CHAPTER SIXTEEN

BELMORE GIRLS

It was their junior year at Belmore.

It was Thursday, 30 October.

The girls, scattered about the living room of their apartment, had the television on. Abilene, slumped on the sofa with her feet resting on the coffee table, watched the eleven o’clock news anchored by Candi Delmar while Vivian fiddled with hair curlers, Finley studied TV Guide, Cora skimmed a chapter in her physiology textbook, and Helen munched nacho-flavored tortilla chips.

‘Parents,’ Candi reported, ‘are being encouraged to take advantage of various community activities, such as Halloween parties being hosted at local recreation centers, which provide a safe alternative to the traditional trick-or-treating.’

‘Oh, what fun,’ Abilene muttered. ‘Next thing you know, they’re gonna outlaw trick-or-treating.’

‘For those who do intend to allow their children to go from door to door, however, we at Newscene urge that several simple precautions be followed. Naturally, small children should always be accompanied by an adult. Make sure their costumes are made of flame-resistant fabrics and light in color so that they will be plainly visible to motorists. Masks should not restrict the child’s vision. Finally, take special care to inspect all the treats before you allow them to be eaten by your young ones. Be on the lookout for any signs of tampering, especially with such items as home-baked goods and fruit.’

‘The ol’ razor blade in the apple gag,’ Finley said, looking up from the TV Guide.

‘Ouch,’ Helen said.

‘… foreign objects in your child’s treats, you should immediately alert the police.’

‘Who would do something like that?’ Helen asked.

‘A lot of sick bastards in this world,’ Abilene said.

‘… these simple guidelines and have a safe and sane Halloween.’

Cora shut her textbook. ‘Halloween was never intended to be safe and sane. The whole idea’s to get wild.’

‘I used to get scared silly,’ Helen said. ‘You know? You go up to some creepy old house and ring the doorbell? You never know who’s gonna open the door.’

‘Or what,' Finley added.

‘Oooo, I get goosebumps just thinking about it. I think it was my favorite holiday, besides Christmas.’

‘Once I got too old for trick-or-treating,’ Abilene said, ‘we’d always stay home and fix up the house. To make it look spooky. I’d hand out the goodies, but Dad’d pull stuff. Come to the door in a vampire outfit, or something. I remember this one time, he rigged up an overcoat so it covered his head. Then he hid on the porch and snuck up on the kids. Scared the hell out of them. Some of ’em actually ran off screaming. And Dad would end up laughing like crazy and Mom’d yell at him. He’d say, “Don’t be a stick-in-the-mud. They love it.” ’ Abilene shook her head. ‘It was so neat. He’ll probably be up to his same old tricks tomorrow night.’ She felt her throat tighten. ‘God, I’m making myself homesick.’

‘We oughta do something,’ Finley said.

‘Yeah,’ Abilene said. ‘Last year was a drag. We bought all that stuff and nobody showed up.’

‘A few did,’ Vivian pointed out.

‘Six or seven. Might as well not have been a Halloween.’ Cora grinned. ‘We could crash the Sig party. They’re having that Midnight Sabat thing.’

'You got a death wish?’ Abilene asked.

‘Why don’t we go out trick-or-treating?’ Finley suggested.

‘I think we’re a little old for that,’ Vivian said, pinning a final curler into her hair.

‘We could go to the movies,’ Helen said. ‘They’re having a special all-night Shock Festival at the Elsinore.’

‘That sounds pretty lame,’ Finley said.

‘Yeah,’ Abilene said. ‘We can go to movies any time.’

‘Helen does,' Cora pointed out.

‘It doesn’t have to be actual trick-or-treating,’ Abilene said. ‘But it’d be neat to get out into the streets. Put together some costumes. Get a look at the kids.’

‘See if any are even out there,’ Cora said. ‘Maybe they’ll all be off having a safe and sane time taking advantage of community activities.’

‘If they are,’ Abilene said, ‘I pity them. Anyway, how about it? We don’t actually have to go around ringing doorbells. What we could do is buy a bunch of candy and take it with us, and hand it out to the kids we see.’

‘I’ll wear my gorilla mask,’ Finley said.

‘Newscene wouldn’t approve,’ Cora told her. ‘It restricts your vision.’

‘Screw Newscene.’

Finley wore her gorilla mask and a suit of green, mechanic’s coveralls that she found after cutting her afternoon classes and searching thrift shops in the seamier area of town. She announced that she would be going out as a grease monkey.

Cora, averse to dressing up, gave in to pressure from the others and wore her varsity cheerleader costume from high school. It consisted of a white pullover sweater with a large M in front, a short white pleated skirt, white crew socks and sneakers.

