Kalliope 2015 | Page 56

smell?” Leaping into the little pool, we raced up the rock steps, which, in hindsight, was pretty dangerous, but what does youth care? We piled in under the waterfall, letting the cold cascade refresh our bodies. It was actually incredibly cold, to the point that we could only bear it when the clouds let the sun through. But we enjoyed it anyway and I have to admit, we did smell a little better afterwards. That night, after we had made camp and replaced our soaked clothes with dry, wooly layers, we settled for dinner. This was the first night that we could build a fire, so of course I got started on it. Morgan handed me a flint and steel and let me do my thing. I have to toot my own horn a little… I was the fire champion. Within a few minutes I had a pot of river water boiled atop my glorious (small) fire. Lex’s eyes suddenly lit up. “Dude! Do me too! Where’d you get that?” I responded in confusion, “What are you talking about?” I finally realized that she was talking about the black smears of soot on my face. I had done it by accident, but apparently it looked like war paint. There was only one thing to do. I used the cooking pot as a palette for my ashen paint and decorated each of my companions with savage markings. My mind drifted back to Into The Wild as my fingers swiped at the soot. I thought of the end of the book, when Chris, the lone hitchhiker, wrote that happiness was not real unless it was shared, a feeling he would not have admitted to earlier in his travels. I thought of the soulful connections that had grown among my fellow adventurers. I thought of the warmth in their smiles and the trust in their eyes. That night we danced and howled at the pitch sky above us using the fire for energy and the pot for music. Our spirits leapt about until the wee hours of the night. Nature had acknowledged and received us and we celebrated. The following morning, we traced the river some ways and heaved ourselves up and around a few tight switchbacks to the crest of the ridge near where we had started. Every hundred feet or so we would get glimpses of the valley through holes in the thick canopy. We could tell we were getting near the top and the end. At last, we cleared the thicker forest and found ourselves atop a cliff across the grand valley from Lion’s Head. We gathered at the edge to survey the long journey’s path. We were so meager. Standing on that peak, looking out over the expanse on each side, I realized how trivial we were to that mountain, to the trees in the valley, to the ceaseless rivers. I was such a small, irrelevant 56