"A sense of adventure is one thing. You could go scuba diving in the Keys or zip lining in Costa Rica. Moving to Alaska is...insane! Somewhere along the way you must have seen episodes from the '90s TV show, Northern Exposure. You know, the Jewish doctor from New York who goes to Alaska to pay back the state for paying his medical school tuition and ends up in a one horse town above the Arctic Circle freezing his tushy off? No, make that a one-caribou town!"
"Yes, I saw the show and no, I'm not Joel Fleischman or even Maggie O'Connell. First of all, there was no Cicely, Alaska. It was all filmed in Washington State. Second, I'm not going to a one-horse town, I'm going to Fairbanks, the second largest city in Alaska. No, it's not New York or Los Angeles, but it's not exactly Booger Hollow, either. It's...it's an adventure."
Her sister sighed then tried another angle. "Lindsay? Do you know how cold it gets up there? Do you? How about 75 degrees below zero cold! Are you listening?"
"Oh, stop! That's an extreme example. It's more like 15 to 25 below and it gets up into the 80s in the summer. Like I said, it's an..."
"Don't say the word 'adventure' one more time. Just don't, okay? If you want to throw away two years of your life and live in darkness for months on end, you go right ahead and..."
"Agh! The shortest day of the year still has almost four hours of sunlight so stop exaggerating, would you?"
"Oh! Four whole hours? Well excuse me! I had no idea there was that much daylight!" her sister Maya said with complete exasperation. She sat there just staring at her sister who'd also been her best friend her whole life and said, "I'm not gonna talk you out of this, am I?"
"You could come with me," she told her using a very different tone of voice. "They need teachers and you're certified just like me."
"Is this about Richard? If it is, you know you don't have to fly to the North Pole to get over him, right? You can do that just fine right here in Denver, Lindsay."
"No, it's not about Richard. I'm over him. If you choose not to believe me, there's nothing I can do about that. Obviously, if things had worked out, I wouldn't even consider leaving. But they didn't...and I am. Maya, why don't you come with me? Come on, it'll be fun. Let's do this together. You and me. Me and you. What do you say?"
Maya made a face but deep down she already knew what she'd do. She wanted her older sister to be happy, and she couldn't bear the thought of being without her. The only time they'd ever really been apart was when Lindsay went to college but she wasn't very far from their home home just outside of Denver and they saw each other nearly every weekend. Two years later, Maya joined her and the dynamic duo was back together until Lindsay graduated and then again, they still saw each other quite often.
Except for when Richard was monopolizing her time. The 35-year old, stuffy, stick-in-the mud boyfriend Maya prayed wouldn't become her brother in law. Lindsay was hurt when she finally realized that 'comfortable' was a death sentence if love wasn't involved but to her credit, she'd done the right thing and called it off.
"Come on! What do you say?" Lindsay said keeping up the pressure. "It gets cold here in Denver so it's not like you're not used to it. A little less sunlight will be different, but this really is an..." She almost said the 'A' word and stopped. "An...opportunity. Alaska will pay off what student loans you haveβand you didn't have that many and it'll give each of us our own apartment and a stipend on top of our salaries. Then we come home with a bunch of money in the bank and we can tell everyone we lived in freaking Alaska!"
"Well, at least you got one thing right," Maya said before giving in. "Freaking Alaska."
Lindsay's excitement was infectious and Maya really had been thinking about. A lot. But then, it was...Alaska for crying out loud! Maya was a city girl. She loved to shop, party, and meet guys. Lots of guys. Lots of very cute, young guys. And that was the one area where she and her sister parted company.
No, they weren't twins, but the resemblance was so strong they'd been mistaken for twins many times. Both of them were very attractive young women with their long, silky, raven hair and blue eyes and those amazing smiles. Both were 5'7" and while Maya was 118 pounds, Lindsay weighed a whole two pounds more. As perfect size 6s with very nice-looking C-cup breasts, they were quite the package and more than a few guys had fantasized about the possibility of being with the two of them together. Maya might even be willing to give something like a whirl, but Lindsay? Never in a million years.
So as much as Lindsay was the one talking up the adventure aspect, she was the one who was the typical older sibling who was quiet to the point of being shy who rarely dated. It wasn't for a lack of interested guys. She'd been hit on regularly in high school and hounded the entire four years she was in college. She was just very selective and when she did date, it tended to be with guys who were either older or very mature for their age. Or from Maya's perspective, Lindsay dated guys who were bor-ring!
"The deadline is next week. If you're not approved by then..." Lindsay began.
"I know. I know. You'll leave without me," Maya said, her voice showing something between pouting and sadness.
Lindsay moved to over next to her and said, "Think how much fun it would be to have our own place and hang out together!"
"Yeah, but there's like, what? Maybe ten people in Fairbanks?"
"Agh!! You and your exaggerations! There are over 30,000 people and that doesn't include the Air Force Base. You know, with all those hot, young guys. Hot, young, lonely guys." Lindsay was saying it in the way she knew drove her little sister crazy, but it was working.
"All those hours of darkness where you'll need someone to hold and keep you warm and..."
"Okay. Okay! I'll go with you!" she said.
Lindsay threw her hands over her mouth and said, "Oh, my God! Are you serious? You're really coming with me?"
Maya looked at her and although she tried to make it sound like she was only doing this for Lindsay's benefit, her sister knew she'd won her over.
"Yes, I'll go with you," Maya said. "But if I don't meet a ton of these hot, young guys, Air Force or not, you are in SO much trouble!"
"I'll set you up all the time!" Lindsay promised pulling Maya off the bed and doing a kind of silly, happy-dance with her. "Oh, we're gonna have SO much fun!"
"Fun. Right. At 75 below zero during weeks of endless darkness with the other ten people dumb enough to live there. I won't be surprised if they're all fat, toothless Eskimos. So...oh, goody. I can't wait," she said as sarcastically as she could. Finally, she softened and said, "You know I'd die if you left me for two years."
Maya saw tears in her sister's eyes just before she hugged her. "Me too, Maya," she told Maya. "Me, too."
Maya electronically sent in her application the next day and within 48 hours she was approved. They had two weeks left to say goodbye to family and friends before flying first class from Denver to Anchorage and then on to Fairbanks where their sponsor would meet them.
"Hey! Look at these apartments," Maya said as she did some on-line research. "Some of these are really nice!"
"What did I tell you?" Lindsay said as though this was old hat to her. She'd done a little looking, but her heart wasn't into it until her sister had agreed to join her.
Both of them had guaranteed positions as elementary school teachers and they would both be working in the same school. Had that not worked out, it wouldn't have been a show stopper, but both of them would have been very disappointed.
Not two minutes later, Maya had switched gears. "Hey! Check out our principal." Maya flipped the screen of her laptop around and showed her sister. "He's a little too old for me, but he's kind of cute."
"Mr. Phillips. Hmmm. He is cute. But he's gotta be married, right?"
"Hey, we're just looking, right? Window shopping never hurt anyone," Maya said. "I wish they had pics of all of the faculty members. There has to be at least one hot guy teaching there, right?"
Lindsay laughed and said, "There are quite a few schools in town so even if our particular school is a dead end, there are plenty of others. Besides, how many men do you think teach elementary school anywhere let alone in Fairbanks, Alaska?"
"Um...you're not helping, you know," Maya said snidely but in a way Lindsay knew wasn't mean.