A Trip That Lasts
The plane banked left over the Atlantic, and she pressed her forehead against the cold plastic of the window. She had spent the morning in 32 degrees. Her grandmother had braided her hair on the porch while the sea threw itself against the rocks below, and she had told her, for the third time, to buy a proper coat. Not a jacket. A coat. She had nodded, not really understanding the difference, and promised to send photographs. Now, twelve hours and one hemisphere later, the captain's voice crackled through the cabin. Something about descent. Something about weather. She was barely listening. Because outside the window, the world had turned white. She had seen snow in movies. She had seen it in magazines, in Christmas cards sent by a cousin in Toronto, in the shimmer of crushed ice in a rum punch. But I had never seen it. Not like this. The mountains appeared slowly, like a photograph developing. First a suggestion of grey, then the sharp ridgelines, and then, white. Not the white o...