. At the bottom of my pack, I feel for the six-pack of lukewarm Gatorades and I open one and drink it without stopping.

I look around. Sam and I are the only people out here. I point my head at the sky and let out a loud yell, and Sam jumps and scolds me for scaring the crap out of him. He returns to tightening the Velcro on his shoes. The air is clean and this place is amazing and I can’t wait to see the view from the top. I had no idea how much I needed this.

“You want me to lead?” I ask as I start clipping the cams onto my harness.

Sam looks up at the rock. “Actually, this is a popular one to free solo. What do you think? You up for it?”

I consider it. It’s not that vertical, and the holds look relatively easy to spot, even from here. “Sure,” I say as I drop the gear back into my pack.

“You have the burgers?” Sam coils the rope and throws it over his shoulder, then clips his chalk bag to his belt loop.

“Yep.” I pat the smaller backpack I brought along and feed my arms through the straps. I’m not hungry at all. Just euphoric and full of energy.

Sam checks his watch. “We made good time. It’s only twelve thirty.”

The climb is easy at first, and I have no trouble finding hand- and footholds. I pull myself up, slide to the left, and pull up again. The granite is cold and dry beneath my fingertips. I’m moving quickly through the route.

About a quarter of the way up, I see a good spot to take a break, and I wedge my hand into a large crack and find an equally large space for my toe. I let my arms slacken a bit.

I look for Sam. He’s ahead of me, and he seems to be maneuvering the rock well. I see his fingers grip the edge and watch him pull himself onto a ledge to rest. He’s only about ten feet higher, and I can see the sweat glistening on his forehead and dripping down his cheeks. He wedges himself into a position where he can free one hand, and he lifts the edge of his T-shirt and wipes his face dry.

It’s time to move, so I chalk up my hands again and reach up for a hold. It’s barely enough to grip on to, and within a few seconds, my knuckles are turning white and my forearms are burning. I see a better grip only inches away and swing my body around so I can grab on to it, rising to a ledge that’s wide enough to stand on. I stop and catch my breath.

The summit is farther away than I expected it to be, and it’ll be slow going from here. I don’t know what I was thinking. It’s been months since I climbed outside, and even though this was supposed to be an easy route, I’m starting to think the free solo climb was a bad idea. When I chalk my hands, my arms are shaking with fatigue.

I start back up the rock, and a little while later I see Sam reach the summit. I stop and consider my last few moves while he stands there, doubled over and beaming down at me.

“Dude, my mom climbs faster than you do.”

I tighten my fingers around the hold with one hand, freeing the other one to flip him off. Sam lets out a loud laugh, and returns to sweating and panting. I’m waiting to feel the euphoria I usually experience at this point of the climb, but each move feels harder than it should be. I’m going to be insanely sore tomorrow.

I’m almost there. In just one or two more strategic, well-thought moves, I’ll be at the top. I take one more deep breath and lock my eyes on my next hold. I make my move, then the next, and suddenly I’m gripping the shelf.

I breathe. My fingertips dig into the granite.

“Jesus, it’s about time.” Sam takes a swig of Gatorade and checks the time on his phone. “It’s already one o’clock. Get up here, would you? I’m starving.”

As I pull myself up, I feel the edge break in my hands. Dust and bits of rock tumble down into my eyes, and I grope blindly, reaching up for anything to hold on to. My right hand falls away and I grab the rock harder with my left, but it just slips off.

Sam reacts immediately, dropping his Gatorade and falling to his stomach. His hand juts out over the edge, but by then I’m nowhere near it.

My cheek skids against the surface and my hip hits something sharp. My shoulder slams against a boulder and that slows my momentum, but only temporarily. My already-raw fingers burn and sting as they claw at the granite.

I hear Sam yell from the summit.

I’m waiting for my body to shut down so I don’t have to endure the pain of the crash. Suddenly, I feel my hip connect with something hard and I stop fast. I’m lying in a crumpled heap on the ledge I’d been standing on earlier, and it’s wide enough to keep me secure, but I scramble to find something to hold on to anyway.

