Chicago, IllinoisMegan Maxwell pressed the first two fingers of herright hand firmly against the throbbing in her temple, as shepushed open one of the thick glass double doors that led fromthe World News Central newsroom to the executive offices. Assoon as the door whooshed shut, blissful quiet enveloped her,the first respite in a stressful and very long day. It was 7:15 p.m.and the management wing was dark, but for the light spillingout from under her office door at the end of the hallway.She made it halfway there before the BlackBerry on her left hip vibrated.Sighing, she reached beneath the tailored jacket of her navy pantsuit for thehandset. The display read 911 control room. “Maxwell,” she answered in a clipped voice as she returned to thenewsroom. “A small plane has entered the restricted air space around Camp David.”The voice belonged to the executive producer of the sportscast currently on the air. “Page Shelley to the studio,” she told him. “Extension 7892. She’sprobably in makeup. I’m headed your way.” Shelley Vincent and Ted Gilliam were her 8 p.m. anchor team, andof the two, Shelley was by far the better ad-libber with breaking news.Megan strode briskly past the noisy assignment desk and the four large U-shaped communal writing podswhere teams of writers, editors, and producers were preparing for upcoming new shows. She made a point ofappearing oblivious to the eyes that glanced her way as she breezed through toward the control room, but shewas well aware of the effect she had on her staff. No one had better appear to be idle when the vice president ofnews was around.As soon as she entered the dimly lit control room with its intimidating array of monitors andswitchboards, the executive producer she’d just spoken to wordlessly vacated his chair so she could slip into it.There were two rows of seats in the futuristic control center, both facing a wall of monitors. The operationspersonnel who controlled the massive switchboards, a mind-boggling array of lighted buttons and switches,occupied the front row: audio operator, technical director, robotics camera operator, Chyron and graphicsoperator.In the second row, set on risers, were seats and computer terminals for the producer, executive producer,and director. The wall behind them was made of glass. On the other side was the studio, with its wide mahoganyanchor desk and blue chroma-key wall for weather.Megan quickly scanned the Associated Press bulletin on the computer in front of her. It said only that asmall plane had violated the no-fly zone and was approaching Camp David, and that the Air Force haddispatched two F-16 fighters to intercept it.“Two minutes out,” the director announced. Megan glanced at the monitors to make sure the other networks hadn’t beaten them to air with the story,then swiveled around in her chair to see her anchor just entering the studio. She punched the button that would key her mike to the studio speakers. “Less than two minutes, Shelley,”she informed the anchor. “Get your IFB in so I can brief you.”The anchor took her seat and fumbled for her earpiece. The interruptible feedback system allowed on-airtalent to hear both program sound and instructions from the control room. Megan, meanwhile, keyed her mike to a small speaker on the assignment desk. “Nick, do we haveconfirmation?”The disembodied voice of the evening desk manager answered, “Yes, but nothing beyond what AP has.”“What about a live shot?” she asked.“From the Pentagon, roughly ten minutes away,” he answered.“One minute out,” the director announced. “Camera two, tight on Shelley.”Megan keyed her mike to the anchor’s IFB. “Another small plane has entered the restricted air spacearound the nation’s capitol,” she told Shelley, glancing at the monitor where the anchor’s image was beingframed up and brought into focus. “This one is approaching Camp David, where the president is spending theweekend. Two F-16 fighters have been sent to intercept. We’ll have a live shot from the Pentagon shortly.”The anchor nodded and began jotting down the information.“Thirty seconds,” the director said. “Coming back on camera two.”“Since nine-eleven, hundreds of small planes have violated Washington’s restricted air space,” Meganspoke quickly into the anchor’s IFB. “Such incidents have become so routine that most go unreported. Four,however, have forced evacuations of lawmakers and others, the most recent of which was just two weeks ago, onApril 18th. The so-called Air Defense Identification Zone comprises some two thousand square miles around thethree D.C. area airports.”“Ten seconds,” the director announced. “Ready camera two. Shelley’s mike.”