Indian Summer Halloween (end)
5. Carlin
The graveyard was silent, but it was far from empty. The decorations marched in a straight line around the whole perimeter before passing through the gate. Once inside, they headed towards the center of the graveyard, and as they marched, they shrank, finally disappearing into a six-inch wide hole in the ground over which two girls were playing paddy cake.
Hayden and Conrad stood a few yards away from the gate, watching the silent parade. Crash and Hurricane sat down at Conrad's heels and whined. Several of the things they saw didn't look like decorations come to life. They were spirits of all kinds, and they radiated soft white light. The graveyard was as bright as day in that glow.
"Now what?" Conrad asked.
Hayden didn't answer. He was staring at the two girls. They looked enough alike that they could have been sisters, but one of them didn't look like she had ever been anything but a spirit. The other girl was Meghann.
Hayden looked around the graveyard. He saw Sky perched like a cat on top of a crypt, watching the proceedings with amused disinterest. Taren was standing not far from Meghann, staring down at his feet as his father lectured him. There were others whom he recognized; cops killed in the line of duty, victims in homicide cases he had worked, friends and acquaintances who had died of diseases, car accidents, suicides or drug overdoses. He hadn't realized there were so many, and he thought there probably weren't. It was because of Tisiphone.
He looked at Conrad. Conrad finally seemed to be realizing what he was seeing, and the look on his face was somewhere between paralyzing terror and overwhelming grief. He had an excuse to look away when Hurricane laid his ears back and growled. Conrad put his hand on Hurricane's head as he looked where the bullmastiff was looking. "Hush," he said gently.
Jack was pushing his Honda up the street. Bacchus was still nestled inside Jack's jacket, and he had his paws on one handlebar as if he were pushing, too. Behind them was a white shimmer that left the impression that it was in the shape of the motorcycle. There was a serenely grinning face in the headlight, if a grinning skull could be said to be serene.
Hurricane uttered one more deep, disapproving grunt as Jack and Bacchus approached, and then he shoved his head into Conrad's hand until Conrad scratched behind his ears.
"I think we found Carlin," Hayden said as Jack lowered the bike to the ground.
Jack's eyes blushed, first a pale pink, and then they rushed through shades of red until they reached a deep purplish red. He looked at the two girls. He put his hands over his mouth. Bacchus copied him. "Thank you, Mr. Detective. And you too, Mr. Journalist," Jack said after a while.
"You knew she'd be here," Conrad said. "Why didn't you just come here in the first place?"
"She'll run from me. She won't run from you. Well, she might run from the dogs. Where did you get them? They're ... weird."
Crash barked. Bacchus drew back against Jack's chest and hissed.
"Stop," Conrad said. Crash sneered but said no more.
"You should have told me she'd be here from the start, Jack," Hayden said. "You might have made things easier on yourself."
Jack shook his head. Bacchus did the same. "You don't understand," Jack said.
"You wanna explain it?"
"No, I just ... I can't. I just wanna take her back where she belongs. It'll stop the crazy decorations and all the other things."
"Other things?" Conrad asked. "What other things?"
"Um ... "
"You better start talking before I decide to have roasted cucumber for dinner and your cat turns into dog food."
"I see why they call you the angry one."
"Start talking."
"Conrad, forget it," Hayden said. "Let's just get this over with. I'm tired."
Conrad shrugged. "Whatever."
"Come on, Jack."
Jack hesitated. "You better stay here, Bacchus," he said. He extracted the cat from his jacket and set him down on the motorcycle. Bacchus blinked his lazy wine-colored eyes and meowed. "It's okay. I'll be fine." Bacchus flicked his tail. Jack walked towards the gate.
"Stay with the cat," Conrad told Crash and Hurricane. "Make sure he doesn't run away."
