"you haven't seen his face, right? You don't know if he looks like you."
"No, I just figured. He's like the high-tech stuff in my photos-come to get me."
And like some cyberpunk stuff I've seen, Jenny thought grimly. She said, "If you did look at him ... If you pulled off his helmet, say-"
She could feel Zach recoil in the dark.
Jenny shut her eyes, feeling suddenly tired. "Then that's what you have to do, I think. It's your nightmare, and you have to face him. I'll go with you."
It was a risk. Whether the Hunter was Julian or just one of Julian's dream-creatures, like the dark elves or the small Visitors, he might very well look like Zach under the helmet.
"Zach, I think you have to-or we won't ever find the way out of here. I think, even if he looks like you, you have to know he's not you."
"But-if he is me ... if you're not really here and this is all my hallucination ..."
"Then I'll probably disappear or something!" Jenny said. "And then at least you'll know you're crazy. All I know is that Summer wouldn't face her nightmare and she died."
There was a silence. Zach turned toward her, but it was too dark to be sure of his expression. "Come on," he said and started for the light.
Jenny's heart rate kept accelerating as they got closer to it. The Cyber-Hunter could easily shoot them at any minute.
He didn't. He stood as still as a figure in the Movieland Wax Museum. He was exactly Zach's height.
Zach stopped when they were a few feet in front of him.
Jenny could hear blood roaring in her ears.
The Cyber-Hunter shifted the crossbow a little. Pink jewels of light slid up and down it, and over his black armor. Zach's face was reflected in the mirrored faceplate.
"Go on, Zach," Jenny whispered. "Take off the helmet. Tell him he's not you, whatever he looks like."
She wasn't nearly as confident as she sounded. Was it Zach's face under the helmet? Julian's? Maybe it was some hideous android-some kind of killer
robot. Maybe Zach would get shot before he could find out. Maybe ...
The Cyber-Hunter stood waiting.
With a sudden gesture Zach reached out and grabbed the front of the helmet, pulling the face mask away.
There was nothing underneath.
No face, no head. Jenny, prepared for anything else, screamed involuntarily. The Cyber-Hunter's black body armor fell down empty, the crossbow clattering on top of it.
A door appeared beside the pink floodlight.
Zach was staring down at the empty shell of armor. He nudged the dismembered robotic hand with his foot.
Jenny gave a little gasp of relief. It had been so easy-but then she looked at her cousin. The real test was in his head. "I'm still here, Zach," she said. "Right? Right?"
He turned to look at her, pink light haloing his hair.
Then, slowly, he smiled. "Right," he said.
The awful dazed look had disappeared. He looked like Zach again. She could see the sanity return to his eyes. Relief flooded Jenny in painful waves.
Zach dropped the mirrored face mask on the pile of black armor.
"The rock I'll keep. I still want to do that photo."
They stepped through the door to the mirrored hallway.
Zach's slip of paper was on the ground. Jenny picked it up and frowned over it. She could vaguely make out what looked like a profile-a profile with a
beaky nose-but behind that was just a futuristic mishmash of colors, streaks and dabs.
"The things in my head," Zach said. He took it from her and tore it up. Jenny watched the colored pieces float down like confetti.
"Zach-what made you think insanity runs in the family?"
Zach just shrugged. The others had explained their nightmares, but it didn't surprise Jenny that Zach wouldn't. Zach protected his privacy.
An unseen clock struck four.
"I hate this place," Zach said, looking at his own gray-eyed reflection. "It reminds me of the fun house at that amusement park we used to go to when we were kids."
"Then you're the one who put it here," Jenny said. She'd forgotten the fun house herself-but then she'd forgotten a lot about her childhood, especially the years before she came to California. She didn't want to remember.
She felt a little twist of premonition in her stomach.
She also felt the heat in her cheeks. Now that they were out of danger, now that Zach looked like himself again, she found that her attitude toward him had changed. It was Julian's fault. Jenny knew perfectly well that her cousin had never thought of her