“Toss back to sports when you’re done,” Megan told the anchor as the floor director counted down theseconds. The cut-in went smoothly, the anchor reciting the information Megan had fed to her as effortlessly as if ithad been typed on the teleprompter. They met two minutes later in the hallway outside the control room.“Nice job,” Megan said. “You should stick close. That live shot should be up soon.”“You know, it never ceases to amaze me,” Shelley responded, as she plucked a dark brown hair from thefront of her taupe designer suit with a frown.“What does?”“How you can recite off the top of your head the background information on just about any story thatcrosses the wires. Names. Dates. Places. Context. And you’re never wrong.”Megan shrugged. “I’ve always had a pretty good memory.”“Phenomenal is more like it. I bet you can recite the names of every teacher you ever had, can’t you?”Shelley studied Megan’s face, clearly awaiting a response. She considered the question a moment. “Honestly? I could probably name every classmate, too, if I hadto.” “We really should do a story on you.” “No, what we really should do is get back to work. You have a newscast to prep for.” She started to leave,but Shelley’s voice stopped her in her tracks. “By the way…” The anchor was looking at her with an impish smile and a sparkle in her pale blue eyes,like a child with a secret. “You…have some ink…” She pointed to Megan’s right cheek. “Ink?” Megan touched two fingers to her face as though she could feel the mark. “Is it bad?” She glancedaround for a reflective surface: glass, chrome. Nothing.“You have a blue Sharpie…” Shelley drew a short jagged streak in the air with a perfectly manicuredindex finger. “Kind of like that Harry Potter—Lord Valdemort scar thingie.”“Sharpie?” Megan asked, aghast. “I haven’t had a Sharpie in my hand since…” She trailed off as shefocused inward, remembering. Since my department head meeting. She knew immediately what had happened.She had nearly fallen asleep listening to the head of the sales department drone on and on about the latest adrevenues. Had sat at the conference table with her hand propped against her cheek, fighting back a yawn. Takingnotes. Oh, crap. That meeting was at four and it’s after seven.“Since…?” Shelley’s voice interrupted her mental recounting of everywhere she’d been and everyoneshe’d seen in the intervening hours.“Never mind,” she grumbled, but she felt her expression soften when she looked at the anchor. “Thanks,Shelley.”“Don’t mention it.” She took the long way back to her office to avoid the newsroom and to make a stop in the expansiveladies’ lounge adjacent to the bookings unit. Designed for visiting celebrity guests, it was the nicest of therestrooms on the floor, and, best of all, it was deserted at this hour. The faint floral scent of hair spray assaulted her nostrils as she flicked on the lights and headed towardthe long mirror where the hair and makeup artists worked. Her green eyes narrowed as she winced at herreflection. In addition to the three-inch-long jagged Sharpie tattoo, her normally impeccable facade was marredby an errant blond strand of hair that stood straight out of the side of her head.“And no one bothered to tell me,” she griped aloud. No one dared tell me.Grace had already gonehome. Her assistant certainly would have told her how foolish she looked. And maybe a handful of others. The fact irritated her greatly. When she’d moved up the corporate ladder and starting making sixfigures, she began spending a good bit of money on her appearance, and as with everything else in her life, shepaid attention to the details. Nice jewelry. Understated makeup. A $400 salon stop every five weeks for a trimfrom Ritchie and a touch-up to the blond highlights she added to her straight, shoulder-length medium brownhair. A pedicure, manicure, and massage twice a month. A designer wardrobe of suits—twenty-four in all—sizeeight, except the pants always needed to be shortened slightly to fit her five foot six height because she refusedto wear heels.Not a single person said anything. Megan had learned to have a thick skin in her position, but it rankledto think that no one cared enough about her personally to spare her the embarrassment. At least no one you ranacross in the last couple of hours, she tried to console herself. Whose fault is that? The question came and wentlike a whisper. She didn’t dwell on such things.It took a large dollop of cold cream, a couple of squirts of liquid soap, and vigorous scrubbing to erasethe marking pen. Her cheek was beet red, like someone had slapped her, but that would pass. A spritz of hairspray tamed the unruly tuft of hair, and she felt almost presentable again. Not too shabby. Back to business.A loud groan escaped her lips when she opened her office door. The chaos awaiting her was far worsethan she’d expected. Her massive