“We can spy on people.” James led the way back up the steps to the kitchen, and the two of them hurried past the parents, still talking in the living room, and headed up to the second floor. James pushed his door open wide and stood proudly to the side as his friend entered the bedroom.
“Wow,” Robbie said, taking in the posters on the wall, the built-in television cabinet, the beanbag chair on the large expanse of floor between the bed and the desk.
“Look over here.” James went over to the window, pointing down. On the sidewalk in front of the house, an elderly couple was walking slowly, arm in arm. On the street beyond, two men in racing gear bicycled past, going the opposite direction.
“This is awesome.”
“And they can’t see us that good because the tree branches kind of block us. Even if they
“You are so lucky.”
“And when I get my Wii, the only time I’ll leave my room is for meals.”
“Will I be able to come over?”
James fell into the beanbag chair in a way that he thought was impressively smooth. “Sure.”
Robbie leaned against the windowsill. “So, are you really coming back to Fillmore this year?”
“Yep. Thank goodness.”
“Was Pierce really that bad?”
“I told you—it’s a horrible school. I had no friends there. None. The kids are all—I don’t know—losers. I’m just glad to be out of there.”
“Well, I’m glad you’re coming back.”
There was a shout from downstairs. Robbie’s parents were leaving. The two of them hurried down. Robbie reddened with embarrassment when his mom gave him a hug, and he promised her he would behave. He took his suitcase and rolled-up sleeping bag from his dad, who playfully punched his shoulder and said, “We’ll pick you up in the morning, sport. Have fun.”
“Robbie can spend the day tomorrow if he wants,” James’s mother said. “We can bring him home in the afternoon or evening.”
“That’d be fine, if he wants to. That sound good to you, buddy?”
Robbie nodded happily.
“All right, then.” His dad smiled down at him. “Come home when you want to.” He looked over at James’s parents. “Whenever you get tired of him. We should be home all day.”
“Six o’clock at the latest,” Robbie’s mom said.
Good-byes were said, and after his parents left, Robbie toted his suitcase up to James’s room, where the two of them hung out and played computer games for the next hour.
For dinner, they had pizza, James and Robbie going with James’s dad to pick it up, and afterward they watched
Robbie had already unrolled his sleeping bag on the floor, and while James’s mom had given him an extra pillow to use, he decided to rest his head on the beanbag chair instead. James, of course, slept in his bed. The two of them talked for a while in the dark—it was their goal to stay up until midnight—but they were tired, and within ten minutes both of them were fast asleep.
“James!”
The cry sliced through sleep and into his dream, waking him.
“James!” It came again.
He sat up groggily, opening his eyes. There was an edge of annoyance or desperation in his friend’s voice that indicated Robbie had been trying to wake him up for a while, and he had the sense that the other boy had been calling his name for some time.
James leaned over the side of the bed. “What is it?” he whispered.
“I want to go home.” It sounded as though Robbie was about to cry.
James squinted over at the clock Ms. Hitchens had given him last year for reading more books than any other student in the class. The multicolored numbers indicated that it was two thirty. “It’s the middle of the night!” James said.
Robbie did start to cry. “I want to go home!”
James felt scared. He had never seen his friend like this before and didn’t know what he was supposed to do or how to react.
But he was scared for another reason as well.
He was suddenly sure that Robbie had had a nightmare about the basement.
It was not something he would ask about, for the simple reason that he didn’t want to know, but the possibility frightened him, and he imagined his friend dreaming about the dirty man standing in the corner, grinning.
Maybe if they ignored the problem, it would go away. “Just go back to sleep,” James said. He felt sure that if they could just make it to morning, everything would be all right.
“I can’t!” Robbie cried.
There was a knock at the door, and James’s dad gently pushed it open. “Everything all right in here?”
“We’re fine,” James offered quickly.
“I want to go home,” Robbie said, sniffling.