“Stay there,” Sam says, and I laugh. He disappears from the edge and I keep laughing, but I’m not sure why. Maybe because it keeps me from thinking about how fast my heart is racing and that my legs feel rubbery.

A couple of minutes later he returns to the shelf, flattens his chest against the rock, and slaps a coil of blue rope by his side. He feeds it over the edge and I watch it fall, dancing and squirming its way toward me. When I look up, I see Sam. His face is drawn, his eyes are full of panic, and his hands are shaking violently as he guides the rope down.

I tie the rope to my harness. Sam yells, “Hold on,” and then he’s gone for a full minute. I picture him tying the rope to the anchors at the top and feel the slack disappear. He returns and looks over the edge. “Okay. You’re on belay. I’ve got you!” He gives me a thumbs-up and drops to the ground again. He’s trying to sound stoic, but I can hear the worry in his voice.

I start climbing again, taking my moves a lot more slowly, thinking through each one more than I usually do. I try not to think about falling again. I don’t look up, but I can feel Sam working to keep the rope taut.

I’m only a few feet from the top when Sam drops to the ground again, and when I’m close enough, he lowers his hand. This time, I grab it and let him pull me to the surface.

Neither one of us says a word as we collapse back on the sun-warmed rock and stare straight up at the sky. I don’t even remove the rope from my waist. I just lie there. Eventually, I bring my hand to my face. My cheek is throbbing and my arms are covered in deep scratches. My right hip hurts when I try to sit up, there’s a small gash on my shoulder, and my fingers are caked with blood.

“You okay?” Sam asks and I nod. I don’t look at him, but his voice still sounds a little shaky. “Give me your pack.” He holds out his hand and I slide it off, but the strap grazes the cut on my arm. I cringe. He rifles through my stuff, and when I look up a minute later he’s dumping Gatorade onto an In-N-Out napkin. “All the water’s at the bottom,” he says as he hands it to me. “This will have to do.”

I wash the dirt off my face and clean up my arm. Without saying a word, I hold my hand out to Sam and he tosses me the rest of the Gatorade. I dump a little more on a clean corner of the napkin, take a big gulp, swish it around in my mouth, and spit out a mouthful of dirt.

“Well at least you crushed your face and not the burgers,” Sam says with a laugh. He reaches into the bag and pulls out his Double-Double, then tosses the bag to me.

I down another Gatorade, Sam takes a big bite of his burger, and neither one of us speaks as we stare out at the view. I take a few bites, but when I start thinking about what might have happened, I feel my stomach tighten up and my appetite disappears.

What if I had fallen to the bottom? I didn’t think about doing it over—it all happened too quickly—but I could have. What if I’d locked in on a time before we started up that rock, closed my eyes, and brought myself back? What would have happened if I’d saved my own life? Could I even do that? If I had, Sam would have seen everything.

Out of nowhere, I think about something I once said to Anna. As I was envying her deep roots in Evanston and a normal life she couldn’t wait to leave, I told her that, aside from my parents and my sister, everyone I knew back home was somehow temporary. Now I feel guilty for saying that. I watch Sam mowing his burger and wiping sauce from his face, and I can’t stop picturing how he dropped to the ground and reached over the edge for me.

Sam’s not temporary. He never was. And it occurs to me that, while I can’t tell him my biggest secret, perhaps I shouldn’t keep so many of them from my best friend.

We finish our burgers and I toss my backpack—now much lighter, since it’s filled with nothing but trash—over the edge. I use the top rope to rappel down to the bottom, and Sam follows me.

We pack up and head down the path to the next rock. It turns out to be a lot more technical, and when Sam offers to lead, I accept immediately. We climb two different routes. At dusk, we start the half-hour hike back to the Jeep.

We’re walking single file and almost at the end of the trail. “Sam,” I say to his back.

He lets out a “huh” that’s barely audible.

“There’s something I’ve been wanting to tell you.”

He keeps walking and doesn’t turn around.

