thing Mack heard for a little while, because right at that moment, he slipped into a cold dream. Didn't even fall asleep first. Just felt himself walking into a hospital room that he had never seen before and firing eight rounds from a handgun right into Bag Man's bandaged-up head.
Only the bandages were nothing like the real ones, and the room was nothing like the draped-off area where Mack actually saw Bag Man, and suddenly Mack understood what he was seeing. It wasn't coming out of Mack's memory of the hospital, it was coming out of someone else's imagination. What Professor Williams wanted more than anything else in the world right now, far more than he wanted to be a great poet, was to murder Bag Man.
Mack had never thought of Puck as "Bag Man," but in the cold dream that's absolutely who the man was, what his name was.
Until he awoke shivering, with Ceese pinching the skin on his arm.
"Ow," said Mack.
"You fainted," said Ceese. "You were shivering like you were having some kind of fit."
"I was cold," said Mack angrily. "You don't have to punish me for it by pinching like a girl!"
"Just trying to bring you back."
And that's what Mack wanted him to do.
"We okay back there now?" asked Word. "We're almost to your house."
"I had a dream," said Mack.
"In three minutes?" asked Ceese. "That's quick dreaming."
"He's an efficient dreamer," said Word from the front seat. He pulled back into traffic and a moment later turned right on Coliseum and then left on Cloverdale. Both Mack and Ceese looked at where Skinny House was hidden but from the street, of course, they saw nothing.
When they got to the Smitcher house - Mack's house - Word got out of the car to help Ceese get Mack out.
"I'm okay," Mack insisted.
"You just fainted. That suggests you're not exactly okay," said Word.
"I had one of my dreams," said Mack. "Not a sleeping-type dream. A different kind. And somebody was trying to kill Bag Man."
"Who," said Word, laughing. "My dad? I'd believe it!"
Mack just looked at him.
Word stopped laughing. "Oh, come on. I don't really believe it."
"Your dad knows which hospital he's in," said Mack.
"My dad's not a murderer."
"I don't want him to be," said Mack. "But the things I see in dreams like this - sometimes they come true."
"Like Tamika Brown dreaming she was a fish and waking up inside the waterbed."
That knocked them both for a loop. They stared at Mack for a long moment. "You mean Tamika's dad wasn't crazy?" asked Ceese.
"Or lying?" asked Word.
"Like you, Word," said Mack. "Who could I tell?"
"Weird shit's been going on for years, and I never had a clue," said Ceese.
"So you think my dad might just magically appear in Bag Man's hospital room?" asked Word.
"I don't know what might happen," said Mack. "But when these dreams come true, it's always the thing the person wants most in all the world - only it happens in the ugliest way. If your dad gets his wish to have Bag Man dead, then I bet your dad gets caught. Or maybe shot down by the police.
And all of us arrested as accomplices, probably. All part of a big setup."
Ceese and Word looked at each other.
"I'm going back," said Word. "It's crazy, but so is everything else. I've got to stay there until... or I could call my father."
"No, let's go back," said Ceese. "But not you, Mack. It's too dangerous."
Mack just looked at Ceese with heavy-lidded eyes.
"Oh, don't give me that vulture look," said Ceese. He turned to Word. "But he's right. We got to take him, because he's more in tune with this weird stuff than either of us."
So they piled into the car and headed back for the hospital.
"I'm blowing off an exam to do this," said Word as they pulled into the hospital parking garage.
"So what do we do? Sneak into the emergency room? They know us there."
"He won't be there now," said Mack. "They move them out of there after an hour or so."
"Where will he be?"
"I'll find out."
It was easy, as long as they didn't go through Emergency, where they would all be recognized.
Instead, Mack went to an ordinary nurses' station where he was recognized only as Ura Lee Smitcher's boy, and nobody even noticed when he looked up the John Doe who had been admitted to Emergency as an indigent about two hours before - had it already been that long?
Mr. Christmas was still asleep, but now he