blindness.
The helicopter pilot took off, leaving Jack, Storm, Digger and Scarlet behind.
Jack scanned his surroundings. Now he understood why mountaineers called the Western Cwm the âValley of Silenceâ. It was deathly quiet. There was no breeze, no birds, and no life. In the absence of wind, it was also blazing hot.
Jack looked at the temperature on his Watch Phone. It was 95°F. He shifted the temperature control setting on his Polar Parka from âwarmâ to âcoolâ. It certainly wasnât what he was expecting on Everest.
Flicking a switch on the side of his Snow Shades, Jack tried to locate the plane. Like the Google Goggles, the GPF Snow Shades had a zooming feature. Except for a crevasse followed by an ice boulder, there was nothing in sight.
âI wonder where it is,â said Jack. âPlanes donât just disappear.â
âThey do if someone wants them to,â said Scarlet.
âDo you think it was planned?â asked Storm.
âMaybe,â said Scarlet. âAfter all, they were carrying precious cargo. If the Russians are after it, maybe theyâre the ones who brought it down.â
Jack hadnât thought of that before. Heâd assumed that the plane had accidentally crashed. If someone wanted to get their hands on the skull, this was the perfect way to do it. Make the plane disappear, and take off with the cargo when nobody was watching.
âDo you think itâs real?â asked Digger.
âThe Yeti?â said Storm, shrugging his shoulders. âPeople have taken photos of weird footprints. Others swear to having seen an ape-like creature as high as 19,000 feet.â
Jack stared into the distance. They were about that altitude now. He wondered whether there was a Yeti lurking somewhere on the mountain, watching them.
Not wasting any time, Scarlet grabbed a small H-shaped frame from her Book Bag and began to lengthen the ends. After a minute sheâd created a sturdy aluminium ladder. âThe planeâs probably on the other side of this crevasse,â she said, pointing to the huge crack in the ice ahead.
Scarlet walked up to the edge of the hole and lowered the ladder over the crevasse. Now it was touching the other side of the chasm. Fastening the ends of the ladder to the ground with ice stakes, Scarlet tied a rope to the first rung.
âLetâs go for it,â she said.
Scarlet went first. With steady legs, she stepped on each rung, careful not to fall or drop the rope. When she got to the other side, she tied the rope to the top of the ladder, and used two more ice stakes to fasten it to the ice. Thanks to Scarlet, the others had a makeshift handrail they could hold onto when they crossed the bridge.
Next it was Jackâs turn. He put his foot on the ladder.
CLINK .
The crampons made a loud noise against the rung. He took another step.
CLINK .
Jack was really sweating now, not only because it was hot, but also because of what was below: a huge vertical drop between two gigantic slabs of ice. As he looked down, he noticed that the color of the ice changed from white at the top to dark blue at the bottom. As wacky as it sounded, Jack thought this crevasse was one of the most beautiful heâd ever seen.
Jack had been over several crevasses before. In fact, when he visited Mount McKinley in America, heâd learned how to rescue people whoâd fallen down one. Recently, a climber in Europe had died when he fell down a crevasse and his partner was unable to save him.
Carefully, Jack continued to walk along the ladder until he reached the other side.
Storm was next. He made it across without a problem. The only one left was Digger. As soon as he put his foot out, however, Jack knew that something was wrong. Diggerâs leg was shaking with nerves.
âItâll be all right, Digger!â shouted Jack.
But when the boy tried to step on the second rung, he slipped. His safety rope was pulled
Terri L. Austin, Lyndee Walker, Larissa Reinhart