SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE

 

Then the mountains started screaming at me and I struggled to hold back tears of joy. They rose before me, green and white, brown and yellow, made orange by the sun and with their soul so singular that they could no sooner be mistaken for any other than could the face of the love of your life.

I was entering the land of so many childhood memories and sacred places. I recalled the ostensibly innocuous Bingly Bongly Wood, a square of a few hundred trees just off the road, the menace of Demon Drock, the invented devil who lurked in winding woods stalking cars. I dreamed of the plateau on Harrison Stickle that looked like a rock-pool-dotted moon.

 

I alighted at Keswick and headed for a B & B – the youth hostels were out of the question – I never wanted to meet again that curious quasi-Fascist breed of boarding school types who somehow relished the suffering of staying in huge wooden dormitories and having to be in bed by 11pm, even if they were on holiday and could afford better. I recall one time being in a dormitory of ramblers when a sharp voice pierced the darkness telling some kids to stop messing around or he was ‘going to call Matron.’ It wasn’t the outburst that did me – it was the fact he didn’t use the word the before Matron.

 

I digress somewhat. My story really began with a newspaper I found in The Golden Lion. I had noticed it lying there as soon as I’d sat in the pub but it was a local rag and I didn’t fancy it. I had just finished tucking into one of those oddly conservative yet delicious meals you get in pubs sometimes – sort of halfway between an old style pub snack and a proper restaurant - vulgar in a very British bourgeois way, but huge and tasty and good value for money. As I digested the meal like a bloated motionless ox I browsed the paper. To my surprise there was an article which struck me as worth reading.

 

LOCAL MOUNTAIN CLAIMS ANOTHER DEATH

The body of another climber was found yesterday on the slopes of Blencathra. The deceased has been identified as a local woman, Patricia Varndean, 48. The body was spotted by another fell walker in the early hours of the evening, a few yards off the National Trust path. It seems the woman suffered injuries to her head, ribs and legs. Forensic police say the cause of the injuries is unknown.

Mrs. Varndean is the seventh person to die on Blencathra so far this year, and we are still only in late March. Experts are wondering if the mountain is becoming more dangerous to climb or whether it is purely a coincidence. Some locals are talking about a curse on the mountain – others suspect some sort of foul play. It is suggestive that all the victims have been lone climbers. The police would welcome any information to help them ascertain exactly what happened.

 

Blencathra was a mountain I had climbed twice before and was one of the more thrilling Lake District climbs – I rated it alongside Bowfell and Helvellyn for atmosphere – narrow steep paths you had to scramble up with sheer drops on both sides, often clouded with swirling fog. Deaths however ! Climbing Blencathra was on my list of possible things to do in the four days I had intended to spend in Keswick – now I was going to do it tomorrow ! Not that I’m brave or anything like that, it’s just that my death was out of the question. I am a pompous old puss at times…

 

That morning, before I set off, I chatted to the Australian lady who ran the B & B about the Blencathra deaths.

She told me the first one was in early January - a teenage American going it alone in ragingly inclement weather. Apparently there had been a minor avalanche on Blencathra – a mere snowball compared to a Himalayan avalanche but enough to kill someone in the wrong place at the wrong time. Broken limbs and damaged head suggested this foolish hero had met his end this way, but the injuries sustained by all seven victims had been fairly similar. The talk of avalanches reminded me of Leonard Cohen so I shoved my Walkman and my self-compiled ‘best of Cohen’ in my rucksack. The peak of the mountain was covered in snow and I knew when I hit it Cohen was going straight into my ear, and if there was mist as well it was going to be FULL ON starkness and melancholia up there. Cool !

 

I won’t bore you with details of my early ascent - after all, this is a story and not a mountain manual; save to say I was heading with gusto towards ‘Straight Edge’: this is the mother of all Cumbrian spine-tinglers – the final ascent of the mountain, and not for the vertiginous. When I reached it things became totally far out straight away.

Clouds circled, rain lashed down, I scrambled for Cohen, the sheer drops flashed like strobe lights in the inconsistent mist, and when flashes of green, orange and violet stabbed the sky I wondered if the Australians had influenced my coffee. I stumbled on up a sheer crack slippery with glistening drips, and the higher sky became knives of a thousand colours. I put Cohen back in my pocket and replaced him with Iggy Pop. Thunder cracked and green lighting ripped and roared and in fear I started shouting “Cohen Cohen Cohen,” and turned Iggy up until my ears thumped in harmony with the maniacal sky.

