It should have been an almost "magical" white, snowy white, solsticey, wonderland of a jaunt through Nature's winter splendor. Instead the smog of war blighted what the universe had become in the lens of humanity.
"Well. Can I at least vote?" Mink covered and draped in jewels asked.
"My dear, you are not a superpower." A neat and orderly attache in only a summer suit replied.
"Who is next?"
Hands went up as if it was an auction. Wrists dangling golds. Fingers beaming reflections of the chandelier, partly uncovered, and plummed with candles. Jet fuel smells filled the air. "Next for what?" Someone asked in Swiss and then several people translated the question into four or five languages.
"It is," a man screwed the cap back onto a flask, "An exercise to know our place in the scheme," hiccup, "Of things."
"We are taking turns witnessing history in the making," another person said. Small squares had been cut in plywood and covered in muslin to capture the progression of pollution climbing the mountain. These were already blackened and made perfect little frames for viewing progress in a standoff. There were note-takers recording impressions.
Three world leaders in heaps of coat trapsing around in a thigh high drift. Scaling a rudimentary ladder into a "tea house".
"Any more thoughts?"
"Only one believes in my God. I will stick with him even if this really is the end." Coughing from the roomful of at-large and etcetera people prompted a meter read of pollution and temperature. Not good, was the prognosis.