calls. Oh, yes, he knows just how to play this little game. He never says anything, of course. Â He doesnât need to. Â He just listens. Â And then hangs up. Iâve considered going to the police, of course, but itâs way too late for that. Â Way too late. Or I could ask Jan and the kids to move away to a different city with me. Â But he knows who I am and heâd find me again. So all I can do is wait and hope that I get lucky, the way Neil and I got lucky the night we killed the second of them. Â T onight I canât sleep. Itâs after midnight. Jan and I wrapped presents until well after eleven. Â She asked me again if anything was wrong. Â We donât make love as much as we used to, she said; and then there are the nightmares. Â Please tell me if somethingâs wrong. Aaron. Â Please. I stand at the window watching the snow come down. Â Soft and beautiful snow. Â In the morning, a Saturday, the kids will make a snowman and then go sledding and then have themselves a good old-fashioned snowball fight, which invariably means that one of them will come rushing in at some point and accuse the other of some terrible misdeed. I see all this from the attic window. Then I turn back and look around the poker table. Â Four empty chairs. Â Three of them belong to dead men. I look at the empty chairs and think back to summer. I look at the empty chairs and wait for the phone to ring. I wait for the phone to ring.