It flashed on the horizon like a fragment of a vision; like some horror-movie trickery, all silent and subtle and quick: the size of a man or more, a smooth grey gingerbread man of stone. Faceless, handless and footless like a plasticine parody. The thunder squealed like a feline God and I nearly tripped and died as hundreds of little stone men scuttled past my boots ! ! In the swirling panic I was reminded of Miyazaki’s tree spirits and realised they were spirits of the rocks. They were sometimes mottled with algae or chipped and cracked and it all happened in a second as a flash of lightning sent them hurtling into some other dimension and I questioned what I had seen. Stone Man again ! Two feet in front of me ! I crunched up my eyes, heard a whizzing, and forcing them back open saw nothing but a burst of clemency in the shape of a burning marigold sunlight. The Cumbrian weather was crackling with its madness of super rapid change. Clouds cleared and a ridiculous blue sky cleared the way to the summit of the mountain. Five minutes later I reached the top and my face collapsed into my sandwiches.

 

Slopping my bread, ham and eggs with the messy gusto of a slobbering dog, I fell asleep and dreamed of stone men, tiny and smiling and benevolent, then bulging up into stone balloons of malice and crashing down with supernatural force and sudden speed on to my skull. I think I jerked like a newborn baby for a while, then awoke to find a third weather; a bland white sheet. I welcomed it.

 

Almost everybody who ascends Blencathra via Straight Edge descends by a less intense route, and being no different I found a gentle path down a rolling grassy expanse, with the spiked cliffs rearing up to my left. It was getting warmer and I found myself whistling and singing under my breath, glancing at the sheer stone rise with decreasing frequency. Relief and the beginnings of harmony filtered into my muscles and veins. Then,

 

CRAAAAAAAAAACK ! A sudden flash and roar of storm and rain like a swish of a colossal hammer. A profound and immediate darkening of the heavens, then zoom ! - Another flash like a cosmic camera and I was surrounded by a stone circle of stone men, waddling on their hips like disco-dancing weevils. One snapped and flashed a sinister eyeless grin, then they disappeared with a shimmering fade. The weather was grey and dismal and rain was spotting insipidly and I gathered my shaking skin and continued the descent. I was nearly running. I just wanted to get off the mountain and away from this wondrous savagery. Straight Edge still loomed large to my left and like Orpheus in the Underworld I somehow knew it would be fatal to glance at it, so I arched my back and bowed my head, looking inches in front of my feet at the dreary sodden ground. I headed downwards like an unrelenting arrow for several minutes, all curled up inwards like a ball, when a rumbling and cracking sound terrorised my ears with a terrible treble. My instincts flung my head sideways and a huge gingerbread man-shaped hole gaped in the side of the cliff. Everything stopped; time, my heart, the clouds and the breeze, and dread fixed my lumpen body to the spot as if I too were a stone man. All hope passed and a vague curiosity as to the manner of my demise remained.

And there it was. Framed on the horizon at the top of the grassy slope I had just descended. A giant, motionless figure of smooth stone with the white sun behind it. Arms and legs childishly stiff, it reminded me of the dramatic image of the 100-foot Wicker Man at the end of the film of the same name. We looked at each other for what I think was minutes but could have been seconds, me gripped with hypnotic despair, and the thing infinitely patient as it dwelled coolly on its puny quarry. I imagined a camera panning silently and suddenly from its head to mine, and back again, and my brain swirled as if the machine in motion. Hope slapped me like a flat crack in the cheek, and I belted down the mountain, a screaming, flailing-limbed banshee. I looked behind and the man-shaped tower of stone stayed as still as the rock from which it was hewn.

Then it started running ! A couple of inexorable bounds and it was almost upon me. Suddenly it wailed a wail that pierced and ripped the sky as several eagles crashed dead around me, and sheep thudded to the floor with bleeding ears then floating souls.

Something extraordinary happened next ! The stone monster had split into hundreds of huge boulders hurtling down the mountainside like red-tailed cannonballs. I ran until I felt a crack on the back and fell. A gigantic ball bashed my head between the eyes and I started floating in the watery air.

Already amazed to be gazing down on my crushed bloody cadaver, I was more astonished still when the boulders were pulled together as if by some incredible magnetic force. There was a curious clunking sound and there once again stood the stone figure, whole and still. In a swish of a wing it was gone and the mountainside from where it had come was full of its stone again.

I am writing from my afterlife which is beautiful and bright but a little lonely. As if sensitively planned by benevolent cosmic potters, sometimes I whizz around an infinite whirlpool of creamy white light with the sound of  Sly and the Family Stone filling the Universe. Each beat is accompanied by some shapely flash of colour – it’s lovely to behold! This reminded me to name my destroyer Sly as he (I see him as the father figure) clearly had his family up there on Blencathra, and they were evidently made of stone. I wonder where they came from, and what Daddy’s beef was with human beings climbing his mountain ?