

"I don't want to die!" Jessica screamed as she glanced over her right shoulder, out the car's rear window.
A wall of flames was lapping up the darkness of our mountainside,
heading for the Rim.
"Oh my gosh," Jonathan uttered. "See how high the
fire is!"
I kept looking back while trying to keep the car on the narrow
highway. When I got a chance, I pulled over into a turnout to
watch. The crimson flames seem beautiful, alluring, and destructive.
"Don't stop!" Jessie yelled. "And don't you dare
take a picture! We should have left seven hours ago."
"Don't worry. We're safe. We'll get down the mountain,"
I tried to assure her. She held a big white bird cage on her lap
with a parakeet in it. Penny the Parrot was in the other bird
cage, back beside Jonathan. Bubbles the Beta Fish was in his little
evacuation bowl in the car's cupholder.
"I want Daddy!" Jessie whined as I took one last look
at the approaching wall of fire before merging with the long line
of headlights making a slow, orderly caravan down the burning
mountain.
Jess is a helpful, quiet, intelligent soul who is gentle with
birds and people. When it comes to catastrophes, she scares easily--like
her parrot who flies off my shoulder if startled by the ceiling
fan.
"You can call Daddy on the cell phone," I suggested.
"Tell him the fire is getting closer, the traffic is bad,
and he should leave now."
Edd had stayed behind for last-minute house checks and to load
up the three cats.
"Do you think Midnight will be afraid?" Jess asked,
sounding calmer as she dialed on my small red phone.
"She'll be safe in her carry box," I replied.
Jess spoke briefly with Edd who assured her he would be leaving
soon--especially if people stopped calling him on the phone.
We drove through another town, and I wondered if my friend Mary
Pat, who had to evacuate a couple of months ago, would be leaving
her home again. We entered the highway down, which cut quickly
toward the valley, only to see flames leaping up from the valley
floor almost to the top, parallel to the highway.
"Oh my gosh," Jonathan said again, pointing in the darkness
toward the car's right side.
"Jessie, call Daddy one more time. Tell him a wall of flame
is closing in on the highway from the west, and he'd better hurry.
The fire can't be more than a mile away. They'll shut this evacuation
route soon, and it'll take him five hours to get down the mountain
the back way."
Jessie got her message through just as Edd was leaving.
"I'm scared," she admitted as she set the cellphone
down.
An eerie red light danced on her right cheek, her arm, and down
her long braid. "I don't want to die so young, like this,
on a burning mountain."
"There are a lot of firefighters up here," I assured
her. "Remember how we kept checking the fire's progress by
driving down to the highway's edge? When the fire got close is
when we decided to leave. No one even told us to go! We had all
day to pack the stuff we needed. Now that area will be packed
with fire engines, but the planes won't be able to dump water
after dark."
"Will our house burn?" she asked, staring at me in the
dark car, the birthmark on her left cheek barely visible in the
dashboard's green light.
"I don't know," I replied, knowing that something would
be burning.
As we drove lower toward the valley, strange white flashes spread
across the mountain like lightning.
"What's that?" Jessie asked.
"I think those are electrical transformers exploding."
My mind started wandering back to earlier that evening. The electricity had gone out right before we evacuated. We had to wear headlamps to carry bags down our stairs. We swept the beams through each room one last time, wondering what final item to take, what we wouldn't want to burn. We grabbed a few more framed photographs and kids' toys, then stepped outside to a quiet street with no lamps shining from the windows of already-abandoned homes.
Oh please protect the mountain, I prayed as I tried to keep from crying, as I entered the freeway and left our home behind.
Over an hour later, we arrived at our friends the Connelley's,
in the desert valley. As soon as we got out of the car, Heidi
remarked,
"You smell like smoke."
I nodded and replied, "You helped me survive cancer seven
years ago, and now you keep me from the fire."
I practically fell into her arms.
Jessica and Jonathan ran to play with Heidi's children and their
cousin Linda, whom Heidi and her husband Jonathan had adopted.
Big Jonathan helped us unload birdcages, suitcases, and toys.
We got situated in our temporary shelter as Edd pulled up in a
car full of boxes and cats.
"I got down just before they closed the highway," he
told me, kissing me in the dark by his car. "I heard the
fire jumped the highway and was coming up."
If it continued, it would reach our house . . .
We turned on the news and watched updates of the fire's progress--for
the next five harrowing days: in the middle of the night when
we couldn't sleep, in the early morning when our nightmares woke
us, in the afternoon when we felt helpless because we couldn't
go see for ourselves, in the evening after dinner when we tried
to talk about something else but faltered.
Sometimes it looked as though the firemen would succeed at keeping
the flames from jumping the highway to the dead treetops and communities
of homes and businesses, schools and churches, that lined the
top of the our mountains from side to side. Other times the flames
broke free and burned homes and businesses.

