One way God showed me Jesus was missing in our lives...
It was a long leg of journey. There was a kind of madness in Alaska. The kind that had people who identified as having a "soul" but who weren't necessarily connecting that with "morals" be expressing loss. Tremendous loss. "Like maybe," a trubador/interpreter clutched at the thread in interviews we'd gathered. She let her shoulders relax; she sank her ears through the silence of respectfully listening; she patted her head and tugged on her outer ears. "I just did that last thing for fun." She laughed. We stared at her and that made her laugh harder. "Was gonna say, like maybe how I feel as a retail worker. People come and take stuff all day long. And sometimes,"
"Can I braid your hair?"
Her turn to stare for a second but we'd agreed to stop asking why so much. "Okay, sure," she swiped a "tobaggon" off her head. "Sometimes I feel empty shelf at the end of the day."
Hmmmmm, an openly empathic person acknowleged hearing. The tea and coffee steamed. The hot chocolate awaiting a bicyclist coming from the lower 48.
In a morning people were up early and off doing stuff. One piece of paper was on the cleaned off table.
Itinerary
Use the jet ski, follow the path, interview mystery guest.
I lit off. Parts of the path were dotted with lanterns, gifts to bring the note said at one pitstop. Yellow snow, my mind registered. "I DIDN'T DO IT!" I yelped when someone squeezed me from behind. "Sssssssshh, we gotta keep going before he wakes up."
"Who?" I was still asking as the gifts were put in a sack, other snow mobiles came creeping closer, and the animal fur covered person hopped on as driver.
Parts of the path were mini expanses of wide open tundra. "So we acclamate," the driver called backwards barely distinguishable from the purring motor. I gave a squeeze, got it.
Snow mobiles dashed ahead to scout.
When we finally caught up there was an exchange of foreign-to-me language. Different kinds of snow mobiles were making opposite moving concentric circles. Moving closer, now farther away.
A shadow eclipsed the snow-glow of sunlight for a few seconds.
Waving snow mobilers from behind slowed to ask about a cafè. A grizzled man asked to see a tourist's map. Whistled others over who made a tight circle to compare hand drawns to graphic-peppered. "I just use this," a snowmobiler held up a GPS monitor but the dangling wire showed cracked. "Or did. I guess I used to use this." He threw it in the snow. It only sank in a little bit.
"There are supposed to be flags." A woman's voice said.
Nobody said anything.
"Where they'll land," she sighed.




