guttural snarls, not the sort of sounds a human could make, came from behind it.
The door that Dee was wrestling with was doing exactly the same thing.
Only it was open a little. Dee had her lynx like body braced against it, head down, knees bent, one long slender leg back so the toe of her sneaker dug into the black carpet of the hallway, but she couldn't quite get the door shut.
Without a word Jenny went and helped her, leaning to press on the door above and below the handle which Dee was grasping. The keyhole had a large key in it.
"Push," Dee gasped.
Jenny leaned harder, throwing her weight behind it, while Dee pushed right above her, body stretched taut beside Jenny's. The door pushed back and bulged. The low, thick snarling rose in tone. Angrily. Jenny felt her muscles begin to tremble. She put her head down and shut her eyes, teeth locking.
"Push!"
The door yielded a crucial fraction of an inch, closing. Dee's hand shot to the key and turned it. There was a click, the sound of a bolt shooting home.
The door wasn't pushing anymore.
Jenny stumbled back, legs weak with the sudden release of strain, and looked at it. No bulging. No snarling now, either. It was just an ordinary six-paneled door, as quiet and innocent as a door could be.
There was utter silence in the hallway.
Jenny backed to the opposite wall, then slowly slid down it until she was resting on her heels. Her forehead was wet around her hair roots.
Dee was leaning one hand against the wall by the door.
"Hi," Jenny said at last.
"Hi."
They continued to look at each other blankly.
"Have you seen the others?"
Dee shook her head.
"Me, either. He said-you know, him"-Jenny paused "he said you guys were scattered around the house. Waiting for your nightmares." Jenny looked at the door. "Were you in there?"
"No. I was in the parlor watching Tom, and then all of a sudden I got dizzy. I woke up on the floor here. There was only one door, and I wondered what was inside, so I opened it."
"Oh. What was inside?"
"Just your average butt-ugly monster."
"Like the ones in the pictures-the Creeper and the Lurker or whatever?"
"No, really ugly. Sort of like Coach Rogers."
Dee was taking this rather calmly, Jenny thought. She looked strained and stern, but very beautiful, like a statue carved out of ebony.
"We'd better look around," she said. "See if we can find the others."
"Okay." Jenny didn't move.
Dee, still standing, reached out to her.
"Come on. Up."
"I'm going to faint."
"Don't you dare. On your feet, soldier!"
Jenny got up. She looked down the hallway. "I thought you said there was only one door. What's that, then?"
"It wasn't there before."
They both looked at the door. It was just like the other one, six-paneled, innocuous.
"What do you think is behind this one?" Jenny said carefully.
"Let's see." Dee reached for the knob.
"Wait, you lunatic!" Trying not to flinch, Jenny pressed her ear to the wood. She couldn't hear anything but her own breathing. "Okay-but be ready to shut it again fast."
Dee flashed her a barbaric grin and stood ready to kick the door shut. Jenny put her hand on the knob, turned it.
"Now," Dee said, and Jenny flung the door open.
Chapter 6
The room behind the door had golden-ocher walls. On one of them an African mask hung in primitive glory. Several clay sculptures rested on built-in teak shelving, including a bust that could have been Nefertiti. Leather cushions were tossed around the floor, one resting beside a complete home gym.
It was Dee's bedroom. The bust was one that Dee's grandmother, Aba, had made of Dee. There was a stack of textbooks by the bed and a pile of half-completed homework on the nightstand.
Jenny loved this room, loved to see what Aba would bring Dee next from her travels. But seeing it now was unnerving.
Once they were inside, the door shut behind them-and disappeared. When Jenny turned at the sound of slamming, she saw nothing but a blank ocher wall where the door used to be.
"Great-now we're trapped," Jenny said.
Dee was frowning. "There must be a way out."
They tried the window. Instead of the Ice Age outside it was the ordinary view from Dee's upstairs room. Jenny could see the grass below, illuminated by a porch light. But the window wouldn't budge, or-as they discovered when Dee swung a ten-pound barbell against it-break.
"So now what?" Jenny said. "Why are we in your room? I don't understand what's going on."
"If this place is like