BACK AT THE BASE, an old woman had just started to climb. She was clad in a heavily worn pair of knickers and a wool sweater, her hair pulled back in a tight bun. On her feet were the same odd rubber shoes that Teplyh was wearing, tied on using a cloth wrapping system very much like a ballerina slipper. The old woman flowed smoothly up the rock, years of tradition guiding each move¬ment. There was a beauty to her toughness, one weathered by sun and rock. I couldn't imagine her life. Nearby a horizontal crack ran 200 feet up Stolby One's sheer western flank, then traversed off a broad ledge for forty feet before curving upward to a small summit. I asked Valeri whether it had a name. He wiggled his fingers as if playing a piano. Valeri scrunched up his brow and called Oleg over for a quick, private discussion. Valeri walked me over to the base of the wall and showed me the boy's memorial plaque, a smaller version of Teplyh's, with his date of birth and death — it happened seven years ago. The boy was fourteen. Valeri then spread his fingers wide and dragged them downward as though scratching his nails on a chalkboard. He made a teeth-baring grimace through his white beard.
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