I made my first mistake when I volunteered to hike with Simon and Luke. Big Sur is a beautiful place, but it's wild. People tend to forget. With state-of-the-art gear and all the arrogant baggage that goes with 21st century conventional wisdom, we step out of our depth when we step into the wild.
I broke a leg a few years back. They pinned it, but it's never been the same. It's just in the past few months that I've felt confident enough to do any serious walking on it. So when Luke mentioned that they were going on a hike by Ventana wilderness, I asked to tag along--proving once again that there are no victims, only volunteers.
I brought my Camelback and CD player. The Camelback was a necessity, since some of the creel amd spring water is not potable. The CD was there in case Luke decided to start singing. He's a sweetheart, but he can't carry a tune in a bucket. He's especially fond of 50's pop music. Believe me, hearing Mockingbird Hill or Canadian Sunset five times in thirty minutes would frighten the condors into extinction.
My second mistake was expecting Simon to take my bum leg into consideration. You'd think we were trying to beat the rush hour hiking trail traffic. He's built like a bear, but he can move like a manic gazelle when the mood strikes him. I kept falling behind. Luke would stop and wait for me. We'd both have to holler at Simon to get him to slow down. It worked, occasionally.
We were halfway up the ridge by noon. The plan was to make the crest, stop for a picnic lunch and hike back down. But there's an old saying, men plan, the gods laugh. The Santa Lucias had caught the high fog and trapped it. The forest dripped and the sun shone milky and cold through the treetops. We'd dressed for warm weather. I'd worn my waterproof hiking boots, so I was better off than Luke in his Nikes and Simon in his designer walking sandals.
We came to a switch back. The trail split into a "Y". None of us had a map, and someone had defaced the trail head markers so that they were illegible. Luke shook his finger at the graffiti and Simon frowned.
"Now what, gentlemen?"
"How the hell should I know!"
"I thought you'd hiked here before, Sy."
He scowled.
"Not since they graded it after the fire."
Luke shrugged and shifted his day pack on his shoulders.
"Let's flip a coin."
Simon shot an evil glance at him.
"Let's not."
"Thanks for asking my advice, guys."
They both stared at me.
"We're all ears, Miss Marple."
I flipped Simon off and sat down on a rock by the signs.
"It just seems like we need to take the high road. Maybe it'll take us out of the fog."
Luke looked up suddenly.
"Do you hear that?"
"Hear what?"
"There was bird song all the way up until we hit the fog. It shouldn't be so quiet at midday."
Simon rolled his eyes.
"Mr. Audubon speaks."
"I'm serious."
"He's right, Sy. And this is summer. We should have passed other people on this path."
"Whatever. I'd say take the high road, but you've been limping for the past half hour."
"It's all right. I just need to take it easy. The damp aggravates the pin in my leg."
"Maybe we should have just gone to Point Lobos."
"Maybe we should have just gone to Point Lobos. Jeez, Luke, she knew this was a real hike. Didn't you Kay?"
I was remembering why I didn't spend much quality time with Sy.
"Why don't you two pick a path and go ahead. I'll catch up with you in a bit."
Simon grunted and adjusted his pack. Luke smiled halfheartedly.
"Let's take the high road. Do you have a watch, Kay?"
"Yeah."
Simon looked at his wristwatch.
"It's 12:20 now. If you don't catch up with us in 30 minutes, Luke will come looking for you. Do you have your cell phone with you?"
I pulled it out and flipped it open.
"No signal up here."
"Figures. Well, we'll see you in a bit."
Simon turned and started up the trail. Luke patted my shoulder and handed me a Cliff bar.
"Just in case you get hungry."
"Thanks."
"Toodles."
He trotted off after Simon, whistling Lazy Days of Summer--off-key, of course. I contemplated the Cliff bar and decided that I wasn't that hungry, not yet. I took a sip from my Camelback and shifted on the rock. The fog was getting denser and it was starting to mist.
I flexed my ankle and put off getting up for a few more minutes. Luke was right about the silence. There were usually scrub jays and woodpeckers this time of year. It was eerie. I stood up and stretched. The leg still ached, but I couldn't let them get too far ahead.
I started up the trail. I walked for about ten minutes when I came to another "Y" with defaced trail head posts. I groaned out loud and tried to find footprints. It was drizzling. Little rivulets of water had washed any tracks that might have been visible away. I looked at my pocket watch. It was 12:40. I wound it and put it away. Luke wouldn't come back for another ten minutes. There was no place to sit and wait. It was beginning to really rain.
I walked a few yards down the left fork. It ran toward a clearing that looked like it may have been burned out during the big fire a few seasons back. It was almost a perfect ring with a hollowed out redwood growing in the center. The trees formed a canopy around it. It looked drier than standing out in the rain waiting for Luke. I pulled an old receipt and a pen out of my jeans pocket and wrote a note for him. I set it under a rock on the trail head post and walked back to the clearing to wait.
I found a place to sit on a fallen log. The atmosphere was still and hushed, like some living cathedral. The mist was so thick that I couldn't see the trail from where I sat. I was able to put my leg up, which helped a bit. An owl hooted. It startled me a bit. It was the first sound I'd heard since we'd entered the woods at midmorning. I smiled and hooted back. I instantly realized that it was a mistake. The forest got even quieter than before. I fidgeted a bit.
"You shouldn't be alone out here, Miss."
I nearly fell off the log. A man stepped out of the mist. He was tall, lean and a little on the shaggy side. I'd never seen eyes that color of green before. They were nearly topaz. I stifled the urge to panic and stood up slowly.
"I'm not, actually. My friends will be along any minute."
"You don't sound too sure about that."
He grinned. He had perfect white teeth. He started to approach me. I shook my head and backed away a little. His expression softened. He held out his hands, palms up.
"I don't bite."
I laughed nervously.