"HE'S GONE!" I YELLED. "Valeri just fell! He pitched!" I cried out again, "He's gone!" No one moved or said anything. Oleg climbed up to the slab and looked down the west face for his father's body. I left Brittany's side and scrambled up alongside Oleg to lean over the edge. Thirty feet below, Valeri was jammed perpendicular in the wide chimney, facing upward coffin style. He moaned as he freed himself and chimneyed back up. The shin of his right pant leg was blotched with blood. Valeri kindly brushed Brittany off, motioning that he was fine. He wasn't. Valeri might be a battle-toughened Stolbist, but he was also a sixty-five-year-old man fazed and wobbly from a thirty-foot fall. Dark clouds stormed across the taiga and the ancient trees swayed in the gusty wind. I looked down to figure out our descent: an easy ramp and ledge system. "This is enough," Brittany fired at me. "This isn't worth it! If you fall and die, I'm going to be so fucking pissed! Don't be stupid!" Valeri, Oleg and Mikhail watched with amused silence. Oleg climbed up here often with his wife, Katia, pointing out holds and ushering her along. Neither seemed stressed. In fact, no one we saw climbing, alone or with a loved one, seemed stressed. In the end, Brittany and I calmed down, and she agreed that the move was easy enough for us. Burcham watched us go first, measuring the difficulty, and then, satisfied that the short slab to the summit wasn't too hard, followed us up, wearing his bulky camera pack. Even Valeri climbed the slab, though this time Oleg employed the Stolby "hand-ledge" technique on his father's foot at the crux to ensure he didn't slip again. On die summit, Valeri told us that had been "only the second time" he'd ever fallen in his half-century of free soloing at Stolby.
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