"Elena, over here!" echoed the voice of the expedition leader, eerily muted and bodiless in the morning fog.
I stumbled and cursed as I tried to climb the muddy berm. The newly sprouted foliage had not yet had the time to cover the exposed earth, making the terrain treacherous. My university-provided boots were clearly substandard for this type of work. I crested the hill and called out into the fog, "What is it?"
"I think we found something you're going to want to see," came Dr. David Jankowski's reply.
More cursing followed a sideways slide down another muddy berm. My jeans were now more dirt than denim at this point. I followed the disembodied sounds of my fellow scientists, tromping through a stream bed that had not seen the light of day in more than twenty-thousand years. A few more steps and the gaping maw of a massive cave opening loomed before me.
"In there?" I asked, faintly.
"Yeah, stay in the stream bed and follow it up," David's voice beckoned.
I regarded the cave opening with equal parts disfavor and growing curiosity. It yawned before me, the only notable feature of the granite cliff face that defined this side of the valley they were currently exploring.
The valley itself was a new addition to the landscape, a byproduct of the retreating glaciers in the area. Up until last year, this entire region had been blanketed under hundreds of feet of ice. This particular valley was an anomaly, in that the exit was a narrow gorge that prevented any outflow of ice. In effect, the valley had been under the same unmoving glacier for longer than human civilization had existed. It was prime real estate for anthropologists looking for remnants of early humans in the area; Doubly so for one Elena Murakuma, aspiring Cryo-archeologist, looking to test her experimental low-temperature decrystallization device at the lab and provide the necessary fodder for her academic dissertation. A dissertation which, if accepted by the academic community, would complete her doctorate. A doctorate was respect, possibly funding from the university as well as a shot at her own lab. A real one, not the extra space she leeched off of the rear-office of David's research division.
Dr. Murakuma.
It had a nice ring to it. I especially wanted to hear Dr. Schneider say it. All six delicious syllables coming out of that prudish, disapproving mouth.
For that I needed samples and the the only way to get those was out in the bush. Normally this was the kind of grunt work that undergrads were good for, but there was a real dearth of undergrads willing to go into northern Canada by prop plane and haul heavy refrigeration equipment into the wilds of the Taiga.
All of which brought me back to the reality of standing ankle-deep in glacial runoff, staring at a cave that was half ice, half stone and all dangerous. I slogged forward and began to climb the rocks at the base of the opening, quickly getting drenched in the process. After a few minutes, I managed to wriggle over a small ledge and stoop to enter the cave proper. I ducked down a narrow passage, smooth blue ice overhead and the crunch of stream bed gravel beneath. After a minute, I rounded a curve and entered a much larger chamber.
I was greeted by the sight of both team leaders, Dr. Jankowski and Dr. Schneider standing side by side, lanterns on max. They stared at the rimed ice before them. Anna and Jenna, the only others to join the expedition were efficiently setting up a series of lamps as well as unpacking the thermal insulation they would need to carry artifacts without destructive uncontrolled thawing. There was only one reason to unpack that kind of equipment. They'd found something.
"What is it, David-" I said.
"Dr. Jankowski," Miriam corrected frostily.
"Ahem-Dr. Jankowski," I amended hastily.
David started out of his trance and glanced back at me. "Oh, Murakuma. Yes, you are going to be quite interested in this find. What a stroke of luck. Unparalleled preservation and right up your alley, what with the find still being encased in ice." He scratched his temple absently before adjusting his glasses before murmuring, "And didn't I mention it before? Just call me David."
I opened my mouth and Miriam shot me a glare of pure malice. I shut it with an audible click.
The two post-grads stifled a chuckle at the familiar byplay. I scowled at them and they quickly went back to unpacking. Jenna held up a thermal laser cutter and fiddled with it, adjusting the calibration. Anna returned to hanging the site lantern, what would be our main source of illumination in the darkness.
Unwilling to subject myself to any additional abuse, I stepped forward to look at the ice wall as well. The surface was smooth and wavy. It had been melted by flowing water, the same which was even now sloshing over my boots and numbing my toes. I grabbed my little field flashlight from my belt-clip and shined it over the wall.
There wasn't much power behind the beam but I was able to discern a shape behind the ice. I squinted, playing the beam over it again. The dark form was fairly large, possibly the size of a very large dog. Whatever it was , it was solidly encased and several feet from the surface. I blew my breath out in frustration. "I can't see what it is."
"Hmph," muttered Dr. Schneider. "You would have missed it for sure. Good thing you tagged along-"
"Now Miriam," David interrupted gently. "Let her have a look at it. I'm quite interested in her opinion. Once we get some light in here, that is."
As if on queue, Anna finished with the site lantern and turned it on. The bright glow provided twenty times the illumination of my flashlight and suddenly, I forgot all about Miriam and her needling.
Deep in the ice, a human face stared back at me. It was a woman, tiny as most were back then, eyes sightless, dark and