Where am I?”
 
 “You’re safe,” Hannah said from a swirl of shadow—or that may
 
 have been his vision beginning to dim. “Chris,” she said, “let us help
 
 you.”
 
 “Help?” His laugh was weak and strangled. “You tried to kill me.” I have to get out of here. He took a swaying half step. His legs were suddenly wooden. The gun was growing unbelievably heavy, as weighty as a boulder, and he understood that in two or three seconds, he would faint. “Please,” he groaned. “Let me go. I don’t want to hurt
 
 anybody, I don’t—”
 
 With no warning at all, his strength fled as if he’d been unplugged.
 
 His knees buckled. From somewhere distant, Chris heard the thud as
 
 the gun hit the floor. There was nothing in his hands now, not even
 
 the old man.
 
 “You tried to kill me, y-you t-tried . . . oh God . . .” His eyes rolled;
 
 there was no more light and nothing to see, and he was hurtling fast
 
 in a black swoon.
 
 “Quick, catch him!” someone said. He thought it might be Ellie.
 
 “Don’t let him fall—”
 
 “Chris?” A voice from the dark. “Chris, answer me. Are you okay?” “I . . . I don’t kn-know.” His tongue was bloated, his mouth numb.
 
 His chest was heavy, a huge weight pressing him down, down, down
 
 into the black.
 
 I’m on the snow again. I’m under the trap.
 
 “N-no.” When he tried to turn his head toward the voice, his
 
 neck locked tight. “Don’t k-kill me again. P-please. I don’t w-want
 
 to d-die.”
 
 “Shh. Don’t be afraid. I’m here now, Chris. I won’t leave you.” A
 
 hand, strong and sure, cupped his cheek. “Open your eyes. It’s time
 
 to come back. It’s time to see.”
 
 “I c-can’t.” He was shivering. “I d-d-don’t want to see.” “You have to. No more hiding in the shadows.” The voice was
 
 calm but remorseless. “You’re not eight anymore. Come on. Come
 
 back now.”
 
 “N-n-nuh . . .” But his lids were lifting, the darkness peeling away,
 
 a film seeming to dissolve from his eyes. At first, there was nothing but a glaring bright fog, like strong light bleeding through heavy mist. Then he saw the fog curl and eddy as Peter’s face pulled together, the
 
 pieces knitting from the neck up: chin and mouth, nose and forehead. But no eyes. Only blanks, smooth skin over bone.
 
 “Where are y-your eyes?” A fist of horror squeezed his heart.
 
 “P-Peter, whwhere . . .”
 
 “Oh, silly me.” And then the skin over Peter’s sockets peeled apart.
 
 “There. Better?”
 
 Chris felt the scream boil up his throat and try to crash from his
 
 mouth. Peter’s eyes were caves, not deep black mirrors like Jess’s,
 
 but red and vast and filling fast. They brimmed in bloody rills that
 
 oozed down his cheeks and leaked over his lips. When Peter smiled,
 
 his lips skinned to reveal a bristle of too many teeth that were wet
 
 and orange.
 
 “Peekaboo,” Peter said. Thick scarlet teardrops trembled on his
 
 upper lip to drip directly onto Chris’s face and splash into his own
 
 staring eyes. There was a sssss sound, the hiss of a snake, the boil of
 
 acid, and then the pain, and Chris was blind and he was screaming—
 
 “Huh!” Chris heard the cry bolt from his mouth.
 
 “Christopher?” Not Peter or Lena or his father, but an old man. A
 
 dry, cool palm found his forehead. “Christopher, are you back with
 
 us?”
 
 Is this another dream? He lay absolutely still for a long moment. A
 
 new nightmare? He was under a thick down comforter and still mostly
 
 naked, although someone had slipped on a pair of underpants. There
 
 was also something unfamiliar around his neck. Cord?
 
 “Christopher?”
 
 “Y-yes,” he croaked. He dragged his lids up, wincing against bright
 
 spokes of yellow-white light jabbing through two windows directly
 
 opposite the bed. He would’ve raised a hand to shield his eyes, but he
 
 couldn’t move his arms. Sheets were noosed around his wrists, and
 
 his ankles were tethered to the bedposts.
 
 “There you are. Welcome back.” Reaching for a stoneware jug on
 
 a nightstand, the old man splashed water into a clear glass. “Thirsty?” He was about to ask why he was tied down but then considered
 
 that if a kid had grabbed his gun, he’d have done the same thing. “Is
 
 it drugged?” he rasped.
 
 “No. Here.” Slipping an arm under Chris’s shoulders, the old man
 
 propped him as he drank. The water was clean and odorless and
 
 cool as a balm. He felt the chilly slide of its course from his tortured
 
 throat down the middle of his chest and then the cold explosion in his
 
 empty stomach. When he’d drained the glass, the old man lowered
 
 him, then settled back into his own chair. “That should stay put. We
 
 fed you a bit of broth yesterday, so . . .”
 
 “Yesterday?” When he ran his tongue over his still-dry lips, he
 
 tasted old blood from where the skin had cracked. “How long have I
 
 been here?”
 
 “In this room?” The old man laced his fingers over his stomach.
 
 His hair, which floated around his shoulders, was as snowy white as
 
 his beard, although his upper lip was bare. But the resemblance was
 
 clear, especially the eyes, which were as bright and black and keen as
 
 an old prophet’s. “Six days ago. I arrived last night just before sunset.
 
 I was here when you surfaced the first time.”
 
 He caught the emphasis. “What do you mean, in this room?
 
 Where was I before?”
 
 “What do you remember?”
 
 “Snow,” he said, hoarsely. He didn’t want to think about the
 
 dreams. “The trees. Spikes and green glass, and the sound of the
 
 limbs breaking, like bombs.”
 
 “That was the tiger-trap. What else?”
 
 “Weight on my back, and I remember the cold, and it hurt . . .
 
 my chest, whenever I tried to move. I couldn’t breathe, like kn-knives
 
 . . .” He was starting to shiver. “I c-couldn’t . . .”
 
 “Easy.” The old man laid a calming hand on Chris’s forearm.
 
 “That’s in the past.”
 
 “But how far in the past?”
 
 “Two weeks.”