ARCHER TOOK A DEEP BREATH, LOCKED EYES FOR A FEW moments with Kaylie, and thought of Master Gabriel, the leader and trainer of all Dreamtreaders. Before the Rift occurred, it would have been against the rules to tell people about Dreamtreading, to reveal age-old secrets, and to expose the hidden world. But now?Archer wondered. The Rift had changed things. The hidden world had been exposed. Everybody was a part of this now. Master Gabriel may not like this,he thought, but my family and friends’ sanity—maybe their survival—depends on their understanding. Survival . . .
Archer knew just how he’d do it. He gave a glance to Kaylie. She nodded back. “Okay,” Archer said. “I’ll show you what I know—what Kaylie and I know. But to do it, we need to go downstairs.”
“To the basement?” his father asked. “I don’t see—”
“To your workshop, Dad,” Archer said. He didn’t give them time to argue, but instead strode away and bounded down the steps. He heard them following behind but waited until his family and friends were all inside the basement workshop. Archer shut the door . . . and locked it. This wasn’t going to be easy.
Archer stood by his father’s workbench and gestured to an intricately built, ornamental wishing well his father had been working on lately. It was one of many such pieces in the room. Archer’s mother had so loved the family wishing well in the backyard that Archer’s father began building beautiful models of it to buoy her spirits as she battled the cancer that eventually took her life.
“You’ve been crafting again, Dad,” Archer said.
His father swallowed deeply and set his jaw. “She wouldn’t want me to give up,” he whispered.
“No, Mom would never want you to give up,” Archer said. “These wells are incredible. I think maybe Kaylie and I got the creative ability from you.”
“You got the brains from your mom,” Mr. Keaton said with a quiet laugh.
“Could be,” Archer said. “It’s the creativity and the brains together, I think, that make Kaylie and me Dreamtreaders.”
His father echoed, “Dreamtreaders?”
Archer explained the basics of Dreamtreading as best as he could. The Nine Laws, the moral and physical rules that governed life in the Dream; the Creeds, a kind of anthology of Dreamtreader wisdom and lore; the Three Realms of the Dream, Forms, Pattern, and Verse; Breaches, the small tears in the Dream fabric; and the Rift, the cataclysmic collapse of the barrier between the Dream and the Waking Worlds—everything from Master Gabriel’s summoning to the Nightmare Lord’s downfall to the present day. More than that, Archer showed them what Dreamtreaders could do. Calling up just a small measure of his mental will, Archer went to work.
The well’s original cinder blocks and mortar melted away by Archer’s command, revealing the wall of half-frozen earth behind it. A glob of silver-gray appeared. It spun in the air like metallic taffy and began to form long cylinders. An interlocking grid of carbon-steel struts formed next, and then something like molten granite flowed over it all . . . and hardened. Before the astonished audience could take three breaths, Archer replaced the basement walls, floor, and ceiling with ten-foot-thick, carbon steel, blast-proof shields.
Amy and her mother gasped. Archer’s father made no sound but gaped. Only Buster said anything, and that was a whispered “Whoa.”
“Pretty impressive, Archer,” Kaylie said.
“You feel it, don’t you?” Archer asked. “Since the Rift? We’re—”
“Stronger,” she said. “Much stronger. And we can do it in this world.”
“I don’t understand,” Amy said. “What’s with the bomb shelter?”
“He’s keeping us safe,” Mrs. Pitsitakas said.
“Safe? What?” Amy exclaimed, her owlish eyes wide with confusion. “But, Archer, we can help you.”
“Maybe,” Archer said. “But for right now, until we can figure out how to fix this, you’re better off here.”
“Dude,” Buster blurted out, “you’re gonna leave us here?”
“What about Kaylie?” Mr. Keaton asked, his voice pleading. “She’s just eight. She’ll be in danger. She can’t—”
“Dad,” Archer intervened. “Did you see what Kaylie did to that wolf monster?”
Mr. Keaton’s mouth closed with a snap.
Archer nodded. “Kaylie is the strongest Dreamtreader ever. She’ll do okay, I think.”
“Better than okay,” Kaylie said, smiling smugly and crossing her arms.
Archer grinned, but his expression became serious as he strode toward the newly created blast door. “Listen to me. Mrs. Pitsitakas, Dad, please keep everyone down here. You saw it. There’s crazy stuff—deadly stuff—going on outside.”
Archer’s father paused. Then, he laughed. “Never thought I’d see the day when you’dbe telling meI’m grounded.”
Archer smiled. It felt like his father was finally coming out of his grief-stricken depression. “Well, you’re not grounded,” he said. “Not really. You can open this door from the inside. You can get out. I just don’t want you to. It’s not safe.”
“We’ll bunker down here, son,” Mr. Keaton said. He held up his cell phone. “Looks like we’ve still got service, so we can call you, right?”