I take a deep breath. “I wasn’t backpacking in Europe last spring.”

He flips his head around and gives me a quick nod. Then he turns back to the path.

“I was in Illinois.”

“Oh…”

“Living with my grandmother.”

The fact that I can’t see his face makes this easier.

“And while I was there, I sort of…met this girl.”

He stops cold and I almost run into his backpack. He turns around, his eyes wide with surprise. “Why were you staying with your grandmother?”

I stare at him. I wasn’t expecting him to go there and don’t have a great answer for this. “I was just…dealing with some family stuff. It was complicated. I just needed to get away.” It’s not the whole story, but so far, I’m not lying.

His eyebrows knit together. “Coop,” he says. “We all know you were in rehab.” Then he stops cold and stares at me. “Wait, did you meet a girl in rehab?”

“In rehab? Why would I be in rehab?” My mom swore she didn’t tell that ridiculous story to anyone outside the school administration. And Sam has never seen me drink or smoke or pop a pill. Even if he’d heard that, how could he actually believe it? How can he just be telling me this now?

“Come on, why else would you take off suddenly in the middle of the school year, not come back for three months, and when you do, tell everyone you were traveling in Europe.” He rolls his eyes. He’s got a point. “Besides, your mom told Cameron’s mom that you were away ‘dealing with some issues.’ What else would we think?”

Great.

I step in front of him and start walking down the trail toward the car. I didn’t want to start some kind of major confrontation about where I was last spring; I just wanted to tell him about Anna. I’m tired. I could have died on that rock today. And now my brain isn’t working fast enough to feed me new lies and help me keep up my cover. All this lying is exhausting, so I decide to give up, play it straight.

“Look,” I say without turning around, “You don’t have to believe me, but I wasn’t in rehab. I was living with my grandmother in Illinois for three months and then I came back. Now I go visit her. And Anna.” It feels good to say her name aloud.

I can hear Sam’s footsteps behind me, but he doesn’t say anything and neither do I. Once we reach the car, we silently load up our packs and get inside. I turn the key in the ignition and crank up the heat, and then I reach for my iPhone, looking for music.

Sam buckles his seat belt. “Is that why you stayed there for the rest of the semester?” he asks.

I don’t look up but I nod.

“Because of Anna.”

I inhale sharply when I hear Sam say her name, and I turn to look at him. “Yeah, because of Anna.”

“Who lives in Illinois.”

“Unfortunately, yeah.”

He gives me this let’s hear it gesture with his hand, and as I back out of the lot and turn onto the two-lane road that heads to the bottom of the mountain, the words just start pouring out.

Omitting details about the decade I visit, I tell him everything there is to know about Evanston, Illinois, and what I do when I’m there. I even give him the history, going all the way back to last March, when I first arrived at my grandmother’s house and enrolled at Westlake. A half hour later, he not only knows all about Anna, he knows about Emma and Justin, Maggie, and the Greenes, too. Anna was right. My shoulders are lighter right now than they’ve been in months.

When we reach the bottom of the mountain, Sam points out a diner that serves twenty-four-hour breakfast, and I pull in and park. I’m just about to get out when my phone chirps. I pick it up and read:


Miss you here.

Come next weekend? There’s someone I want you to meet. :)

“You want to get us a table?” I ask Sam. “I’ve got to reply to this message.”

“From Anna?” he says, like he’s enjoying being in the know. If he only knew how impossible that is.

“It’s from Brooke. Give me a sec. I’ll be right in.”

Sam shuts the car door and heads inside. It occurs to me that, as much as I miss Brooke, and as much as I’d love to tell her what happened today, I’m glad I’m not in Boulder right now. I can’t remember the last time I wanted to be exactly where I was.

I type the words:


Miss you too,


but can’t do next weekend (Anna).

A minute later, her reply arrives:


Bummer.

I’m just about to shove my phone in my pocket and join Sam when I have an idea. Anna told me I’d better bring flowers next time, but I can do a hell of a lot better than that. I start typing.


There’s someone I want you to meet too.

Wanna come along?

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