oak desk was piled high with anchor audition tapes, employee contractsawaiting her signature, the latest ratings, reports from her department heads, and a vast number of other scripts,tapes, documents, and letters. Great. Just great. I’ll be lucky to get out of here by midnight. She slipped off her shoes and sank into her high-backed leather chair, automatically reaching for herremote to turn on the six monitors set into the opposite wall. The one tuned to WNC she left barely audible;those showing the competition were muted. It was only then that she noticed a space carefully cleared in the center of her desk so that her eyes wouldbe drawn to the travel brochure placed there, isolated from the bedlam surrounding it—an enticing island in ahostile sea of paperwork. A yellow Post-it note on top relayed a message penned in the familiar backhand slantof her best friend Justine Bernard, a reporter with WNC. Give it up, already. You are coming along. I’m going to nag you until you do.Megan smiled for the first time that day. Justine was so damn persistent. But that is why you’re such agood reporter. Never take no for an answer.She started to toss the brochure into the trash, but stopped herself when she caught the picture on theback. It was breathtaking, a wide-angle photo of an endless caribou herd, tens of thousands of animals, setamidst a landscape of snow-topped mountains and lush, vibrant green valleys. She turned the brochure over andpulled off the Post-it note, revealing the words Discover Alaska, Land of Endless Adventures. Surrounding theheader was a collage of happy tourists enjoying all the possibilities: dogsledding, whitewater kayaking andrafting, backpacking, fishing, whale watching. Opening the brochure, she saw that Justine had circled the trip she’d been chattering about for the lastseveral days. Kayak the remote and scenic Odakonya River as it cuts through canyons in the Arctic NationalWildlife Refuge and journeys across the coastal plain to the sea. Witness the magnificent spectacle of the annualmigration of the Porcupine caribou herd. Fish for Arctic char and grayling. Explore the grandeur of the lastgreat American frontier. An unforgettable experience that will change your life.There was a quote from Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas about the refuge that read, “This isthe place for man turned scientist and explorer; poet and artist. Here he can experience a new reverence for lifethat is outside his own and yet a vital and joyous part of it.” Those are some pretty hefty promises. She had to admit they really were striking photographs. And as achild, she had dreamed about traveling through an untamed wilderness, like the early explorers she had readabout. But that had been too many years ago, and she’d long since given up her childhood fantasies. And heronly real experience with the out-of-doors had been a nightmare. Besides, there’s no way in the world this placecould get along without me for two whole weeks. Even one week would be disastrous.The phone on her desk rang. She snatched it up. “Maxwell.”It was the evening assignment desk manager. “I wanted to let you know the plane turned out to benothing, as usual. Just a guy with a new pilot’s license who was showing off to his girlfriend. She, apparently,was not amused.”“Okay, Nick. Thanks.”Almost as soon as she’d hung up the phone, it rang again. I’m never going to get out of here. This timeshe put the call on speakerphone. “Why aren’t you here?” Justine’s usual velvet-smooth, reporter-trained voice was strained—she had toshout to be heard above the cacophony of raucous laughter in the background. “Can’t make it tonight,” Megan said, her eyes skimming the mayhem of work on her desk, looking for aplace to start.“You haven’t made it in weeks. We’re going to revoke your membership card.” A chorus of voices chimed in. It sounded like a goodly number of the gals had managed to make tonight’simpromptu gathering of Broads in Broadcasting. Megan could picture them tucked into one of the big circularbooths at the Cool Breeze Tavern, a popular spot for local journalists and politicians.“C’mon, Meg!”