was on a hospital bed and there wasn't a tube anymore.
"So what do we do," said Word. "Wait for my dad to appear?"
Ceese looked around. "Move the old man?"
"This isn't The Godfather," said Word. "We can't just move him. They'd notice. And besides, if he comes here by magic, we can't fool the magic, can we? He'll come to whatever room Mr.
Christmas is in."
They were interrupted by Mr. Christmas whispering from the bed. "Come here."
They all turned. The man was holding up a feeble hand. He was reaching for Mack. "Hold my hand."
Mack took a step toward him.
"You trust him?" asked Word.
"Don't do it, Mack," said Ceese.
"Help me," said Mr. Christmas.
Mack looked at Ceese and Word, then turned back to Puck. "The doctors already did what you needed."
Mr. Christmas glanced at Ceese and Word, and suddenly they smiled and began pushing Mack gently toward the bed.
"It's all right," said Ceese.
"He needs you," said Word.
And Mack knew right then that Puck was doing to them the thing he had done to Word Williams thirteen years ago. Making them want to do something they didn't want to do. Encourage Mack to obey Puck's command.
The thing was, Mack didn't want to do it. Didn't want not to, either. It's as if Puck had no power to make Mack want or not want anything.
"I touched you before," said Mack to the man on the bed. "I... carried you. It didn't help you."
Mr. Christmas responded by wiggling his fingers. Give me your hand, his fingers were saying.
his pocket.
Mr. Christmas still wiggled his fingers.
Okay, so I proved I could do it. But now as I take my hand out of my pocket and reach out to him again, is that because I want to or because I...
I could keep going back and forth on this all morning, and in the meantime, Professor Williams might pop out of thin air and blast eight rounds into Puck's body.
Mack took the man's hand.
His grip was weak. But the longer he held, the stronger it got. Until Mack said, "You're hurting me."
"Sorry," said Puck. But now he looked stronger. And when he let go of Mack's hand, he sat right up and pulled the bandages off his head and his body. "That really hurt."
"What happened to you?" asked Mack. "Was it the - "
Puck put up a hand to stop him from saying more. Then he stood up and looked down at the cast on his leg.
"Mack," said Puck, "can I lean on you to steady me?"
Mack came closer. The man leaned on him. He took a step. Another.
And then Puck wasn't leaning on him anymore. Mack looked at him, and now he was fully dressed as a homeless man, with grocery bags hanging out of every pocket and looped over his arms.
"No reason to hide these from you now," said Puck to Mack. "Now that Word here has told you everything."
And with a nod to Word and Ceese, and a wink to Mack, Puck flung open the door and strode boldly out into the hall. Nobody challenged him.
"You healed him," said Word.
"He healed himself," said Mack. "He's the magical one, not me."
"But he had to hold your hand to do it."
"That's crazy," said Mack.
"And when he was leaning on you," said Ceese, "his cast just disappeared, and he was wearing those clothes."
"We saved your father," said Mack. "From committing a murder and going to jail for it."
"If he was coming."
"Now we'll never know," said Ceese. "But isn't that better than knowing because we didn't stop him?"
"Yes, it is," said Word.
"Now let's go home," said Ceese, "before the nurses catch us here and demand to know what we did with the old man."
As they approached the car, Word pushed the button that made the Mercedes give a little toot and blink its lights. "You know what I don't want to do now?"
"What?" asked Ceese.
"I don't want to spend a lot of time trying to figure all this out. I spent years trying to make it make sense and I decided long ago that the best thing for me to do is act as if it never happened, just as my dad does, because there's not a damn thing we can do about it and it's never going to make sense. In fact, not making sense is why we call it magic instead of science, right?"
"Right," said Ceese.
Mack didn't like it. He had finally found not one but two people who believed him, and Word might have even more information about