Vivian borrowed a costume from the wardrobe room of the theater arts department. She would be going out as a witch, complete with pointed hat and a flowing black gown. She used makeup to construct a nasty, bulbous wen for the tip of her nose. She didn’t want to carry a broom but Finley talked her into it.

Abilene prepared her costume in secret. She cut out a foot-long crescent in cardboard, taped it securely to the pendant of a chain necklace, covered the cardboard with aluminium foil and attached the Schick label from a pack of injector blades. She scissored a big hole under one arm of an old sweatshirt. While the others were in the living room, she dressed herself in Reeboks, corduroy pants and the maimed sweatshirt. She dropped the chain over her head so that the shiny crescent hung across her chest. Then she joined the rest of them.

‘What the hell are you supposed to be?’ Cora asked, seeming to frown and smile at the same time.

Abilene grinned. She raised her right arm and waved it up and down, showing her exposed armpit.

‘An ad for Ban deodorant,’ suggested Finley, who was tossing her gorilla head from hand to hand.

‘Beeeeep. Wrong.’ She tapped the dangling crescent.

‘Moon something,’ Helen guessed. ‘A silver moon.’

‘You’re a Moonie,’ Cora said.

‘Beeeeep. Wrong.’

‘A lunatic,’ Finley said.

‘I get it,’ Vivian said. Shaking her head, she rolled her eyes upward. ‘I’ll give you gals a couple of hints. One, it’s really dumb.’

‘That narrows things down,’ Cora said.

‘Two, Abilene’s an English major.’

‘Got it,’ Finley said. ‘She’s Huckleberry Armpit.'

In unison, Vivian and Abilene said, ‘Beeeep. Wrong.’

‘Give up?’ Abilene asked. ‘Tell ’em, Viv.’

‘She’s “The Pit and the Pendulum,” you weenies.’

The revelation was greeted with groans, chuckles, smirks and shaking heads.

‘Nobody’s gonna get that,’ Cora said.

‘So what? I think it’s pretty neat. That’s all that counts.’

‘You’re so weird, sometimes,’ Helen said.

‘Me? What are you supposed to be?’

Helen, standing there among a grease monkey, a cheerleader, a ‘Pit and the Pendulum’ and a witch, seemed to be dressed as nothing more than Helen. She wore sneakers, brown corduroy pants and a white blouse. Clutched against her stomach was a wadded white sheet.

‘A laundry woman?’ Abilene suggested.

‘Hardly.’ Helen shook open her sheet. When she draped it over her head, Abilene saw that holes had been cut for her eyes and mouth.

‘Caspar the Friendly Ghost,’ Finley said.

Helen raised her arms and went, ‘Woooooo.’

‘And you say I’m weird.’

‘I always used to go as a ghost,’ Helen explained.

‘Always?’

‘Every Halloween. But you’ve gotta get the full effect.’ Pressing the sheet to her face so she could see out the eyeholes, she drifted over to the sofa. She picked up a short length of rope with a hangman’s noose at one end. She dropped the loop over her head like a necklace, positioning the thick row of coils in the center of her chest. The weight of the noose, Abilene realized, was intended to hold the outfit in place.

‘Pretty decent,’ she said.

'She won’t have to worry about getting hit by a car,’ Cora said.

‘True,’ said Abilene. ‘Not a ghost of a chance.’

‘Groan,’ Finley remarked. She put on her gorilla head. Bending over the sofa, she picked up her video camera. She taped the others while they gathered flashlights and several plastic sacks loaded with candy they’d purchased that day at a nearby convenience store. Then she led the way, walking backward through the doorway, the camera at her shoulder, recording the procession as it paraded along the corridor.

Lowering the camera, she trotted downstairs. They followed her into the night.

‘ “The sky, it was ashen and sober,” ’ Abilene intoned. ‘ “The leaves, they were crisped and seer. ’Twas night in the lonesome October of my most immemorial year.” ’

‘Say what?’ asked Finley in a muffled voice.

‘A perfect Allhallows Eve,’ Abilene said. The wind in the tree tops sounded like cars rushing by on a freeway. It made shadows tremble and shake on the pavement of the road and sidewalk. It tumbled leaves through the air. It billowed Helen’s sheet and flapped Vivian’s witch gown and lifted Cora’s pleated skirt. It tossed Abilene’s pendulum from side to side. It licked her bare armpit, eased inside her sweatshirt’s gaping hole and slid its chilly tongue over her breast Though it gave her gooseflesh, she rather liked the feel of it.

Stopping at a corner, Finley asked, ‘Which way?’

‘Let’s not get any closer to campus,’ Vivian said.

