and walks stiff ly to the gate as his wife spoon-feeds himmashed potatoes. He touches the gate, kisses her, thenspeeds down the hill. Last year, both these runners madeit to the last loop but failed to finish. âItâs like hangingfrom a ledge by your fingernails â it hurts so bad, but youcanât let go,â says Laz.At 6:45am, it starts to rain heavily. Kelly didnât takeany rain gear. The morning creeps by.âOne hour!â Laz shouts at 12:42pm.The rain eases up.âForty-five minutes!âStill no sign of Robbins or Kelly.Laz is just about to call out 30 minutes when a cry comesfrom down the hill. A deathly pale figure is jogging up, aplastic bag wrapped around his shoulders. Itâs Kelly! Thecrowd breaks into cheers, and as he runs in and lays bothhands on the gate, his usually impassive face breaks into asobbing grimace. Laz wipes something tear-like from hiseye and counts the pages. Theyâre all there. John Kelly isthe 15th finisher of the Barkley Marathons.There is no prize money for Kelly. There is no medal.But as Laz says, âThose who know what you did knowthat you did it.âAfter getting to the last book, Kelly says he checkedhis watch and saw one hour and 45 minutes left. Plenty oftime, he thought. He checked again, but now it read onehour and 20 minutes; he had passed out on his feet. In apanic, he realised he had to run not only to get back intime, but also to make sure he wouldnât fall asleep again.When I speak to Kelly a week later, he is still sufferingthe dreaded Barkley hangover. âItâs like every physicalailment Iâve ever had all at once,â he says. Heâs proud,but pretty sure he wonât be running it again. âIâd had thisgrand vision that Iâd get my final page and Iâd enjoy themoment and look down over my daddyâs farm. In reality,IgotmypageanditwasfoggyandIwassofargoneIcouldnâtseeathing.âAt the gate, thereâs still no sign of Robbins. âFifteenminutes!â shouts Laz. Runners go up the hill in thedirection Robbins is expected, to cheer him along.âFive minutes!â shouts Laz. Robbinsâ wife appearsdistraught.âOne minute!â Everyone is looking up the hill when asound comes from the other direction. Itâs Robbins! Heâssprinting up to the gate â but from the wrong direction.Heâs drenched to the bone and throws himself at the gatebefore collapsing to the ground.âI got all my pages!â he cries.âHe got all his pages,â repeats a voice in the crowd.âHe got all his pages.âLazlooksathiswatch.Itreads60:00:06.Robbinsissix seconds too late.Stilllyingontheground,Robbinsgaspsthathefoundthe last book 3km from the end, but he took a wrong turn.He thought if he could get back to the gate in time...Laz shakes his head; Robbins went off course. Forall his effort, heâs just another DNF. Even veterans areteary-eyed. The week after the race, Robbins will receiveseveral emails that heâll describe as âwonderful andappreciatedâ, signed Gary Cantrell, not Lazarus Lake.For now, Laz gives Robbins a hug, and the notes of âTapsâbegin. Unlike the previous 38 renditions, this time itsounds genuinely forlorn.``````âAt theend of therace, GaryRobbins liesbroken ashis wife criesover him``````âJohn Kellytouches theyellow gateto completehis fifth lap,becomingthe 15thperson everto finishBarkley.``````JULY 2018 RUNNERâS WORLD 63
jacob rumans
(Jacob Rumans)
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