“Party pooper!” “Don’t make us come kidnap you!” “There’s a cute brunette here that’s just your type!”She couldn’t help smiling. It had been a long time since she’d seen most of the “Broads.” After themarking pen incident, she could use some time with her friends. And the thought of maybe hooking up for aquickie wasn’t altogether unpleasant, either. Maybe she had been working too hard. “All right, already. I’ll be there in a while. Someone keep an eye on the brunette for me—and don’t letElise anywhere near her!”Fairbanks, AlaskaChaz Herrick was having an impossibly difficult time keeping her mind on the pile of paperwork in frontof her, despite the fact that it was the only thing standing between her and her liberation for the summer—herreturn to the wilderness that fed her soul and enriched her spirit. The halls outside her office were empty, the students scattered. She’d traded in her professorial khakisand button-down oxfords for the flannel shirt and jeans that comprised the bulk of her wardrobe. Already, inspirit, she was far from this place.Her gaze kept straying to the fully loaded backpack in the corner of her office and then to the wall aboveit, crowded with photographs she’d taken during previous excursions into the backcountry of her adopted state.Some were of trips she’d taken with her parents: cross-country skiing near Denali, kayaking in Glacier Bay,hiking in the Brooks Range. Many solo adventures were represented as well—along with a number of morerecent photographs taken during her summers as a senior guide with Orion Outfitters. One particularly strikingpicture she’d taken of the caribou migration had been chosen for Orion’s brochure this year.Gareth Rosenberg, the head of the Biology and Wildlife Department at the University of Alaska, stuck hishead in Chaz’s door. He was a big, barrel-chested bear of a man, with an untrimmed beard and long hair, heldback in a braided ponytail. “I can’t believe you’re still here. I thought you’d be long gone.”“Well, I would’ve been, if it wasn’t for all this administrative shit you give us to fill out. I swear youcome up with a dozen new forms every year solely to irritate me.” He laughed. Although he was technically Chaz’s boss, they were close friends, and they both knew hehad been offered the job only after Chaz had turned it down. “Boy, do you ever get antsy these last few days.” He glanced up at her wall of photos. “So where’s it tobe this year? You doing your guide thing again?”“Yeah, I’m leading a couple of backpack trips at Denali, and some kayak trips. One on the OdakonyaRiver, and a couple on the Kongakut.”“The Odakonya? Where’s that?” he asked.“It’s within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Doesn’t get much river traffic except us, because it’spretty inaccessible along a good portion of it.” “Sounds like your kind of place.”She smiled. “Yeah, actually it’s the trip I’m most looking forward to. I went there by myself at the end ofthe season last year, to scout it out. Beautiful stretch of river. Great views. Lots of wildlife. We can do a day hikefrom there and have a pretty good chance at seeing the caribou herd.”Gareth heaved a great sigh. “Every year I understand a little better why you didn’t want this job,” he said,sounding envious. “Take lots of pictures?”“You got it. Now get out of here and let me get back to it. You know I’ll go crazy if I have to spendanother night in the city.”“The city, she says, like it’s New York or L.A.” He studied her quizzically. “You can drive five minutesout of Fairbanks and be in the wilderness.”“Not wild enough for me,” she said. Chicago, IllinoisThey had lied to her. There was no cute brunette. It wasn’t even a bona fide gathering of the Broads inBroadcasting, though all those present were members of the group. No, this was just her and the five of them. They’d lured her to the Cool Breeze for the sole purpose ofgetting her drunk and ganging up on her so she’d go on this wilderness thing with them. After a few too manytequila shots, they had produced another one of those damn brochures with all the pretty pictures and a sign-upform already half filled out for her, with her name and address and the other stuff that Justine knew off the top ofher head.“You’ve been promising for years that you’d go with us,” Linda Ferris, a photojournalist with WNC, saidfrom Megan Maxwell’s left. “Fearless” Ferris, they called her, for her award-winning footage under fire from avariety of war zones.“Last year, as I recall, you swore you’d absolutely go this year, no matter what the destination,” Justinereminded her from across the booth. Although she appeared in millions of homes every evening on the news, theWNC reporter was rarely recognized in public. Without makeup and with her flyaway auburn hair untamed bynetwork stylists, she looked like a distant cousin of her on-air persona. “At the time you were all talking a lot about seeing Paris next, as I recall,” Megan mumbled.“You’re always bragging about how good your staff is,” Pat Palmer reminded her. Pat was Linda’s loverand a photographer as well, with TV station WGN. “Don’t you trust them enough to leave everything in theircapable hands?” “Well, of course they’re very capable, but—” Megan began.