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Mike's
mood reflected the dismal weather as he lay in a hole, injured and
waiting for rescue.
Moor
lonely
Mike shivered. The weather was not cold for the time of year, but
he was wet through. He pulled the zip higher on the collar of his
fleece - a futile action because the fleece was as sodden as the
rest of his clothes. The grass, the mud, his boots and the rock
he was leaning against… everything that he could reach in this dreary
hole was completely soaked.
Drizzle. It doesn't hurt the body, but it depresses the soul. A
continuous watery hiss, which blows upwards, sideways and down.
Inescapable. The clinging mist confined Mike's senses as surely
as the injury imprisoned his body. He couldn't go anywhere or see
anything. His right ankle was fractured. At least, he assumed it
must be broken to have produced so much pain. His only comfort was
that the creeping coldness numbed the feeling in his leg, dulling
the agony. But not the pain in his mind.
How good he had felt, striding across the moor earlier in the day.
The burst of early spring sunshine encouraged such optimism that
he struck up a song as he walked (after checking that no one was
around to hear the performance). Gathering clouds scarcely dented
his elation until the drizzle began to fall, dampening a broad,
flat rock just enough to make it treacherous when he stepped on
it. He tried to get up when he fell, but the grass was slippery
and his leg wouldn't co-operate. He looked all around, but saw nothing.
He shouted for help, but no-one could hear him. He was in one of
Dartmoor's soggy hollows: quite shallow, but deep enough to hide
a man who was lying down. And the night was closing in. Other walkers
might have spotted him easily in daylight, if they came close enough,
but nobody would come here in the dark and in this weather.
Mike didn't bother to wipe the drips that were falling from his
chin and his nose. What point was there when everything about him
was already saturated? He wondered whether his bald head would be
warmer or colder in the damp air than in his woollen hat, but opted
to keep wearing the sodden headgear. Wetness ruled, quenching all
hope, and his hopelessness was reinforced by the monotonous noise
of the swishing rain, which drowned all other sounds. He knew there
must be a road nearby, but no traffic noise penetrated the muffling
curtain. He thought of his own car, just as lonely as he was, abandoned
in a National Trust car park where overnight parking was banned.
It was the car that alerted the police to his plight. An officer
shone his torch at the abandoned vehicle and noted the registration.
A number check identified that the car belonged to Mike's employers
and a call to the company's traffic office connected them to Bill
Johnson. It was lucky that Bill was on duty that night. A fellow
walker, Bill had joined Mike on several past outings, and he ventured
a guess at the route that his friend might have taken. The clatter
of helicopter rotors gradually differentiated themselves from the
fussing rainfall and Mike allowed himself a first flickering gleam
of hope.
His yellow rucksack reflected the searchlight beam as the chopper
homed in on its weary target. Mike marvelled at the skill of the
pilot, landing safely on a grassy mound, which was almost impossible
to see in the limited visibility. Cheery voices rekindled a smile
that had been washed away by the myriad rivulets, which trickled
down his neck, his back and his legs. The paramedics splinted Mike's
leg, lifted him out of the hole, half carried him across to the
helicopter and strapped him into a seat behind the pilot. They fitted
him with a helmet, complete with headset and microphone - Mike's
first dry clothing for five hours, and a welcome relief from the
incessant hiss of the drizzle. In the air, Plymouth's lights, though
dimmed by the mist, started to penetrate Mike's psyche and revive
his optimism. Dry clothes, warm blankets, hot tea and the ministrations
of cheerful nurses set in train a healing process that would have
Mike walking again in a couple of months.
©Derrick
Phillips
March 2000
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