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Persistently, the shadow\'s line approached until, finally, the rays of warmth attacked my shivering. Gripping the camera tightly, my poorly functioning fingers pressed hard on the shutter release to record the spectacular scene. Thirty-six hours earlier, the air at the park entrance - at 1500 metres - was refreshingly cool compared to the lower altitude tropical heat of Malaysia, and the dense jungle was absolutely green, green, green. Spirits were high and wits competed among us travellers who had ad-libbed into groups of eight to share the guide costs. We were unsure what to expect. The only first-hand report had come from a veteran of the odyssey who was back down the same afternoon as our arrival. Lying in his bed of our six-bed dorm, he chuckled and giggled, saying only, "It\'s hard ... but worth it." What does that mean? How hard is hard? Whaddaya mean "worth it?" To whom? How?
A lousy, frosty sleep ended at plus or minus 2:30; the protocol was to reach the summit for sunrise. A nearly full moon dominated the starry sky. The climb\'s final 1.5 to 2 kms., above the tree line, comprised flat, steep, colossal sheets of rock. Finally, the final peak point, km. 8.72 at 4101m. The temperature was 3C, the wind about 40km/h. I had on a t-shirt, cotton pants, acrylic sweater, plastic poncho, socks, and sandals. Other travellers garbed similar attire. Who knew what it was all about? My hands were swollen and frozen; feet soaked and more frozen; lips stinging, chapped, and bleeding. The hardy souls who needed to reach the peak waved. I still needed another 400 or so metres. Were we having a good time? Nyet. I took another jittery picture instead.
We laughed and limped our way to the bottom, last off the hill. A young, attractive damsel in distress convinced a valiant stalwart to carry her down the final remaining way and they nipped us at the finish line. A brooding driver in a waiting bus (hallucinations read "hearse") closed the door behind the mountain\'s final three victims, and we slunk into the seats like Rocky I after round 15. There ain\'t gonna be no rematch. At the park entrance, Anders roosted on a stone wall, looking fresh as a farm egg, and snickered: "My goodness, you Canadians are, how do you say, wimps?" Wimp would cover it. After 12 dead-to-the-world hours of sleep and a pleasant breakfast, we stood on the opposite sides of the highway, thumbing to our next destinations: east to Sandakan for my comrades and west to Kota Kinabalu for me. "Hey, here comes a truck! Get your thumbs out. They love Swedes in this country. Sorry, no brake lights. Losers!" "No one\'s lining up to take you! And there\'s only one of you. You\'re three times the loser!" After 10 minutes, a truck, loaded with pipe and then them, disappeared
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