“When’s the last time you took a vacation, anyway?” Yancey Gilmore interrupted. “You’re like…livingin workaholicville, girlfriend. You need to chill.” Though her vocabulary and blond, pinup girl appearanceseemed to belie the possibility, Yancey was a highly regarded researcher with the Oprah empire. “Oh, I don’t know. Some say the Royal Ice Bitch is pretty frosty already,” Justine said, which touchedoff a gasp of shock and then a chorus of snickering among the group clustered around the plush booth. OnlyJustine dared to bring up the nickname that the malcontents in the newsroom had assigned to Megan.Megan glared at her. “You’re lucky you’re not in my department,” she warned with a gruffness that wasnot at all convincing. “You have only yourself to blame that I’m not,” Justine responded warmly, leaning across the booth toplace a hand on Megan’s forearm. “I’d still be in the writing ranks if you hadn’t given me a shot in front of thecamera.”“Oh, shut up. You belong there. I had nothing to do with it.” Megan’s vision began to swim from thetequila. She closed her eyes and slumped against the thickly cushioned booth.“Back to the trip,” Elise Webber reminded them, pointing to the sign-up sheet that lay on the table infront of Megan. “We have to get this in by tomorrow to get the group discount.” The youngest of the group, Elisewas a graphic artist with the Discovery Channel. She was also Megan’s biggest competition if there were anyprospective bed partners about—both of them liked to prowl for new faces when they went out with the group.“Right you are,” Justine agreed. “So you’re gonna come, right, Meg?”“I have never even seen a kayak, much less been in one. Besides, camping and I don’t mix.” Megancracked open an eye, but the room began to tilt, so she quickly shut it again.“You’re athletic,” Pat said. “You’ll pick it up in no time. And I guarantee you, it’s a blast! You’ll be soglad you did!”“It’d be all bugs and snakes, and bad food, and sleeping on the ground, and no way to take a shower…”Megan grumbled on, as if she hadn’t heard.“Look at these pictures.” Yancey thrust the brochure at her. “The last great frontier. Unspoiled beauty.How can you miss this?”Megan ignored her. “You’ll come back a new woman,” Linda promised. “Relaxed, refreshed, rejuvenated.”“I think she’s afraid,” Elise volunteered.Afraid? That cut through the haze of the alcohol. “Am not,” Megan said, rousing herself.They were all staring at her, totally united in their task of getting her to sign that piece of paper she washaving trouble bringing into focus.“Prove it,” Elise said. “I dare you to go.” “Double dare you,” Yancey chimed in.“Triple-dog dare you,” Pat added.“What are we, back in grade school?” Megan said. Her defenses were beginning to crumble. “Rather make it a bet?” Justine asked.Megan perked up a little. There might be a way out of this after all. “I’m game for that.” She blinkedseveral times, trying to clear her head. “How about…movie trivia. Or…current events. You ask me a question,and if I miss it, I sign on the dotted line.” “Oh, no, you don’t,” Linda said.“No way are we going to take a sucker bet,” Yancey agreed. “No trivia. It’s got to be left totally up tochance. A flip of the coin?”“That’s fair,” Pat said.“A fifty-fifty chance? That’s not fair.” Megan never played those odds. She only bet on a reasonably surething.Justine leaned forward again to claim her undivided attention. Her gray eyes grew serious, and she usedher most convincing tone of voice…the one that audience focus groups characterized as “highly trustworthy.”“You need this, Megan. Leave it up to fate this one time?”Leave it up to fate. It was an alien concept to her. Despite the fact that her workday was ever changingand unpredictable—often dependent on breaking news—she had established an orderliness and routine to her lifethat she was reluctant to relinquish. She never left any important decisions to fate. You once dreamed about exploring some place like Alaska, she reminded herself. She had to admit shedid find the whole idea intriguing. Exciting, even. And not much excited her any more.“I’m not afraid,” she repeated to no one in particular, swaying as she tried to sit up straight in the booth.“Flip the damn coin.”Author notesIn the late 1970’s, I spent ten days in Alaska on a dogsled adventure above the Arctic Circle. The grandeur of the state and its people made a deep impression so it was a no-brainer to use it as a setting for an adventure book.I decided to set it in summer in order to bring in another passion of mine--kayaking.The book was so well received by readers that I went on to set another two books in Alaska--Breaking the Ice, and High Impact (due for release in December 2011). Chaz makes a cameo appearance in Breaking the Ice, and both Megan and Chaz appear in High Impact.No more plansto set any furtherbooks in Alaska, but never say never.Chapter OneKim Baldwin