tool    shed    behind  a   clump   of  sagebrush   that    no  one had hid in  before. But
just    as  the kid who was It  was finishing   counting,   the door    opened  and
someone  else   tried   to  get in. It  was Billy   Deel.   He  hadn't  even    been
playing with    us.
"You    can't   hide    with    me,"    I   hissed  at  him.    "You're supposed    to  find    your
own place."
"It's too late," he said. "He's almost done counting."
Billy   crawled inside. The shed    was tiny,   with    barely  enough  room    for
one person  to  fit in  crouched    over.   I   wasn't  about   to  say so, but being   that
close   to  Billy   scared  me. "It's   too crowded!"   I   whispered.  "You    gotta
leave."
"No,"    Billy   said.   "We     can     fit."   He rearranged   his     legs    so  they    were
pressed up  against mine.   We  were    so  close   I   could   feel    his breath  on  my
face.
"It's too crowded," I said again. "And you're breathing on me."
He  pretended   not to  hear    me. "You    know    what    they    do  in  the Green
Lantern,    don't   you?"   he  asked.
I   could   hear    the muffled shouts  of  the other   kids    being   chased  by  the boy
who was It. I   wished  I   hadn't  chosen  such    a   good    hiding  place.  "Sure," I
said.
"What?"
"The women are nice to the men."
"But what do they do?" He paused. "See, you don't know."
"I do," I said.