The dogs looked at Bacchus. Bacchus blinked back at them. Conrad followed Jack to the gate as the line of spirits and decorations halted to let Jack through. Hayden put his hand on his chest and took a deep breath. It wasn't his stomach that was in knots that time. He watched Conrad pass through the gate. His knees were starting to shake. Jack turned to him and shouted, "Come on, Mr. Detective!" Hayden took another deep breath and walked to the gate.
As he walked past the spirits and through the gate, he could feel that they were in awe of him, as if they saw something more than a man, and he wondered what he looked like to them. They might have been seeing Tisiphone, marble pale and cold, snakes in her hair and tears of blood rolling down her cheeks, but he didn't think that would inspire anything but fear, even among spirits. Whatever it was, it allowed him and Conrad safe passage. The spirits' attitude towards Jack, however, was a little different. Hayden heard nasty names whispered as Jack went by. It seemed Jack's reputation as a trickster preceded him, and his fellow spirits weren't too fond of him. Hayden understood why Jack was worried. Carlin had no reason to trust Jack, and to get her to go wherever it was she was supposed to go, he was probably going to have to trick her, thus adding to his unfavorable reputation and losing whatever love Carlin might have had for him.
Carlin had stopped the game of paddy cake and was staring at the hole in the ground over which she and Meghann were playing. "It stopped," she said. "Why did it stop?"
Meghann put her hand over her nose. "Ew, it smells like vegetables," she said. She looked around for the source of the offensive odor. Her eyes got wide when she saw Hayden. She jumped up and ran to him.
Hayden didn't let himself stop to think about anything, not the fact that she was a spirit or that she was growing up in the afterlife. Just to have her run to him like that was all he needed to smooth out the knots in his heart.
"Jack O'Lantern, you little bastard!" Carlin shrieked. She stood up and put her fists on her hips. She looked sixteen instead of eight.
"Carlin," Jack said. He approached her timidly, and his eyes were a muddy tan with dark swirls.
"What are you doing here? Can't you see I'm busy?"
Jack went down on his knees and clutched his hands together. "Please, Carlin, you're making people scared. You have to stop. You have to come home, please."
"It's Halloween. This is what I'm supposed to do."
"But Carlin - "
"Go away, Jack."
Jack took off his gloves and showed her the ring with the face in it. "They've been watching me since you ran away. They told me that if I didn't find you in a hundred years they'd turn me into a human and make me die so I have to end up like my dad."
Carlin studied Jack carefully. She scrunched her eyes. "This is some kind of trick."
Jack shook his head. "This is the last night I have."
"One hour," the face said.
Carlin's expression softened. "Oh, Jack." She fell on her knees and threw her arms around him. "Oh, Jack, I'm so sorry. I had no idea they'd do that to you. Oh, those terrible, terrible bitches. But I can't go back. I can't."
"Why? Why did you run away?"
"Because people are trying to kill me. They think Halloween is evil, and they want to get rid of me. They don't understand, and I can't make them understand."
"Screw them."
"If they make people stop trick or treating, I'll go away. I'll die."
"I don't want you to die."
"But I can't let the crones kill you like that. If you want me to come back, I will. I'm sorry, Jack. I should have told you why I left. I should have asked you to come with me. I do love you, Jack."
"I love you, too, but - "
She kissed him on the mouth. His eyes flashed yellow and then fell shut.
"That's gross," Meghann said. "He's got vegetable cooties."
"Girls have cooties, too, you know," Hayden said.
"Nuh-uh."
"They do. I've had them. They're pretty gross."
The face in Jack's ring started to fuss. Jack broke the kiss and stuffed his hands back into the gloves. "Take your spirits and get out of here," he said. "The crones will show up before too long, and it's best if you're long gone. Maybe I can convince them I couldn't find you."
"Jack ... "
"No. I want you to go. Nothing they do to me is as bad as what could happen to you. Even if I die, I'll end up just like I am now. You won't. Get out of here."
