This story stands alone, but follows on from Under the Ice, which finishes as Hannah spots a friend she's missed for too long. Their lives touched briefly once before but finally Kay and Hannah can meet in better circumstances.
Hannah turned to the students, who looked to her expectantly. She was never very good at speaking off the cuff and hadn't anticipated this meeting. What completely threw her concentration was a familiar face smiling back at her. Karolina!
Hannah cleared her throat and behind her back, dug a fingernail into her thumb to suppress her nerves.
"Hello everyone. I'm Dr Hannah Turner, one of your course supervisors. I know that our Danish hosts here at the NRI in Greenland will do everything they can make you feel welcome and provide you with practical assistance to your field work. I must apologise that I'm only here for twenty-four hours, so come and see me down the hall this morning if you have any pressing questions. That's in room P17, Oscar?"
Hannah queried her liaison officer, who acknowledged her question with a nod.
"I'll leave you to your safety briefing. I know it might seem unnecessary but it might save your life, so stay focused. Good luck with your projects -- I know how important they are to you, so please copy me in to your results. Thank you."
The students turned back to re-packing orange emergency shelters but in the crowd, Hannah lost sight of Karolina.
Karolina was a final year student, originally from Poland. They had first met two years earlier on a research yacht in the UK. The sailing adventure had turned into a nightmare when Hannah's boyfriend dumped her, but Karolina had offered an olive branch of friendship. But the timing was wrong, Hannah felt unable to take things any further with Kay, so they'd parted amicably. She often wondered if they'd meet again.
Hannah followed Oscar back to his spacious office with its panoramic views over the icy fjord and harbour of the capital, Nuuk. Hannah had arrived in the harbour by ferry the previous day and knew how cold the wind blew across its Arctic water, etching patterns across its inky surface. The memory made her shiver, despite the warmth of the office. She vowed to never complain about the weather in the UK again.
Professor Oscar Poulsen was a man in his fifties with thinning hair and pale eyes that seemed permanently worried behind owl like glasses. He enjoyed hosting researchers from round the world, but Hannah was a favourite, with her ability to switch easily from serious study to quips and humour. She was good company. Her long legs and blonde curls weren't above his attention either, though seeing her slim figure and exuberant energy made him wistful for his younger days.
The professor offered Hannah space at his table where she could enter the new field data on her laptop. In addition to enjoying arduous fieldwork she had a talent for seeing patterns amongst numbers, spotting trends and drawing conclusions that others overlooked. Her trip to gather ice samples at a remote outpost had been cut short by bad weather, but unknown to Oscar, Hannah and her Danish guide, Noah, had hit things off very well.
Noah was a great bear of a man who treated her as his equal, which she'd found refreshing. A smile crept over her face as she recalled Noah's dry wit and dead pan delivery. She'd allayed his scepticism of scatter-brained academics by demonstrating her practical skills. Despite his tetchiness, on better acquaintance she found him pretty irresistible. Maybe it was the subtle vulnerabilities of a strong man that appealed to her or maybe it was their isolation. Either way, Noah was a true gentleman and a passionate ogre in bed.
Whatever it had been, it was distracting from her work. She realised she was staring at the distant mountains, kissed orange by the sun in contrast to the blues of the shadows. Hannah chased the memory away and turned back to her data.
After an undisturbed hour Oscar suggested they break for lunch.
"It seems as though your students have no use for you, Hannah." Oscar chuckled.
"Maybe they're frightened of me," Hannah replied, stretching out a crick in her back and standing to join him at the door. "I've been told I can be intimidating."
"Pfft -- I find that hard to believe, Hannah. You're strong in your science, not your opinions."
"Thanks Oscar. Are they staying nearby? There's a student I know from another trip. I was hoping to catch up with her."
"They're being put up in the bunkroom here in the centre. There's only twelve of them so they're all sharing the one room. It saves on heating, you know!"
"Oh well -- they won't want me cramping their style. I'll be relying on your suggestions for a final night in Nuuk," Hannah sighed in reply.
"Oh, you mean nookie in Nuuk, Hannah? That can be arranged!" Oscar snorted at his own bad pun.
"Oscar! I'm shocked." Hannah laughed with him. "Come on, let's try the canteen for now."
As Oscar and Hannah enjoyed a light lunch together, a lone figure walked up the corridor to room P17. She looked through the glass panel and tried the door but found it locked.
"Come on, Kay. We're all taking a walk into town. Are you with us?" hollered an English student down the corridor to her.
"Okay, sure. I'll be there," Karolina called back. She looked at the note she had scribbled to Hannah and wrinkled her nose. She contemplated leaving it pinned to the door, but folded it into her pocket instead and hurried after the others as they left for the town in a boisterous group.
Oscar was a kind and generous host, but Hannah felt distracted. She only had a few hours left in Greenland and knew she ought to be making the most of the opportunity, but her long journey home the next day made her fret.
She was a person who needed order in her life, to have fall-back plans, to have memorised her flight number, its departure time, the gate number and she had memorised her passport number so that there was no room for unwelcome surprises.
Back in Oscar's office she was unable to settle and was only picking at her work. Under the table she ran her fingers over her thigh pocket to ensure her passport and ticket were still there. She had a printed ticket because she never trusted her phone with an electronic alternative. She actually had two print outs because she didn't trust her memory either.
Oscar sensed her discomfort and lounged back in his chair.
"Hannah? Why don't we take a walk up to Myggedalen point? I've been stuck in this office all week and it looks like it'll be a good sunset. There's a fantastic view over the town and harbour and up towards the mountains."
"Am I making it that obvious, Oscar? I don't feel able to concentrate because I'm only here for a few hours. It sounds a great idea. Is there anything else you need from me right now?"
"Really? No. Our people will upload the lab work over the next few days and you're only at the end of the phone. It's just number crunching now, isn't it? It would be a shame to miss out on a walk on your last day."