you are not insane," she said. "Is that what your problem is-why you were acting so strange before? Because you thought you'd gone crazy?"
"Brain kidnapped by the Shadow Man," he told her. "It was bound to happen sooner or later. It runs in the family."
"Oh, for God's sake, Zach!" She had no idea what he was talking about.
The orange floodlamp, the next one out, seemed to flicker.
"Don't worry," Zach told Jenny. "You're just part of my hallucination. It won't really hurt."
"What won't really hurt?"
Zach was gazing at the rock on his canvas. "It's about dimensions. See? The canvas is two dimensional and the-"
An arrow shattered one of the blue floodlamps in a shower of sparks and glass.
No, a bolt, Jenny thought, stunned. A bolt from a crossbow. She recognized it because Zach's father had made it to the National Crossbow Championship three years running. Bolts were even more lethal
than arrows-and this one was metal and looked almost futuristic.
Zach was brushing bits of glass off his canvas. "Zach, get up!" Jenny was frantic. Another bolt shattered the second blue floodlight. Jenny jumped away from the sparks. Zach hunched protectively over his rock.
"Zach, listen to me! This is not a hallucination, it's real, and you can die for real here, too! You can bring your rock if you want, but we've got to leave this minute-this minute!" Her voice rose hysterically at the end.
It got through to him. She could barely see him by the glow of the white-splattered sky, but he got up-still holding the rock-and went where she was pulling him.
Orange floodlight, Jenny was thinking. Orange, and then white, and then pink. The door should be beyond that.
The orange lamp shattered as they got to it. "Zach, who's after us? No, don't stop, come on!" Panting, Jenny tugged at his elbow. He'd turned around to look thoughtfully behind them. He didn't seem frightened. "Me," he said.
They reached the freestanding wall by the white floodlamp. Jenny felt somewhat safer behind it. She looked at her cousin. "You?"
"It's me. It's my hallucination and I'm chasing myself. Hunting myself."
"Oh, Zach," she said helplessly. Then: "Zach, it's not a hallucination. The same thing is happening to all of us-we're all here. Dee and Mike and Tom and
Audrey and me. And Summer was here, but her nightmare killed her because she couldn't cope. So you have to cope, because if you don't..." Jenny's eyes were wet.
Zach blinked. "We're all here? It's real?"
"It's real. It really happened, the Game and the Shadow Man and everything. It's not in your head. It almost drove me crazy, too, but you can't let it."
Zach blinked again, then looked through the empty window of the wall, out into the darkness. "If it's real..." he began slowly, and continued in a voice with more strength, "If it's real, then who's that?"
Jenny inched over to take a cautious peek. A-person-was standing at the very edge of the light that went through the window. His crossbow was futuristic-looking-and so was he. Cyberpunk, Jenny thought. He was wearing black body armor that hugged his lean body sleekly, and he had one normal hand and one that was shining steel and cables. There was some kind of high-tech gun strapped to his thigh.
He wore a helmet with a mirrored face mask that completely obscured his features.
Jenny leaned back against the wall.
"Oh, terrific," she whispered.
"I figured he was my dark side. The part of me that wants to destroy me," Zach said reasonably.
A bolt came through the window-Jenny felt the wind of it-and shattered the white floodlamp.
"Come on!"
This time Zach ran without prompting.
The Cyber-Hunter got to the pink floodlight before them.
He couldn't have, but he did anyway. He stood, backlit by the neon pink glow, a dark silhouette as they approached.
"This way! We have to get to the door!"
Jenny veered sharply, circling to get to the other side of the pink lamp. Zach followed her. But when she got to the place where the door should have been, it wasn't.
"It's gone!" Jenny turned to look back. The Cyber-Hunter was facing them now, facing the blazing pink glow.
And what on earth are we supposed to do with him? Jenny thought. Kill him? Bash him with the rock? I don't think so.
One thing she'd learned-the nightmares were fair. There was always a chance, a way to get out, even when there didn't seem to be. She supposed Julian considered that only sporting.
So what could they do with the Cyber-Hunter? How could Zach face his fear?
"Zach," she said hesitantly,