Carlin smiled. She stood up and was suddenly dressed as a drill sergeant. She blew hard into a whistle. "All right, you lazy bastards! Double time!" she shouted. The spirits began to move again, pouring into the little hole in the ground. Jack watched them with a sunset in his eyes. When they were gone, Carlin waved to Meghann and kissed Jack again before she disappeared.
Conrad scratched at the bandage on his chin. "I don't think that was what I was expecting," he said.
"What did you expect?" Hayden asked.
"I don't know. I just know it wasn't that. Are we done now?"
Jack looked around the graveyard. The spirits that belonged there were still there, but there were no decorations and no other spirits. "Yeah," he said. "Until the crones come for me. And I'd rather not wait here for them, if it's all the same to you."
Before anyone had a chance to answer, they heard Bacchus yowling. Crash and Hurricane started barking. A lone witch on a broomstick with a sickle in one hand was speeding towards Jack. Bacchus, Crash and Hurricane were chasing the witch. She swung the sickle at Jack, digging a deep furrow across his chest. She started a turn to come back and strike him again. Sky jumped down from the top of the crypt, tackling the witch off her broom and knocking the sickle from her hand. Bacchus reached her first and began to scratch at her face. The dogs soon caught up, and before too long, there were only little bits and pieces of cardboard.
The cut in Jack's chest turned black and hard as stone. His eyes went white, and he collapsed.
"Is he dead?" Meghann asked.
"I don't think so," Hayden said.
"How can you tell?" Conrad asked.
Robert stopped fussing at his son and went to Jack. He bent over the green skinned spirit, his ear close to Jack's mouth. "He's all right," Robert said. He stood up and brushed dirt off his knees. "But you might want to take him somewhere safe."
"We'll take him to my place," Hayden said.
Robert smiled. "I'm proud of you, Hayden." And then he was gone.
Hayden looked at Taren. He thought of a thousand things to say but couldn't voice any of them.
Taren grinned. "No need to say anything," he said. "I know. And I don't think you failed any of us."
Hayden looked down at his feet. He felt Taren disappear. Meghann kissed his cheek. "Bye, Dad," she whispered. And then she was gone too.
Sky squirmed away from Crash and Hurricane who were cheerfully licking his face. "It could be worse," he said.
"Thanks for being so optimistic," Conrad said.
Sky shrugged as he disappeared.
"Well, he's right," Hayden said. "It could always be worse." He bent down and scooped Jack into his arms. Jack moaned at the movement but didn't wake up.
"You need any help?" Conrad asked.
"No. He's pretty light. Get his motorcycle."
"But it's dead. Isn't it?"
"It'll be fine in the morning."
"Okay. Whatever. I don't think I'm ever gonna tell anyone about this Halloween."
"Why not? No one would believe you anyway."
"That's just the problem. This is too weird, even for me."
6. Treat
Bacchus sat on the back of the couch above Jack's head, occasionally opening one eye and lifting his chin off his paws to look at Jack and Hayden as they waited for the crones to come. He always had a look on his face like he was satisfied but still concerned. Jack was alive, if that was what a spirit could be, and Hayden hadn't left him alone for a second. Being a cat, there wasn't much Bacchus could do for Jack, but as a loyal familiar, he could and did make sure that Jack was being taken care of.
As they waited, it began to storm. The tricks that the flashes of lightning played on Hayden's eyes seemed only that - tricks. He dismissed them without going though the painful, wracking guilt that usually sent him running into the kitchen in search of cigarettes and bourbon that weren't there. Bacchus lifted his head and looked at Hayden.
Hayden shrugged. "My own demons," he said. "What can I say?"
Bacchus shrugged back at him and put his chin back on his paws. He didn't close his eyes. His ears twitched, and his fur began to bristle. The crones were coming.
