sister, except for baby Squeak.â
âYou sisters really get along well together, donât you?â
âOf course we do!â Sylva laughed. âExcept when Goldie teases me too much. Then weâre glad to have Clara thereâshe takes care of us all.â
nine
L ater that afternoon, as the other gnomes and fairies enjoyed an enchanted snack (fairy doughnut holes!), Clara flew away from the sunny meadow. The competitions were over for the day, and thereâd be just enough time for her to try out some more magic.
Clara set her wings eastward and made the long flight up to Sunrise Hill. It was very cold out, but she loved the sting of the wind on her cheeks. It made her feel so aliveâas if there was nothing she couldnât do.
An elegant mother deer crossed Claraâs path and looked at her curiously with its big brown eyes. Clara walked over to her and gently touched the tip of her nose. Deer are very friendly on Sheepskerry, and Clara knew this doe from last yearâs harsh winter, when she had helped the finicky mother deer find delicious beechnuts to eat. âDo you need some more food to eat, Doe-deer?â asked Clara. âI wish I could magic some up for you.â
The sound of trampling startled them both, and the mother deer bounded away. Clara turned quickly. Maybe it was a bear!
But it wasnât a bear at all.
âRowan!â Clara said.
Rowan Gnome stood in front of Clara. Gnomes cannot fly, of course, so Rowan had clamped on his ice shoes and taken the slippery path to the top of the hill. Fairies donât mind if the paths are slippery and slick, because they donât need to use them much. (You wouldnât walk on ice, either, if you had wings.)
âWhat are you doing up here?â asked Clara. She always thought of Sunrise Hill as her own special place, especially when fluffy snowflakes were falling, as they were that afternoon.
âThe other gnomes told me about Sunrise Hill. They say itâs the highest place on Sheepskerry. Thatâs why I brought my toboggan.â
âOoh, thatâs a beautiful one,â said Clara, âand we hardly ever do any sledding on Sheepskerry. Most fairies prefer to fly.â
âThis hill is perfect for a toboggan ride,â said Rowan. âAnd this snow is perfect . . . for snowballs.â
âDonât you dare,â said Clara.
âOh, I wouldnât think of it,â said Rowan. He whistled innocently. âBut I may pile up a little snow here, just in case.â
Clara beat him to it. She scooped up a handful of snow, smushed it into a ball, took aimâand threw! Ploop! Claraâs snowball landed on Rowanâs shoulder.
âWhy, you . . . ,â said Rowan. He grinned. âI knew I couldnât trust you.â He made an armful of white powder into a big ball. âWatch out, Miss Fairy.â
âCanât catch me!â said Clara. âI can fly!â
âNo fair!â said Rowan.
Clara had speed and grace, but Rowan could boast an excellent throwing arm. After Clara dodged several well-aimed tosses and Rowanâs cap got knocked off a third time (amid a lot of laughing), they called a truce.
âWant to build a snow gnome?â asked Rowan.
âNo thanks!â said Clara, her eyes merry. âIâll build a snow fairy.â
The two of them got to work rolling snow and sculpting faces. Rowan went off looking for a pinecone for a pipe. âYou have lots of interesting stones on Sheepskerry,â he said, picking one up and putting it in his pocket.
âAnd sea glass, too,â said Clara. âJust ask Goldie about her collection. Have you found the right pinecone yet? Iâm using twigs for fairy wings.â
They worked for a while longer as the snow fell. Soon there was a sturdy snow gnome and a beautiful snow fairy on the top of Sunrise Hill.
âShe needs a scarf to keep her warm,â said Clara,