This was one of my favourite horror story to write. Hope you enjoy!

Jamie used to love playing out in the snow with his friends. The cold was so much fun - it was the perfect way to let the time go by while waiting for Christmas, his favourite holiday of the year.

But then children started going missing.

At first it was just one little girl. She was a bit older than Jamie's sister. She was a few years below him in school, so even though she lived on his street he didn't really know her. But she never came home from school one day. He remembered hearing sirens go past his room that evening as the police drove over to her house. It scared him slightly, and even though his mother offered to help put up "Missing" poster of her he felt that the town soon moved on, too busy to remember her after the first year. Besides, it happened a few months before Christmas, so while everyone said they had the thought of her in their hearts he never heard anything about her from the neighbours after January.

Then, with Easter right around the corner, another child went missing.

Jamie didn't know this child either, other than the fact that he lived on the other side of town. He went to another school, so it wasn't until he heard his mother talk about it on the phone that he realized it. This reminded him of the first girl. He felt guilty; he had completely forgotten about her until then. He wondered if the police thought that this boy and the little girl had anything in common.

Nobody went missing during the summer, yet there was a strange tension lingering in the air. Parents were wary about letting their kids out to play, asking them where they were going and when they were getting back, much to their children's annoyance. Some parents even insisted on driving their kids to school, and their curfews were often cut.

It was September, the second day back to school, when the next child vanished.

This girl was just above Jamie's grade. He'd seen her in the halls every now and then, talking to her friends and playing with the pigtails she often sported. This left him with a sinking feeling in his stomach. Evidently his friends felt the same. They all looked at each other in the hall during the next assembly, announcing that this girl was in fact missing. They felt numb while the teachers gave advice on safety, one thought on their minds:

Who will be next?

Halloween was practically cancelled that year. The few who did go out kept in groups of their friends, and one or two of their parents would act almost as bodyguard while they walked door to door.

Jamie's house only got about three visitors that year. As Sophie munched on the candy apples, he made a joke to his mother about how the candy they bought this year was wasted. She didn't laugh.

When it really hit Jamie how sad it was, that all these children were going missing, was in late December that year. It was nearly Christmas, and so the houses were decorated beautifully, like gingerbread houses. The lights on the streets were bright and warm, giving the world that magical feeling only Christmas time could give.

But despite the decorations and the snowflakes drifting innocently through the air, Jamie couldn't put the thought of those children out of his mind. Where were they? Were they still alive? Have their parents bought them gifts, in the hope that they are found before Christmas? Will their parents even celebrate Christmas without them?

This was in the back of his mind as he went to knock on his friend's doors.

"Sorry," Pippa said, a worried look on her face, "My mom said I'm not allowed out because... you know..."

It was the same story with Cupcake, and Caleb and Claude.

He didn't have much hope when he asked Monty.

"You probably shouldn't go out anyway, Jamie," He'd warned after explaining that he, like the others, wasn't allowed out. "Even if you don't...y'know...you still could catch a cold or something."

So there he was on the swings, with his favourite book, alone in the park. He was wary, but he didn't think he would end up...however the others had. If anything had happened to them at all.I mean, come on, he thought to himself, It's the middle of the day! Nothing bad happens in broad daylight.

That was when a gust of wind blew the book out of his hands.

Jamie gasped, and ran to pick it up before it was blown even further away. And then, wiping the snow off the pages, he looked up. Between the trees, he saw someone walking into the woods. That someone had unnaturally white hair, and a blue hoodie coated with frost, and their feet were bare.

He must be freezing... Jamie thought. "Hey!" He yelled, hoping the boy could hear him. But he continued walking further into the woods. Suddenly, he stopped, and Jamie saw the wooden staff held in his hand. The boy turned, and a chill went down Jamie's spine when they made eye-contact.

The boy had eyes that were shockingly blue and glossed over, like ice. When he smiled, Jamie found himself letting go of his book; it fell into a puddle that wasn't quite frozen. His feet moved without him telling them to. One part of his brain nudged at him, telling Jamie that he should be scared and that he should run away as fast as he could.

But the rest of him seemed to be fin with whatever was happening. After all, the boy only looked a bit older than him, and even though he'd never seen him in school, Jamie believed he must be friendly. Besides, it was Christmas! Nothing bad ever happens at Christmas...

Before he knew it, Jamie was in the woods, standing in front of the boy with the blue eyes. Up close, Jamie could see just how pale the boy was. He was like a resin doll, and if Jamie squinted he was sure he saw that the boy's skin was covered with a layer of frost. Or maybe his skin was made of ice.

"Do you want to play?" The boy asked, and Jamie felt his head nodding.

The boy's eyes lit up and his smile widened.

Jamie found himself running, skipping and dancing deeper and deeper into the forest. The boy, singing and laughing, was leading him past the trees for what felt like ages. Yet at the same time it was like not even a minute had passed since he was in the park.

"Isn't this fun?!" The boy would ask as they played in the snow. And Jamie would agree that yes, he was having a great time. And the boy would laugh. But his laugh seemed to come not from him but from the woods itself. His voice crawled through the snow, up the ice on the trees and through the cold air. It left Jamie feeling very uneasy.

Jamie didn't remember when they built a snowman, but there it was when he got up from the cold ground. Its stone eyes didn't reflect any light, yet they held more life than the cold eyes of the boy. Jamie felt his hat being snatched off by long, thin fingers, and he saw the boy it on the snowman's head. "There we go," he said gleefully, "Now he's perfect!"

Jamie stared at the lopsided smile, and the deformed body, and couldn't help but feel like it wasn't as perfect as the boy thought.