We watched as towering flames licked along a large, familiar A-frame
roof. The news helicopter announcer told us it was historic Wylie
Woods Presbyterian Conference Center--where just two weeks ago
the kids and I had taken a Homeschool Tree class taught by Doris
Bowers. And then, late on Wednesday night, October 29, the flames
burned back toward the major communities and towns.
We had friends there. The red log cabin where Doris lived--had
it been lost? And the garage, stacked full of teaching material
collected over 40 years, was it reduced to ashes? Had she rescued
anything in her old camper truck? Had she evacuated? She would
be the type to stay until the last possible moment, keeping watch.
And what about Clayton and Jessica Connolly, who got married last
April? He is a musician, leading worship with Edd at Calvary Chapel
and teaching children how to play the piano. Had all his keyboards
melted? And Jessica, the oceanographer, were her college textbooks
and shell collections gone? Had their photos and their wedding
presents burned?
And Suzanne Bowen, who owns the local health food store and has
five children. Had her house been swept away? And all those toys
and homeschool books and bottles of herbal remedies?
A fireman pulled a Los Angeles T.V. newscrew from their burning
van when flames arced over both sides of the highway. Veteran
fire captains said they had seen nothing like this fire that hit
the tall, dead pines above an entire neighborhood. Years of drought,
bark beetles, hot weather, and Santa Ana winds caused Three-hundred-foot
flames that shot into the air like tornados swirling with sparks.
Sap-filled trees exploded, shooting burning branches like missiles
toward new fires. Rooftops crashed like flying saucers. Propane
tanks blew up one after the other, and open gas pipes burned long
after the fire swept through like The Perfect Storm.
"It's just like the dream that woke me up on Saturday morning,
two hours before an arsonist lit our mountain on fire," I
moaned to Heidi and her children gathered around the T.V. screen.
"And Edd looked out our kitchen window and, for a moment
in the sunrise, saw flames above the trees. Without debate, we
started packing.
"And out the window was a calm fall day, with the sun shining,
a breeze blowing the cedar branches, and the maple trees turning
red and orange. And we wandered around our mountain home--like
a treehouse in Lothlorian--with its big windows and heavy French
doors and honey-colored paneling--and all the paintings, and the
rock fireplace with photos on the mantel--and wondered if it all
would burn.
"And we walked out onto the deck and stared at the dry stream
by the yard and the forest backed up against us, dust and pine
needles and fallen leaves everywhere--and saw only fuel . . .
"And I sent an email from my computer room, to all the people
on my Mailing List:
"'We Are Evacuating.'
"And Doyle and Paula Eden, friends closer to the fire, were
watching a movie when they checked their email. They hadn't even
known the fire was racing up the slopes toward them, at the rate
of an acre a minute.
"No one told us to leave."
Heidi, with her long reddish hair and practical voice, stated,
"Well, that just shows that when the fire gets close, you
go."
And I wanted to laugh at her statement, but I couldn't. We kept
watching the news.
"The heat was so great that it knocked me on my back,"
a news photographer said. "If I had not been wearing this
yellow fireman's jacket, I would have been burned."
"I can't talk about it," said a longtime L.A. newscaster
who had stayed up all night, reporting. His white shirt was singed
with black spots, and ash made his hair look gray. "I just
feel for all these people who have lost their homes."
And an anchorman wailed,
"The Crown Jewel of California, playground of the stars,
is burning!"
And we, safe in Heidi's living room, could only watch the drama
and pray for rain. We also watched the fire in her fireplace,
orange and red and white and yellow flames flowing together, dancing
like something alive, licking along the wood and sending sparks
up the chimney. Seductive, warm, and romantic, fire can save lives
or destroy them. Would some of the sparks escape and lodge in
the trees or rooftops?
Frustrated with the television stations that kept getting the
mountain names wrong, we turned to the Internet and Ranger Al's
accurate accounts on www.fireupdate.com.
Al, who stayed on the mountain to help the firefighters, listed
the streets and houses that burned--a document of several pages.
We checked our email, hoping to hear from mountain friends like
Josh and Lisa Williams, with whom we had dinner a week before
the fire. Ironically, Edd and I had complained to them about about
our difficult October! Lisa, who used to be a radio host, sent
us emails. Josh, a high-tech computer guy, kept in touch by cellphone.
Even Pastor Tom from Calvary Chapel made a list of all the cellphone
owners in our evacuated church, and he called to check on us.
"I feel like a shepherd with all the flock gone," he
said over the static-filled receiver.
And friends from all over the country, from Ireland, and New Zealand,
sent us emails with offered prayers.
We were dispersed to the valleys and cities and beaches, in Red
Cross Shelters, houses, or hotels, but we kept together electronically
and hoped to return home soon.
Even our evacuation areas were not safe. A fire broke out near
the Temecula wine country. We nervously watched the southeast
flames crest distant hills, then got out binoculars and followed
low-flying planes as they dropped water.
