they called? Shiitake? Maybe it's a judgment on us."
"Take it easy, Mike," Tom said. He looked angry,
which Jenny knew meant he was feeling uncertain. She watched him, all the while stroking the smooth mahogany of a tabletop. She felt the same compulsion that Dee and Michael obviously did-to touch things here. She kept expecting them to feel like cardboard, but they were real.
"Okay," Tom said, "we're not in the living room. We've been-moved somehow. Somebody's playing a joke on us. But we don't have to just stand around like idiots and take it."
"What do you suggest we do?" Audrey said acidly.
Tom strode over to the parlor doorway, which opened on a dim hall. "The guys can come with me and scout around; you girls stay here and keep your eyes open."
Dee threw him a scornful look, then turned narrowed eyes on "the guys." Michael was tapping on the walls, muttering, and Zach was just staring, the skin of his face drawn tight over bones. Jenny wanted to go to him, but she couldn't move.
"Good luck," Dee said to Tom. "Hurry back to protect us."
"Don't anybody leave," Summer said, her blue eyes wet.
"You protect Jenny," Tom snarled at Dee, thrusting his face close to hers. Jenny felt an instant of throbbing warmth, which was immediately swept away by coldness. How could anyone protect anyone here?
Dee crossed the room and put an arm, hard as a boy's, around Jenny's shoulders. "Right," she said.
"I think we should stay together," Michael said nervously.
"Oh, what's the difference?" Audrey said. "It's not really happening anyway. We're not here."
"Then what is it?" Summer asked, on the verge of hysteria. "Where are we?"
"In the Game."
The voice came from the corner of the room, from the shadow behind the Oriental screen. It was a voice that didn't belong to any of the group, but one that was familiar to Jenny. She'd only heard it once before, but she couldn't mistake it. Like water over rock, it was full of elemental music.
Every head turned.
The boy stepped out of the shadows.
He was just as beautiful as he had been in the store. But here, against the backdrop of this quaint and fussy room, he looked even more exotic. His hair shone in the dimness like white cat's fur or mountain snow. He was wearing a black vest that showed the smooth, hard muscles of his bare arms, and pants that looked like snakeskin. His eyes were heavy-lidded, shielded by long lashes. He was smiling.
Summer gasped. "The picture. The paper doll in the box. It's him- "
"The Shadow Man," Michael said hoarsely.
"Don't make me laugh," Tom said. Lip curled, he looked the apparition up and down. "Who the hell are you? What do you want?"
The boy in black took another step forward. Jenny could see the impossible daylight color of his eyes now, though he wasn't looking at her. His gaze swept over the others, and Jenny could see it affect them, like a wave of cold air that caused them to draw together. She could see each of them reacting as they
looked into his face and saw-something there. Something that caused their eyes to go wide and suspicion to turn to fear.
"Why don't you call me Julian?"
"Is that your name?" Tom said, much more quietly.
"It's as good as anything else."
"Whoever you are, we're not scared of you," Dee said suddenly, letting go of Jenny and stepping forward. It sounded like the truth, as if Dee, anyway, was not afraid, and it seemed to encourage the others.
"We want to know what's going on," Tom said, loudly again.
"We haven't done anything to you. Please just let us go home," Summer added.
"You can't go home again," Zach murmured. It was the first time he'd spoken. He was wearing a strange half smile.
"Bud, you're in worse shape than I am," Michael told him in a low voice. Zach didn't answer.
Only Jenny stayed back, not moving, not speaking. Her sense of dread was getting stronger all the time. She was remembering a look like a starving tiger's.
"At least tell us what we're doing here," Audrey said.
"Playing the Game."
They all stared at him.
"You agreed to play. You read the rules."
"But-playing? What playing? You mean-"
"Don't talk to him about it, Mike," Tom interrupted. "We're not going to play his stupid game."
He's so scared, Jenny thought. He still thinks this is all his fault. But it isn't, Tom, it isn't____
"I mean," the boy in black said to Michael, "that you all swore you were playing of your own free