Thunder crashed with a burst of bright white that made Hayden's eyes ache. It sounded like a tree right outside had been struck. There was the brief sound of rending wood then silence but for the rain pounding on the roof. For some reason, Hayden thought of being below the deck of a ship during a storm in the middle of the icy grey Atlantic. If he listened hard enough, he could hear the screams of the crew above as the mast toppled over and buried them under the heavy wet sail. The boat was going down.
Jack sat up suddenly, his eyes flashing sick green waves, much like the sea that Hayden felt rushing in on him. "Oh fuck I'm gonna die," Jack said.
Bacchus stood up and jumped down into Jack's arms, rubbing his gums on Jack's chin.
"That's overreacting a bit," Hayden said.
"Overreacting? They're gonna make me flesh and blood! They're gonna make me die! I didn't do what I was supposed to do!"
"Sometimes what you're supposed to do isn't the right thing do to."
Jack put his arms around Bacchus and buried his face in the cat's neck, making a mournful sound that might have been something like the sound his mother made when she came for the dead.
Hayden shuddered.
A chill seeped into the room. Jack cowered into the corner of the couch, clutching Bacchus like a lifeline. The cat yowled. A milky fog wavered over the living room. Hayden rubbed his eyes, thinking it might go away, but the mist remained. It took its time shaping itself into three old women with long white hair and eyes as black as coal and as shiny as the chrome details on Jack's Honda.
Why do you bitches always come in threes? Hayden thought wearily. He tried to ignore the tremor that crept through his bones at the sight of them. He desperately wanted a cigarette or anything he could clamp his teeth down on to keep from screaming.
The crone on the left, closest to Hayden, pointed a crooked yellowing index finger at him. "Think not thoughts ill of us, blood avenger, or we'll have your snakes twisting down that nasty throat of yours," she said. Her voice, though ancient beyond all reason, was clear and strong.
Hayden shrank back in his chair. "Da, Frau Oma," he muttered, fearing for a moment that she wouldn't like being addressed in German or being called Mrs. Grandma, but she smiled and gave him a little "that's better" nod.
The crones turned their attention to Jack, who was still trying to dig himself a hiding place in the cushions.
"Jack O'Lantern!" the one in the middle said.
Jack froze. He knew he couldn't hide, but maybe if he stayed very, very still, they wouldn't notice him. Bacchus growled.
"Silence, Bacchus," the crone on the right said. She waved her hand, and Bacchus's mouth vanished.
The cat's eyes bulged, and he put his paws up to where his mouth had been.
"Now, Jack," the middle one said. "We had charged you with a simple task and gave you more than ample time to complete it. We are at the end of that time, and yet, we find you empty-handed. What say ye, Jack O'Lantern?"
Jack raised his hand and pointed at Hayden. "Advocate," he said.
"Christ, Jack," Hayden said. "What the hell do you think having me as an advocate will get you?"
"Tell them what happened. They'll believe you more than they will me."
The crone on the left nodded towards Hayden. "Speak, advocate," she said. "What tale have you?"
"Well, I - "
"No. Start from the beginning."
"That was the beginning."
"Of Jack's part. We would hear your tale."
"Oh. Okay."
Hayden took a deep breath and told them everything that had happened that day, starting with his dream of giving Meghann bullets. He couldn't tell if they believed him, but they certainly seemed to be enjoying it. Tiny smiles lifted the wrinkles at the corners of their mouths, and their eyes glinted with glee. When he got to Carlin, they frowned, and their eyes saddened. When he told them how Jack had decided to let Carlin go, big salty tears raced down the fleshy canyons of their faces.
"Oh how sweet," the middle one said. "That is truly love! Oh, poor Carlin! Poor Jack! We had no idea."
Jack pulled himself out of the couch a little. "So does that mean - "
"Silence. Let us confer."
Jack slapped his hands over his mouth to keep the crones from making it disappear, but they turned into milky fog again. Jack dropped his hands to his lap. Bacchus shook himself and got his mouth back. "I think I'm screwed," Jack said.
"I'm sorry. I tried," Hayden said.