Campus was several blocks straight ahead.

Abilene glanced to the left That direction would lead downtown. To the right, however, the street passed between rows of family houses. Cars were parked along both sides and in driveways. Lights glowed on porches. Windows were bright. She saw jack-o’-lantems in front of many nearby homes. And as she watched, a group of kids hurried toward the sidewalk from a house midway down the block.

‘This way,’ Abilene said.

They went to the right

The kids were heading in their direction. Four little tykes, accompanied by a couple of women who waited on the sidewalk while they made forays to each house.

‘I hope these mothers don’t think we’re nuts,’ Vivian said.

Approaching them, Abilene suddenly found herself feeling very self-conscious about her armpit She wished she’d worn a more conventional costume. Or a jacket.

The kids came scampering back to the sidewalk. The boys were Batman and a Freddie Krueger. One girl was a ballerina. The other, in high heels, fishnet stockings, a black leather miniskirt and silky silver blouse, wore a great deal of makeup and a shaggy red wig. Abilene supposed she was meant to be a rock star, but she looked like a six-year-old hooker.

What kind of mother would let her go out looking like that? Neither woman looked particularly weird.

‘Happy Halloween,’ Finley said.

‘Yikes, an ape!’ said one of the women.

‘He’s not a real ape,’ Batman pointed out.

‘We’re the Merry Halloween Team,’ Finley said. ‘And we bear gifts of goodies for all the little boys and girls.’

A snort of laughter came from under Helen’s sheet.

Finley clapped Cora on the back. ‘This is Cheery the Cheerleader. Cheery, give the kids some candy.’

The children gathered around Cora. She reached into her sack, pulled out a handful of miniature Three Musketeers Bars, and dropped one into each bag.

Receiving his treat, Freddie Krueger said, ‘Unpleasant dreams,’ and let out an evil laugh.

The ballerina shyly murmured, ‘Thank you.’

‘Thank you very much,’ said Batman.

The hooker muttered a petulant ‘Thanks’ and stepped right over to Abilene. ‘What’re you?’ she asked in her snotty little voice.

‘I’m the Razor Lady,’ Abilene told her, tapping the edge of her foil-wrapped crescent. ‘I sneak around in the night and cut out the tongues of obnoxious little children.’

‘You are not. Sides, that’s too big to go in a mouth.’

‘I make it fit,’ Abilene said.

Helen started giggling inside her sheet.

Vivian cackled in a very witchlike manner.

‘Come along, kids,’ said one of the women. If she’d caught Abilene’s remarks, apparently they hadn’t bothered her.

Abilene and the others stepped aside to let the group pass, then continued along the sidewalk.

‘Geez, Hickok.’

‘She was a little creep.’

‘Can’t take you anywhere.’

At the end of the block, they spotted several small clusters of trick-or-trfeaters in both directions. Since going to the left would lead them toward campus, they headed to the right.

They met a pirate, a princess and a tiny little girl in a Snow White costume accompanied by a young man and woman who seemed to enjoy the encounter more than the kids.

‘The Merry Halloween Team?’ asked the man after hearing Finley’s spiel.

‘Hiis is really neat,’ said the woman. ‘What a nice idea.’

‘We’re just out to have some fun,’ Cora told them. ‘Monkeying around,’ said Finley.

‘Woooooo,’ said Helen.

‘And look at you,’ the man said, smiling at Abilene — eyeing her armpit.

‘She’s the Razor Lady,’ Finley said. ‘She sneaks around and slices off the tongues of obnoxious children.’

‘Really?’ asked the woman.

The man, frowning, shook his head. ‘I would’ve guessed you might be “The Pit and the Pendulum.” ’

Abilene burst out laughing. ‘You’re right! Fantastic!’

‘Obscure, but clever,’ the man said.

‘You’ve made her night,’ Vivian told him.

‘Give them some candy,’ Abilene said.

Cora gave a couple of Three Musketeers bars to each of the adults, then dropped a few more into the bags of the kids.

On their way again, Vivian said, ‘Nice people.’

‘Smart, too,’ said Abilene.

Next, they met up with a flock of eight or nine yelling, laughing kids being shepherded by three teenaged girls. While Cora handed out candy, a kid wearing a plastic Rambo chest looked Vivian in the eyes and grumbled, ‘I’m your worst nightmare.’ A vampire pranced around Helen chanting, ‘Fatty ghost, fatty ghost!’ Minnie Mouse, as high as Abilene’s waist, reached up and tugged the front of her sweatshirt and said, ‘I’m Susan and I’m four.’

‘Hi, Susan. I’m Abilene.’

‘That’s a pretty name.’

