Scent Marked:
A biologist learns her true power on the trail of the snow leopard
My heartfelt thanks to mollycactus and Brittni4u for their generosity in reading and editing this story.
Chapter 1
"Fucking bollocks!" I uttered softly as I watched the large chunk of ice break away from the cliff where my axe had struck it, trying to give myself an anchor on which to grab hold. 'It's likely going to fall right on top of me, and bash in my bloody skull,' I thought as I felt my body also in free fall, just below and underneath the breakaway chunks of ice. Time seemed to slow as I watched a snow drift right above where the ice broke off begin to fall as well - a small, beautiful tsunami of rolling white powder set against the backdrop of a clear blue sky. 'This won't end well,' is the last complete thought I had before crashing into the icy bank below. I tried to quickly turn my head in the split second before the rest of the mini-avalanche took my face off but I was too slow. I knew trying to conquer this mountain was a bad idea...
It took the rest of my crew five minutes to climb down to me, another five minutes to dig me out. I came to a few minutes before they reached me, and those were the scariest 3-4 minutes of my life. And the bloody coldest! By the time they got to me, I was a shivering mess from both panic and the freezing temperature.
"Priya! Priya! Are you ok?" they all asked me urgently. I tried to answer, but I couldn't stop shaking. My face was wet and cold. I tried to wipe away the moisture and pulled away a wet red hand. I tried to stand up and felt woozy, almost fainting as my brain tried to shield me from the red hot flash of searing pain shooting up my nerves from below my right knee. I looked down to see my right foot grotesquely twisted to the side. If Greg and Elias hadn't been there to hold me up, I would have fallen again.
Further panic set in. This could be the death knell for our trip. If I can't hike and continue to climb, they would have to call for an emergency airlift out of there. All my planning, all the hard work I put into making this a possibility, and all the blood, sweat and frozen toes I put in to making it this far... down the drain.
I tentatively put a little weight on my foot to assess the seriousness of the situation. To my great relief it wasn't broken, but I suspected the sprain was really severe yet a rush of adrenaline was keeping me from experiencing the full brunt of the pain. I was going to need it wrapped soon or it would likely swell up. The only problem was that we were in no position to take off my boot and try to wrap my foot. It was too cold, and my foot would freeze too quickly. It needed to take place inside of a properly warmed tent. Somehow, I would have to keep going.
"I think I'm ok to make it to the next camp," I told them, trying to sound confident.
Ever perceptive, Sonam (our lead sherpa) saw the look on my face but didn't ask me about it right away while the others all fussed over me and continued asking if I was alright. I indicated that I was fine, the gash on my head a minor cut, and that if we kept hiking I'd likely warm up a bit. We had about another hour to go until we reached the camp site and we needed to hurry if we wanted to get there before darkness set in. We were all acutely aware of that, so the others congratulated me on cheating death, wrapped a bandage around my head, and then we set forth.
As we continued on I was determined that I could brave it and make it to camp, but something must have registered on my face because soon Elias stopped me and pulled me to the side. I was still shivering, perhaps even worse than before.
"Your face is turning blue," he observed, "and you make a slight grimace every time you put weight on your right foot."
"I'll be fine," I retorted.
"Elias is right," Sonam chimed in. "Priya," he began hesitantly, "I know you're brave, and I know you're tough, but if we don't get you warmed up and get that ankle looked at, you are going to be no good tomorrow, and this trip will be over for you."
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Out of all the things I'd ever done to prove myself just as smart and capable as the next biologist, this had to be the craziest. Some parts of our planet are so brutal that any animal that can merely survive in those areas achieves almost mythical status. When an animal actually thrives in those areas, it becomes legendary. As an evolutionary biologist who studies big cats, I was teaming up with a small band of scientists and an international film crew to make an attempt to find one such creature that lives in the peaks looming over us, the same peaks that had claimed the lives of countless persons who were foolish enough to try and tame its summit. The mountains are the highest and the most hostile in the world: the Himalayas. Towering above India's northern borders, the Himalaya's are where one searches for the Holy Grail to a big cat biologist: the