trees will burst into flame and Iâll have to fulfill my purpose on the spot. So much is expected of me in this place.
âDonât worry.â Mom puts her hands on my shoulders and squeezes briefly. âThis is where you belong, Clara.â
âI know.â I try to muster a brave smile.
âYou,â she says, moving to Jeffrey, âare going to love the sports here. Snow skiing and waterskiing and rock climbing and all kinds of extreme sports. I give you full permission to hurl yourself off stuff.â
âI guess,â he mutters.
âGreat,â she says, seemingly satisfied. She snaps a quick picture of us. Then she moves briskly back to the car. âNow letâs go.â
I follow her as the road twists down the mountain. Another sign catches my eye. WARNING, it says, SHARP CURVES AHEAD.
Right before we reach Jackson we turn onto Spring Gulch Road, which takes us to another long, winding road, this one with a big iron gate we need a pass code to get through. Thatâs my first inkling that our humble abode is going to be fairly posh. My second clue is all the enormous log houses I see tucked away in the trees. I follow Momâs car as she turns down a freshly plowed driveway and makes her way slowly through a forest of lodgepole pine, birch, and aspen trees, until we reach a clearing where our new house poses on a small rise.
âWhoa,â I breathe, gazing up at the house through the windshield. âJeffrey, look.â
The house is made of solid logs and river rock, the roof covered with a blanket of pure white snow like what you see on a gingerbread house, complete with a set of perfect silver icicles dangling along the edges. Itâs bigger than our house in California, but cozier somehow, with a long, covered porch and huge windows that look out on a mind-bogglingly spectacular view of the snow-covered mountain range.
âWelcome home,â Mom says. Sheâs leaning against her car, taking in our stunned reactions as we step out into the circular drive. She is so pleased with herself for finding this house sheâs practically bursting into song. âOur nearest neighbor is almost a mile away. This little wood is all ours.â
A breeze stirs the trees so that wisps of snow drift down through the branches, like our house is in a snow globe resting on a mantelpiece. The air feels warmer here. Itâs absolutely quiet. A sense of well-being washes over me.
This is home, I think. Weâre safe here, which comes as a huge relief because, after weeks of nothing but visions and danger and sorrow, the uncertainty of moving and leaving everything behind, the insanity of it all, I can finally picture us having a life in Wyoming. Instead of only seeing myself walking into a fire.
I glance over at Mom. Sheâs literally glowing, getting brighter and brighter by the second, a low vibrating hum of angelic pleasure rolling off her. Any second now and weâll be able to see her wings.
Jeffrey coughs. The sight is still new enough to weird him out.
âMom,â he says. âYouâre doing the glory thing.â
She dims.
âWho cares?â I say. âThereâs no one around to see it. We can be ourselves here.â
âYes,â says Mom quietly. âIn fact, the backyard would be perfect for practicing some flying.â
I stare at her in dismay. Mom has tried to teach me to fly exactly two times, and both were complete disasters. In fact, Iâve essentially given up on the idea of flight altogether and accepted that Iâm going to be an angel-blood who stays earthbound, a flightless bird, like an ostrich maybe, or, in this weather, a penguin.
âYou might need to fly here,â Mom says a bit stiffly. âAnd you might want to try it out,â she adds to Jeffrey. âI bet youâd be a natural.â
I can feel my face getting hot. Sure, Jeffrey will be a natural when I canât even make it off the