“We still have service?” Archer echoed. “Really?”
“See,” Mr. Keaton said. “Five bars.”
“That’s surprising in all this chaos,” Archer mumbled. “So, yeah, I guess call us if you need us.”
“Will do. And be careful.”
“Razz?” Archer called out, staring at the ceiling. “Razz, come here. I need you.”
There was a melon-sized puff of blue smoke, a streak of purple sparks, and a shrill voice from the midst of it all, saying, “Here I am!”
Razzlestia Celeste Moonsonnet—Razz to her friends—hovered just above Archer’s shoulders. The Dreamtreader breathed a deep sigh of relief. “Glad to see you,” he said. “I wasn’t sure what would happen to you . . . with the Rift.”
“Dude,” Buster said, “you’ve got a flying rat with two tails!”
“Awwww!” Amy cooed. “It’s so cute.”
“I am not a rat,” Razz said, her words fringed with feistiness. “Nor am I an it. I am a flying squirrel of dreamy proportions with an unrivaled fashion sense.” She struck a pose in midair, pushing her acorn-top beret to one side of her fuzzy head and twisting her body to emphasize the shimmer of her sparkly boutique tunic dress.
“Oooh, pretty!” Kaylie exclaimed. “You look like a thousand facets of blue corundum!”
Archer looked sideways at his precocious little sister. “Blue corundum?”
“Oh, sorry,” she said, her grin revealing a distinct lack of sorrow. “Sapphire, silly.”
“Anyway, Razz,” Archer said, holding out his hand so she could perch, “you’re coming with us, but on the way out, make sure you get your bearings. I want you to know how to get back here.”
“Why, boss?” Razz asked.
“So I can send you back from time to time to make sure they’re all safe.”
“Right, Archer,” Amy quipped. “You mean, to make sure we aren’t sneaking out. Yep?”
Archer smiled thinly. “C’mon, Kaylie, we have some Dreamtreading to do.” He gave the huge spindle wheel on the blast door a spin. After a pressurized hiss, he pulled the massive door open. “Close this behind us,” he said. “And don’t open for anyone but us.”
Archer turned to leave, but Kaylie yanked on his shirt. He stopped and turned. “What?”
“There’s one more thing,” she said, her eyes widening. She turned to her father, her brother Buster, and Amy and her mother. “You need to keep control of your imaginations.”
“What do you mean, sweetie?” her father asked.
Archer went very rigid and whispered, “Of course.”
Kaylie frowned, and Archer could see the familiar dilemma forming on her brow: how do you explain something extraordinarily complex to non-hyper-geniuses?
“We Dreamtreaders have always been able to create things out of thin air,” she began at last, “but only in the Dream. The Rift has mixed everything up, mixed the Dream and Waking together, allowing the free exchange of Dream matter and the Waking World. People can create like Dreamtreaders now—that’s why everything’s gone so crazy. That’s why monsters like that wolf-thing can appear. You have to be careful what you let yourself imagine because . . .”
Archer’s father nodded and said, “Because we might summon up something else? Something terrible?”
“That’s right,” Archer said. “It’s kind of like what Dreamtreaders are trained to do, but it could happen randomly. One minute, you think everything’s normal, the next minute a weird thought enters your mind and—”
“Whoa!”
All eyes turned to Buster who had both hands wrapped around a gigantic cheeseburger.
“Dude!” Buster said. “All I did was think of it and, shazam!” He took a monstrous bite. “Mmm, so good.”
“Cool!” Amy exclaimed, holding a tall strawberry shake in her left hand.
“Okay!” Archer growled. “Great, so you see how it works, but don’t mess with it. One wrong thought could be a big problem.”
“Hey,” Buster said. He took a wobbly step and seemed to sway. He dropped the cheeseburger and started to fall, but his father caught him. His eyes flickered and he said, “Like . . . I feel wrecked. So tired now . . . all of a sudden.”
“I think I’d better sit down,” Amy said. She found a spot on the workbench. “That making stuff. It really takes a lot out of ya. Yep.”
“It’s your mental energy,” Archer explained. “Your brain isn’t used to working at this level.”
“Archer,” his father said, “what happens if you create something really big or really complex?”
“For Dreamtreaders, we get tired,” Archer said. “For regular people, I’m not sure. It wouldn’t be good.”
“Good safety tip,” Buster muttered, rubbing his eyes.
“Look, I know how fun the new power can be,” Archer warned, “but this isn’t something to fool with. Keep your thoughts clean.”
“No worries, dude,” Buster replied. “We’ve got Dad’s old workshop TV, and we’ve got our phones to play games on. We’ll be fine.”
Archer took one last look at his family and his friends, and then pulled the blast door shut. There came a dull clank from inside. They were locked inside.