THE LADDER

…and behold the angels of God ascending and descending upon it.
—Genesis 28:12

1. Denial

                When our little angel came home one night with wings, we thought nothing of it. She had always been crafty and cloud-light, her blue uniform hanging like frosting on fluff as she drifted up the stairs, down the hall, and shut her door with the soft click of a young girl home past curfew and holding her breath. The single feather that settled there on the rug was a testament to her artfulness, her ingenuity—imagine her patient eye squinting through the jeweler’s glass as she set each of a thousand delicate fibers into that waxy stem, the dried blood at the tip no doubt her own blood and sweat poured into this school project, feather by feather as she built two full wings from nothing, two wings flecked with magic dust like powdered sugar that clung to our pores and turned our hands into hummingbirds of flight! It was amazing, yes, but nothing unusual for our little angel, our namer of names, our speaker of tongues and truths. We taped the feather to the door of our refrigerator, proud as any parents, and went back to bed without beating her.

2. Anger

                The next morning the refrigerator had built a nest in the rafters of the kitchen from shredded cardboard and a large box of flexible straws our daughter had left on the counter. The room was speckled with droppings, mostly purple from eggplant rotting in the crisper, but also bright green from the baby spinach. The refrigerator, angled awkwardly against the slant of the roof, cooed to a half-carton of eggs. We brought in our stepladder and a broom, but as we approached the appliance became agitated, first rattling its door, and then dive-bombing us several times before the tape gave way and it plunged lifeless through the floor and into the basement. The feather hung bobbing on a breeze—but there was no breeze. We looked at each other, at the hole in the floor, the heap of metal, and the feather dancing before us more amazing than any school project. We took the broom upstairs to wake our daughter.

3. Bargaining

                The door to her room was locked. We broke the lock, but she had already moved a dresser in the way, moved her nightstand, her bed, and then she sat in the bed in a lump of feathers and flesh. All her things were heavy for a girl so light. It’s okay, we called into the crack, we’re not upset. So you came home with wings. They’ll come right off. We can sew them onto the back of a vest, a beautiful leather vest you can wear whenever you want. You can grow gills or stripes, we said. Anything but wings. Just tell us what you want. We put our ears to the door and waited, but our little angel only spoke in tongues.

4. Depression

                Imagine a girl growing up with wings. Imagine such a thing! We slumped against the door, imagining.

5. Acceptance

                After some time that feather floated up the stairs, down the hall, and settled into the warm pool of our weeping. Again there was no breeze, no volition but the great unseen nudging of all things, now undeniable. We held the feather tenderly between us like an offering. Despite the long night in the kitchen, it remained pristine and powder-full, it’s simple touch exciting even the tips of our fingers. It seemed to glow and throb in silent thrumming, undulating as it was in the air. Carefully we slipped the feather through the door’s slim opening and fixed it to the side of the dresser, which leapt to life so quickly that we fell face-first into the room. The dresser darted about blindly, several feet off the floor, crashing into the other furniture, all of it springing momentarily to flight in a maelstrom of polished oak and plastic. We found the broom handle swirling beside us. Our daughter cowered on the bed. Then we remembered her wings, and went down to get the stepladder.