It took a few hours to get back on his feet, but when Tom threw his arms around Andy's waist he was glad he'd done it. Mr. Siegel was one of the wolves and one of the teachers, and willing to endanger himself by letting a starved wight feed off of him. Andy was starting to realize how much more life could be gained from other monsters than ordinary humans, and scaled his feeding down to suit. The beast stirred, but didn't rise.
"You can't just give up," Tom said, looking up at him with those eerie black eyes. "Not when I don't even know where I came from."
Andy nodded. "Yeah. Sorry. I've just been... I think it all caught up to me."
Tom nodded. "Better now?"
"Not yet," Andy admitted. "But I'm willing to consider that it could be."
"All right," said Mr. Carillo. "Your voice shouldn't have changed much, and I've got a call going through to your family."
Andy stepped up, took the phone in a grip that should have broken it, and waited until an unmistakable voice said, "Hello?"
"Judy?" he asked quietly.
There was a long moment of silence. Then his sister asked, "Am I supposed to believe that you're Andy?"
"Not really," he said, thinking fast. He was suddenly proud of his little sister for being suspicious that this might be a scam. "You remember those stupid banana-shaped earrings that I got you last Christmas?"
"Worst gag gift ever."
"Yeah, but you did wear them to school."
"The uniform shirts are bright yellow. They matched."
"Okay, look. Put the phone down, go into my room, and look under the far left corner of the bed. I had a box back there."
Judith hesitated, then said: "All right, wait a moment."
When she came back a few minutes later she asked, "Condoms? Why did you want me to know you had condoms. Were you and Amy--?"
"I didn't want you to know. It was just the most secret thing I had -- the best way to prove that I'm me."
There was a long pause. "Andy?" Judith asked.
"Yeah," he said. "I died. But I was killed by a wight, and I came back as one. I don't look... much of anything like you remember."
"But you're alive."
"Sort of. And I am so, so grateful that you are really truly no-shit alive." Andy hesitated. "Can you find Mom and Dad? And put this on speaker?"
"No bullshit?" she asked suspiciously.
"No bullshit."