“Yes, you,” says Mr. Phibbs. “You’re our newest member, I hear.”

“Yes, sir,” says Christian, his face getting red.

You’re a member? I think at him incredulously.

He blinks in surprise that I am talking to him via brain. That it could be that easy, between us, when it’s so hard with everyone else. Yes. As of this morning.

And how does one become a member, exactly?

You make a promise to serve the light. To fight for the side of good.

I thought they said they didn’t fight.

He gives me the mental equivalent of a shrug.

And that’s what you did this morning?

Yes, he says unwaveringly. I took an oath.

And so the revelations keep on coming.

“How is any of this possible?” I ask Angela later, when we’re both in our pj’s, snuggled up in our sleeping bags. We zipped the top off the tent so we can look up and see the spattering of stars over our heads. The air is cooler than it was earlier, but still completely comfortable. We don’t even need tents, at least not for the weather, although they do afford us some sense of privacy out here in the open meadow, where separate fires are spread all around us. Every now and then I catch the scent of snow on the wind, and it reminds me that we’re in this magic oasis in the middle of the forest, that everywhere else it’s winter, but here it’s summer.

“Toto, I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore,” I say to Angela.

“I know, right?” Angela says with a laugh. “It’s Billy.”

“What do you mean?” I turn over onto my side to look at her.

“Billy can do things with the weather. I guess it’s an extremely rare gift for an angel-blood. I’d never even heard of it before. Billy comes out here about a week before the meeting and makes it all grow.”

“So Billy told you all this?”

“She told me some,” Angela says. “Not as much as I wanted her to. She was nice to me and all, but she really just wanted to gab with your mom. They seem like best friends.”

“They do,” I agree. “It’s so weird.”

My mom has a best friend, someone I don’t remember, someone I didn’t even know about until today. I think about the way they sat together at the fire, with the same blanket wrapped around them, and how Billy would sometimes lean to whisper something in Mom’s ear that made her smile.

How could she not tell me about her best friend?

“This is so awesome,” Angela says. She turns to me with bright eyes. “Want to hear more about what I did learn?”

I can’t help but giggle at the excited puppy-dog expression on her face. “You’re like a kid in a candy store here, aren’t you?”

“Oh come on, can you blame me? This is an amazing research opportunity.” Leave it to Angela to see this as a “research opportunity.”

“Okay, let’s hear it,” I say.

She fishes her notebook out of her bag and turns on a flashlight, flips through the pages to find her place.

“Okay,” she says, clearing her throat, “here’s the skinny: the northwest branch of the congregation has been meeting here since just after Wyoming officially became a state back in 1890. Right now there are about forty members.”

“So it’s not all Jackson people?”

She shakes her head. “They’re from all over the northwestern United States. But I did find out that Jackson is a kind of angel-blood hot spot, with the highest concentration of us living here than anywhere else in the area. I couldn’t get anybody to tell me why though. I have a theory that it’s the mountains, but that’s just a theory.”

“Okay, Miss Wikipedia,” I tease.

She grins, swats at me feebly, and then returns to the notebook. “Most of the angel-bloods here are Quartarius. There are only nine Dimidius, and they’re the leaders of the group.”

“Right. Because the Dimidius are so rare and special,” I say with a hefty dose of sarcasm.

Angela scoffs, but there’s an excited glitter in her eyes. Here, where most of the people are a mere quarter angel, Angela is a half. She is rare, and special, and all that.

“I’ve also noticed that everybody treats your mom differently than the others,” she adds.

“Like at the campfire, everyone always listened carefully to what she said, like she’s a font of wisdom or something, even though she didn’t talk very often.” It’s true. When Mom got up and said she was going to go to bed, everybody moved carefully out of her way as she passed. There was something about the way they responded to her, a particular kind of reverence.

“Maybe she’s their leader,” Angela says. “I think it’s a democracy here, but maybe she’s like the president.”

Man. How could she not tell me any of this?

“Are you okay?” Angela asks. “You look like you’re freaking out again.”

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