(To the real Mishael who created the ember that brought this story to life. I never want anyone to feel they are 'just' a reader to me.)
*Flakes fall, snow conceals, ice melts and what was lost is found*
(Mishael)
Mishael drove her Jeep to the end of the old fire road and let it coast to a stop in the light snow.
"From here we walk Trooper," she grinned at her search partner. Alaskan State Trooper Philadelphia "Philly" Petrakis gave a rather business-like nod and slipped out the passenger side door. Mishael studied her as she left, trying to get a better understanding of the relative newcomer.
Mishael was in her own way new to the region; she was born and raised in Fairbanks Alaska so she was as native-born as anyone else in Tok. She had moved from the 'Big City' to Tok seven years ago when she was still eighteen. She had started out with a small cyber cafΓ© then added a package delivery service and lastly, lovingly a combination book store and lending library.
In the high society of the population: 1900 Tok that made her a trailblazing entrepreneur. One customer had a few months back scared the crap out of her β they suggested to a third party that Mishael might be a good candidate for Mayor! Her blind freaking-scared reaction had been to dump her cappuccino machine on their head β she simply couldn't think of a good enough cover story to explain her tossing that monster twenty feet across the room.
Her only 'problem' was with her relationships. She had an airtight, two year relationship with her best friend Callie in High School. Callie had never doubted who she was and wasn't afraid to run right at any problem β it was patently un-Alaskan to her to do otherwise. After month of college in Tampa Bay, Florida and Callie told her she'd met someone else and she wasn't going to lie to Mishael about her feelings.
Mishael had been hurt; still she wished her best friend all the best and meant it. She had left Fairbanks though not run away from her old life, but opened up a new chapter in it. Inside a year she had met somebody, young and energetic, but things hadn't worked out and they'd both moved on. In fact, she had coasted in and out of affairs and not worried about where that would end up β until now.
Philadelphia Petrakis had felt different from the first time the new State Trooper had shown up at her business' door. The woman had felt like an 'old soul' and her eyes didn't look over the room, her gaze stalked it. More so; when Mishael greeted her, the woman had weighed her and found Mishael 'interesting' but also 'someone looking for the 'new'', not the 'life changing' next step'. That was a challenge Mishael couldn't ignore.
Over the past few weeks, Mishael found herself stumped. Philly was polite and kind but hardly enraptured with the best girl in town. Nor was Philly damaged goods; mangled by some prior relationship or limping along directionless. Philly simply was not ready and grudgingly Mishael had accepted that for the present.
(Philadelphia)
Philly Petrakis hated this mission for multiple reasons that had nothing to do with her current guide. She was unhappy because this assignment was giving her heartburn β the kind that came from trusting your gut over what you were told. In mid-December a small twin-engine plane had tried to make it over the Alaskan Range, become iced-up and crashed somewhere on the eastern slopes.
Twenty-two years as a Federal Marshal told her there was something plain wrong. To Philly, Alaskans were clearly nuts, taking risks on a daily basis that saner people would balk at β but then if they didn't take those risks the jobs would never get done. This flight had gone way beyond Alaskan crazy β lives weren't at stake, so why take the chance when the weather would clear up for a spell in 24 hours?
"Ms. Childers," Philly got her guide's attention. "I suggest you take some sort of firearm."
"Is this still a rescue mission?" Mishael arched an eyebrow β an affectation lost beneath her toboggan. "Also, since the two of us are going to be sharing a theoretical 2-women tent you can call me Mishael."
"Call me Philly," the Trooper smiled somewhat grimly. "This is still a rescue mission but..."
"I trust you Philly," Mishael pulled out her compound bow and double checked it, "What has you worried?"
"Plane flying in a snowstorm BEFORE four days of clear weather is going to break; the transponder failing and we have six people registered on the flight but the May Day report says there seven. What's not to love?"
"Check that," Mishael agreed; "eighteen of my best arrows and my Grizzly Bear skinning knife."
"You've skinned a Brown Bear?" Philly made one last check of her pack and sleeping bag.
"No, but my main knife is a Swiss Army multi-tool and I don't want my other blade to feel inadequate," Mishael smiled to herself as she put a cover over her bow and arrow set.
"Is this going to be another quaint colloquialism I'm going to have get used to β you natives talking to your weapons and giving them nicknames?" Philly faux-scowled at Mishael.
"Talking to your weapon is a polite way of saying 'come, sit down and get acquainted'," Mishael bantered back, glad to see Philly beyond the usual monosyllabic response. "Now when we start speaking with ourselves and losing the argument then be on your guard."
"Duly noted," Philly snorted. "If you have finished being down-right loquacious, let's head up toward grid D-5 coordinate which is somewhere," she pointed, "up there."
"Got it Kemosabe," Mishael was happy that Philly was also finally relaxing her official exterior. They re-established their outdoorsmen calm for over thirty minutes when Mishael cracked ever so slightly.
"Loquacious? Did you get that from your 'Word of the Day' calendar or was that your Criminal Justice degree from USC?" Philly found herself being taunted.
"No; I used to take a thesaurus on stake-outs when I was with the US Marshal's Service," Philly replied after a moment. "We would pick a word and the other person had a minute to find a way to use it in a sentence."
"Wow that sounds - boring," Mishael muttered absently.
"Oh, it is," Philly chuckled. "Unfortunately it is harder to do crossword puzzles and keep watch on the location we were sitting on."
"I don't think I could do that," Mishael confessed. "I have to keep busy β all of this nervous energy."
"It isn't for everything but you could do it." Philly assessed her companion, "You learn to do it just like you learn to make a good cappuccino if you keep at it."
"Oh," Mishael grinned secretly (she was in the lead after all). "You like my cappuccino?"