Further south, much of San Diego burned. People were killed in their cars while trying to flee the fires in their suburban neighborhoods. In Ventura and Los Angeles counties, houses and canyons burned. Smoke rose in giant, mushroom plumes in all directions. Horizons glowed red, and the air was heavy with ash.
"Is it the end of the world?" Jonathan asked as he climbed
up to watch beside me on a hill of rocks.
"Not yet," I assured him, tousling his curly hair.
"I wish we were still in New Zealand," he whimpered.
"Where there are lakes and rivers. Remember how you dressed
me in my Frodo costume and took my picture in a field?"
"Yes, I remember. And we drove to Mount Cook and saw the
snow and glaciers, in the Land of the Lord of the Rings."
And so, like a scene from a film, much of California burned that
week--the largest fire in United States history. Three quarters
of a million acres burned. 3000 homes perished--whole suburbs
together, entire country towns wiped out. Twenty people lost their
lives, including a fireman who died protecting a stranger's property.
And then, amazingly, the weather changed. The Santa Ana winds died down, and the breezes blew in westerly, over the cool Pacific Ocean. Rain swept down from Alaska, water muddied ashes in the valleys, and snow dusted our mountains. That was not in the T.V. weather forecast. When was the last time we had snow in October?
Two weeks after evacuation, we drove up a burned mountain. A full moon shone above short black stubs that dotted the canyons. Bare black treetrunks shone eerily in the moonlight, and even the dirt and rocks were ashen. And we thought,
Our mountain looks like Mordor.
Everyone we knew in one community lost homes, except for Doris
Bowers whose house was high enough atop a hill that the flames
did not reach it. Even people from the local newspaper where I
work were hit, including my Editor Davey Porter, my friend Laura
who works in advertising, and Gordon who does the fishing column.
I wandered down to their neighborhood, dazed, to take some photographs
and write a story for the paper:
There is a bridge between 2 houses, on the corner of Hook Creek
and Bridge Roads. The house to the right looks ready for a fall
day, its cheerful redwood walls and scalloped roof surrounded
by green bushes, a lawn, and the red and yellow leaves of healthy
trees. A brooke bubbles at its verge, under the bridge. The house
to the left is the last one burned in a long line of devastation.
Everything is gray and black: car shells, twisted metal, broken
steps, heaps of ash. Charred stone chimneys rise like memorials
in what used to be a neighborhood.
Here the firemen took a stand in the worst firestorm in California
history, where 300-foot flames burned tall dead pine trees which
exploded like bombs.
Further down Hook Creek Road lies the ruins of another house,
the home of newlyweds Clayton and Jessica Connolly of Calvary
Chapel. Clayton, a worship leader, rescued his keyboards and wedding
photos, but little else. When a CNN television news crew found
him standing next to his leveled house, they asked why he was
smiling.
Clayton replied, "They can take my home, my property, and
even my wedding gifts, but they can't take my Jesus."
Up near The Malt Shop, a red log cabin survived. Its owner, Doris
Bowers, has lived in these mountains for 40 years. She is a homeschool
science teacher, and all of her teaching materials are stored
in her garage. As she gratefully checked on her property, she
said,
"Well, at least we have some trees left on this mountain.
Fewer to cut down now."
Then she got in her truck, waved, and headed down the mountain
to teach another class.
And other people showed their gratitude for surviving the fire.
On the lawn of one untouched house a handpainted sign read "Thank
you. We love you all, and so does Jesus." A big American
flag waved over a burnt house further down the way. On a slope,
someone sat in a white tent on the remains of his home. At the
old Car Wash, a Fire Rescue Center began offering counseling,
hot meals, clothes, and all types of necessary aid. Utility trucks
and repair crews lined the roads.
The neighborhood is already rebuilding. Maybe it was never really
lost, for the people who lived there survived. And the rest of
us, hardy mountain people who knew the risks when we moved into
the forest, share the experience with each other at the grocery
store or in the post office. We ask where we evacuated to and
talk about the fire. Sometimes we cry into comforting arms. And
perhaps we remember a verse from Psalm 30:
"Lord, by Your favor You have made my mountain stand strong."
And so, like the Bible verse suggested, much of our mountain survived though nearly 100,000 acres, 1000 homes, and 10 businesses burned. On a map put out by the Crest Forest Fire Department, the fire area looked like a giant, open red hand grasping the mountaintop on three sides. Their website's slide show, photographs taken by firefighters, gave us a glimpse of the monster they fought. Yet on most of the Rim you could not tell there had been a wildfire, as our house and many others stood untouched and did not even smell of smoke.
Thank you God, for changing the weather. And thank you, firemen,
for taking a stand at Strawberry Peak, a mile from our home, where
1200 of you lined up with shovels. Like Gandalf with the fiery
monster, you stood at a point, dug in your staff, and said,