‘Why, thank you.’

‘I’m four.’

‘Are you getting lots of candy?’

‘Oh yes. Lots and lots.’

The prancing, chanting vampire yelped and went down. He fell flat on the sidewalk and started to cry.

Once they’d left the bunch behind, Abilene asked Helen if she’d tripped him.

‘Who you mean? “Fatty ghost, fatty ghost”? Naw. He was just a klutz, the little asshole.’

‘Have you noticed how some of these kids are such jerks?’ Vivian asked.

‘Did you see that little shit grab for my camera?’ Finley asked.

Abilene hadn’t noticed.

‘Gives abortion a good name.’

‘Most of them are okay,’ Abilene said.

‘Here come some big ones,’ Cora announced.

‘Ohhh, boy,’ Helen muttered.

‘Hey, that guy’s not bad lookin’,’ Finley said. ‘The blond?’

‘Keep your panties on,’ Cora told her.

‘How can she?’ Abilene said. ‘She never wears ’em.’

Finley popped open a couple of snaps at the top of her coveralls. Apparently, she didn’t want this group to make the same mistake as Batman regarding her gender.

‘Give it a break,’ Vivian muttered.

‘Awfully hot in this thing.’

The four boys, who looked old enough to be high school seniors, were just leaving the sidewalk, ready to head for a house, when one of them noticed the approaching girls. He said something to his buddies.

They returned to the sidewalk.

They shambled forward like drunks, weaving and dragging their feet.

‘Night of the Living Dead,’ Helen said.

Abilene realized she was right. They weren’t drunk; they were supposed to be zombies.

The blond-haired guy who’d caught Finley’s fancy wore a business suit. A sleeve of his jacket was missing. His necktie hung loose. The hilt of a knife protruded from the chest of his bloody sport shirt.

A stocky guy shuffling along beside him wore Bermuda shorts and a T-shirt. He must be freezing, Abilene thought. His face was dark with blood. A meat cleaver was buried in the top of his head.

One was dressed in a plaid bathrobe over pale blue pajamas. His fidelity to the outfit, however, had been compromised by his footwear sneakers instead of slippers. Neither he nor the fourth member of the group, dressed in a baseball uniform, had attached phoney weapons to their bodies or smeared themselves with fake blood. Probably didn’t want to ruin their clothes, Abilene thought. But the pajama boy carried a rubber foot, which he pretended to munch as he approached. The baseball player staggered along swinging a bat with one hand. He looked as if he might like to bash in some heads with it.

All four of the zombies had plastic shopping bags for their goodies.

‘Don’t anybody get cute,’ Vivian warned. ‘These guys could be trouble.’

Finley walked right up to them. ‘Greetings. You guys look dead on your feet.’

The one with the cleaver in his head moaned and swayed.

The baseball player raised his Louisville Slugger overhead and said, ‘Trick or treat.’

‘Just so happens,’ Finley said, ‘we come bearing gifts. Cheery the Cheerleader has some Three Musketeers for you fellows.’

‘We just eat flesh,’ explained the pajama boy. He stuck the big toe of the rubber foot into his mouth and gnawed on it. He moaned with pleasure.

‘The really good part,’ Finley said, ‘must be the jam.’

He laughed. So did Finley’s favorite in the tom suit. The one with the cleaver looked at Abilene and stopped swaying.

Vivian groaned.

Cora reached into her sack and took out a handful of candy bars. As she dropped them into the zombies’ bags, the one in the tom jacket asked in a very normal pleasant voice, ‘Are you gals on your way to a party, or something?’

‘We’re just going around spreading Halloween cheer,’ Finley said.

‘You’re from the university.’

‘We’ve been known to frequent its ivy halls.’

‘Same here.’

The news surprised Abilene. Obviously, the boys were older than they looked.

‘First year?’ Cora asked.

‘It shows,’ said the one with the rubber foot.

‘Aren’t you kind of old to be trick-or-treating?’

‘Why should little kids be the only ones having fun?’

‘Our sentiments, too,’ Finley said, and plucked off her gorilla head. Smiling, she rubbed her mussed, shaggy hair. ‘I’m Finley,’ she said.

‘I’m Bill,’ said the one In the suit. ‘These three cretins are Gary, Chuck and my roomy, Harris.’

Gary was the pajama boy with the foot. Chuck was the baseball player. Harris was the guy wearing the plastic meat cleaver. ‘We oughta get going,’ Abilene said.

‘I’ve seen you around,’ Harris said, looking into Abilene’s eyes.

‘That’s Hickok.’

Thanks a heap, she thought.

Harris frowned. ‘I thought it was Abilene.’

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