she snapped, squeezing the bridge of her nose with her thumb and forefinger. Clearly, living in Neverland didn’t leave him with a lot of knowledge of social etiquette in the real world. “People will think you’re up to something, maybe that you might hurt her,” she told him. “You could get into a lot of trouble—you could get us into a lot of trouble.”
Now he looked genuinely confused. “What? But I would never do that.” The hurt in his voice made her feel bad for chastising him.
“I know, but people—other people, grown-ups—they wouldn’t know that. They would just assume the worst,” she explained, trying to be more gentle. “Especially with everything going on. If an adult saw you talking to random kids, they’d probably think you were the kidnapper.”
They were at the end of the street now. Peter stopped and turned to face her. “Why do I have the feeling you’re not telling me something?”
Wendy bit her bottom lip. “The detectives think you have something to do with the missing kids.”
Peter’s arms fell to his sides. “What do you mean?” he asked, shifting his weight between his feet.
Wendy took a deep breath. “I was late because I had to go down to the police station. Detective James—from the news, remember?—he questioned me about Alex, the missing kids.” She added hesitantly, “You.”
Peter groaned like a kid who had just been found while playing hide-and-seek. “Did you tell them anything?” he asked.
“No, of course not! How could I?” she spluttered, throwing her hands in the air. “It’s not like they would believe me. We already ruled them out from being any use,” she muttered. If the police couldn’t find her brothers when they’d first gone missing, how could she expect them to help now? This was up to her and Peter.
Wendy cast a wary glance down both sides of the street. “Let’s keep walking,” she said.
Peter fell into step beside her. Fewer and fewer places felt safe anymore, and the last thing she needed was to be overheard talking to Peter by Jordan or the cops or, even worse, her parents.
“They do think you have something to do with the missing kids,” she continued.
“We already knew that from the news,” Peter pointed out.
“It doesn’t seem like you’re a suspect”—Peter winced—“I think they think that you were kidnapped, too,” she added quickly. “And since they connected you to my disappearance, they think that the person who is taking the kids now is the person who took me and my brothers.”
Peter only nodded. It was hard to read his expression as he stared down at his feet, deep in thought.
Wendy sighed and rubbed her palm against her forehead. “I guess, technically, they’re right?” she thought out loud. “Your shadow took my brothers and now it’s taking more kids.”
Again, Peter said nothing.
Wendy wrung her hands together. “It’s not hurting them, is it?” she asked, nervous to hear the answer.
Peter shook his head. “No, they need to be alive,” he told her, looking dismayed.
Wendy didn’t like how that sounded.
“In order for the shadow to feed off them, they have to be awake.”
“Awake and terrified,” Wendy finished.
Peter nodded again.
He’d told her before how shadows got stronger by feeding off of a person’s fear. Their terror and sadness, their sense of hopelessness. John and Michael had been trapped by the shadow for years. What was it like for them? What kind of existence was it, to be consumed by fear and unable to escape it?
Wendy’s chest ached. She couldn’t stand the thought of them suffering, especially for so long. She and Peter needed to rescue them.
“Do you know where they are?” Wendy asked.
“No—well, in the woods,” Peter corrected himself. “Definitely in the woods, but it could be hiding them anywhere with magic.”
They crossed the street and started walking down the road that led into town. It was the road that hugged the woods. The same one where Wendy had found Peter. They walked along the shoulder but, even in daylight, it made the hair on the back of her neck prickle. Her steps became slower and more hesitant. The overgrown trees and hanging branches loomed above them.
Peter put himself between her and the woods, pushing rogue branches out of the way as they walked. His presence made her feel … better. Less scared, like she had someone who finally knew what she was going through. Someone to go through it with. But then there was also this undeniable warmth that she could feel radiating through her body when