"Wait." He said. Then the boy, using the hooked staff he held in his hand, drew a circle in the snow around the snowman, almost as if it would give it protection. He stood next to Jamie, and Jamie suppressed the urge to jolt away at the coldness of the boy's hand as he put it on his shoulder. Even through his layers of clothes, he could feel how freezing the boy's skin was.

Jamie wanted to ask if he felt cold at all, but that was when he caught a glimpse of someone.

It was a short boy, with dark skin and a striped scarf wrapped around his neck. His skin was covered in a shimmering layer of frost, and he had a frown that seemed frozen onto his face. His curly hair had snow stuck in it, and his eyes were dark and hollow; they were glassy like the boy's. Originally they may have been a lovely warm brown, but it was hard to tell due to his white pupils. They were like the eyes of a dead fish. Jamie gasped, and it felt like he swallowed his tongue.

"Wh-who's that- that boy over th-there?" He asked shakily. The blue-eyed blue rolled his head to gaze at the dark-skinned boy, and shrugged, "He doesn't want to play with us." Was all he said.

Jamie stepped away from the boy, and he caught sight of another person.

Behind the snowman was a little girl, probably only in first grade. Her hair was black and curly, and her pale skin was frozen over just like the other boy. Jamie remembered her big blue eyes from the "Missing" posters, and snowflakes had stuck to her long eyelashes. Her mouth was fixed into a gloomy pout. The tears on her cheeks had frozen into tiny icicles, and the snow on her big pink coat looked fresh, as if she'd...

...as if she'd been buried in snow.

The gasp caught in Jamie's throat.

"What's the matter?" The boy asked, confused.

Jamie turned to him, and behind the boy stood a girl with pigtails. Her eyes, like the others, had glazed white pupils. Jamie recognized her from school.

"Why...why...?" Was all he could say as he looked at the bodies of the missing children.

"What's wrong?" The boy walked up to him, icy waves radiating off his skin.

Jamie took off further into the woods, running as fast as he could. Several times he slipped in the ice, and each time he got up and made sure to look behind him as he took off again. He felt sicker and sicker as he spotted dozens of other dead children hiding between the trees, staring at him sorrowfully.

He couldn't see a clearing in the forest, so he just continued running, hoping that soon he'd see his town again or at least a cottage to take refuge.

He made the mistake of looking behind him, and when Jamie looked back to the front he smashed into something solid, much harder than a tree. Like a statue made of ice.

He fell to the floor, and felt a previously-loose tooth rolling around on his tongue. He reached into his mouth with cold fingers and took it out, before looking up to see what he had ran into.

It wasn't a tree.

It wasn't a statue.

It was the boy.

"Why are you running?" He asked, his pupils now covered with that same deathly white. "Don't you want to play anymore?"

The boy wasn't touching the ground anymore. He was levitating, his staff held loosely by his side.

"No!" Jamie shouted, terrified, "I want to go home!"

Then something about the boy changed. It was like ice was cracking under his skin.

His dead eyes contorted to an almost-sad look, and his head tilted. A cold gust of wind kicked up around him.

"Home...you want to go home...?" He asked, "But...I thought we were having fun."

Jamie felt tears run down his cheeks, before the sting of cold took away the warmth. "I want to go home..." he whimpered.

That was when the boy's eyebrows crossed, and his eyes glowed with rage.

"If you want to go home..." he seethed, "then GO HOME!"

Jamie quickly got to his feet, and the boy continued to scream as Jamie ran.

"GO HOME! GET OUT! GET OUT!"

His voice radiated through the snow, making it feel like his shrieking voice was just behind Jamie, clipping at his heels.

After what felt like an eternity of fleeing, Jamie began to slow down. He stumbled onto a tree, and tried to catch his breath.

Oh, why hadn't he stayed in the park?!

The sky began to darken, and Jamie was realizing just how cold it was. He wondered around, scared of bumping into a dead child or the boy who must have caused their deaths, and tried to find his way out of the woods.

But it didn't work. All he could see were trees, all thickly coated with cold snow.

The skin on his face and ears felt raw and painful, and it got hard to move his fingers.

The woods were dark now, and Jamie found himself bumping into trees and tripping on fallen twigs. It took all his strength just to get up and carry on walking.

"S-s-so c-cold-d..." He whispered, his lips nearly frozen together. His body trembled from the cold, and it began to get difficult to keep his shaking legs walking.

His felt ice beneath his feet, and he lost his footing.

Jamie fell onto the hard ground, and this time, he didn't get up.

It was hard to see at the angle he was in, but Jamie knew the children from before were getting closer to him. Were they going to hurt him? Or were they just going to watch him die?

Die...I don't want to die!

Jamie thought of all the things he hadn't done. He was just a kid! He couldn't - shouldn't - die yet! He wanted to live! He wanted to go home to see Sophie and his mother, and play with his friends, and - although he never thought he'd say it - he wanted to go back to school!

Then a coldness like no other seized his skin.

The boy's hand was clamped around Jamie's neck as he was rolled onto his back, unable to resist.

The boy, with his unnaturally white hair and his blue hoodie coated with frost, and his feet that were bare. And his eyes that had been dead for a very long time. That boy knelt down, and held onto Jamie's neck like a vice. Only this time, his coldness spread over Jamie, sealing his throat shut, and turning his skeleton into brittle stone. A white film went over his eyes, beginning to blind him. A layer of frost went over his skin, his hair, his eyeballs.

All his could see was the boy's blue eyes, and all he could hear was him saying, "Don't leave me alone...don't ever leave me..."

Jamie's body stilled.

The boy got up, and stared for hours and hours until Jamie's whole form was buried thickly in snow.

The last thing anyone saw from Jamie was his book, laying in a frozen puddle.

The End