"No. It's my fault. I wasted their time."
"Does time matter to them?"
"You'd be surprised how much time matters to them."
"How's your chest?"
Jack looked down at the jet-black furrow that marred his fresh green skin. He touched the edges of the wound. "It doesn't hurt," he said. "It probably will when they make me real."
"I'm not so sure that's what they're gonna do."
"Why wouldn't they?"
"They didn't know why Carlin left."
"I didn't know why she left."
"Exactly. They have to take that into consideration."
"I guess."
Hayden watched the fog. He was pretty sure that he would try to do something stupid if they were too hard on Jack. He just wasn't sure what that would be. Trying anything was probably stupid, but Jack wasn't to blame for Carlin running away in the first place. Letting her go was the best thing for her. Maybe Jack didn't handle his responsibilities well, but that was hardly something to be condemned to die for.
The fog began to swirl and bubble and turned a shade closer to egg nog than milk. The crones reappeared. Their tears had dried, and their faces showed no sign of emotion. The one in the middle raised her right hand and leveled her index finger at Jack. Jack and Bacchus trembled and pressed back into the corner of the couch.
"Jack O'Lantern," the crone said. "You have disobeyed us and wasted one hundred years, though we find your reason for letting Carlin go rather touching. So the sentence we pass on you is this: you will never enter the world of spirits again. You will remain here, wandering the world of flesh until the days end. If Carlin returns of her own free will, with no tricks from you, we may reconsider, as the only thing that could possibly cause her to come back is her love for you. We will continue to monitor you through your advocate. We demand that you return here once a year, on Halloween, and that during that day, you remain indoors and take no part in festivities of any kind. Bacchus may remain with you." She turned to Hayden. "Do you find that fair?"
Hayden nodded, glad to be spared the trouble of trying to save Jack's life. "What happens when I die?" he asked. "Who's gonna look after him then?"
All three of the crones smiled soft motherly smiles. "Your line will always be responsible for him," the one on the right said.
"But I don't have kids."
Their smiles deepened and actually touched their eyes. "The sentence is passed. It begins now. Fair thee well, Jack O'Lantern." They melted into creamy fog, and the fog dissipated. Outside, the storm had stopped, and Hayden could feel that the temperature had plunged well below freezing. It would begin to snow before too long.
Jack looked down at the ring on his middle finger. The face had solidified and no longer seemed interested in talking to him. The edges of the band had turned dark bronze as the ring tightened on his finger. Bacchus uttered an inquiring meow. Jack dropped his hand and looked despondently at Hayden.
"You aren't gonna die, Jack," Hayden said.
"I guess I deserve what I got," Jack said.
"I'm exhausted. I'm going to bed. You can stay here as long as you want."
"Thanks, Mr. Detective. And I'm sorry."
"Don't apologize."
By the time Hayden woke up at eight, there were six inches of snow on the ground, and it fell from the sky in steady, thick blankets. He didn't bother to turn on the TV to check the weather reports. It would snow all day and stop by midnight. The meteorologists would never figure out why because it wasn't nature that had been controlling the weather the last two days. But Hayden didn't think it was his responsibility to tell anyone what it really was. He sat in the living room, watching the snow and the sleeping green spirit on the couch.
Jack woke up around noon and left an hour later, zinging through the snow with Bacchus tucked into the front of his jacket. Hayden worried for a little while, but he was pretty sure Jack would be just fine, if not even better off than he had been before. He didn't have the crones breathing down his neck, and if he could find Carlin again, they could be together with nothing to worry about. Hayden looked forward to seeing Jack again and hearing about all the trouble Jack would find himself in during the year.
Later in the afternoon, when the snow wasn't falling as heavily, Hayden went out. In the sale aisle at the drug store, he found a pink plastic pumpkin with round black eyes and a dog toothed grin. He bought a bag of candy, filled the pumpkin and went to the graveyard.