HALLOWEEN KNIGHT
By Joey W. Hill
Laura’s minestrone soup wrapped around Sam
like a hug. He grinned, tossed his coat on the washing machine,
and stepped out of the laundry room into the kitchen.
A cardboard sword, painted silver and purple,
caught him in the gut. He staggered, clutching the imaginary
intestines spilling forth from the wound, and crashed to the
linoleum floor.
"Sam’s here!" his executioner announced.
"By the Blessed Virgin," Sam bellowed, "What
manner of knight besets me in such a cowardly fashion?"
The accused removed her plastic helm,
revealing short, dark hair as fine as a cat’s, and a large gap
between her front teeth. "It’s Celia, Sam. And it wasn’t
cowardly, it was strategy."
"Female logic," Sam grunted, rolling to his
feet. "No honor, just practicality."
"Thank the Blessed Virgin for that," Laura
chuckled from the stove. She extended her wooden spoon and he
sucked soup from it. "Did you stop by Master Mike’s?" she asked.
"For just a minute. I told him I’d do an
extra class for him next week. Hey, this is great. You should be
a cook or something." He dodged her swat.
"She is a cook, silly," Celia declared,
putting her hands on her hips.
Sam crossed his eyes at her and wrapped his
arms around Laura’s waist, resting his chin on her hair.
"Hey," Laura tilted her head and brushed his
jaw with her nose. "You get any taller this year and we’re going
to cut a hole in the ceiling."
Celia giggled. Sam squeezed his sister and
she capitulated, leaning back against him a little bit. "So, how
were things at the Elvis is Dead diner today?" he asked.
"The car joined Elvis," Laura murmured. "The
engine cut out on me twice on the way home."
"Crap. You want me to pray it down to Jay’s
tonight?"
His sister smiled. "And thwart the annual
pilgrimage of the Children’s Crusade? Not a chance. I can
probably nurse it through tomorrow."
"Sam, come on. D wants to show you
something!" Celia tugged at his hand. Sam grinned at Laura and
let himself be hauled away.
Two of his other knights were at the kitchen
table. Demetrios ate soup while Larry drew on a piece of graph
paper with Laura’s precious art crayons.
Sam hid a grin. As usual, Demetrios was
wearing his cowboy boots on the wrong feet. Tonight he wore them
with his homemade armor, chainmail and swordbelt. D was Sam’s
first Crusader. The little boy tripped across his grandmother’s
yard one summer afternoon in his reversed boots to bring Sam a
glass of his grandmother’s lemonade and to be ridden around on
the mower. During the ride, he informed Sam that he was living
with his grandmother indefinitely because his parents were
crackheads.
Sam discovered Larry in the food bar buffet
line at the Palomino steak house. Larry was measuring food out
onto his plate with the gravity of a NASA engineer. When Larry’s
stressed-out dad lost patience with him and slopped gravy onto
his perfect globe of mashed potatoes, the kid’s look of horror
was worth the price of admission.
Celia attended the karate class Sam assisted
twice a week at Master Mike’s. On her third lesson, she informed
him she planned to marry him in ten years, when her seven years
caught up with his seventeen.
"Lookit D’s mace," she crowed.
Sam admired the weapon made from an orange
spongy ball, an assortment of straws and a tomato stake. "D,
this is great."
"Sam," Larry looked up from his drawing. "You
didn’t say anything about my helmet."
"Fantastic," Sam wowed, plucking it from the
chair. "Papier mache, right?"
Larry nodded. "Yep. I made it in Afterschool."
"You guys get better every year. What are you
doing?"
"I’m drawing a map so we can get to all the
houses in the whole neighborhood before you have to take us
home."
"He really wants to make sure we don’t go by
creepy Ms. Winslow’s house," Celia translated.
Larry scowled. "I don’t—"
"Where’s Aaron?" Sam detoured Celia away from
a collision with Larry’s Type-A temper.
"He was right here…" Celia twisted about,
then looked to the hallway leading out of the dining room.
"Uh-oh."
Laura spun from the stove. "Oh, Sam---"
"I’m on it," he responded, already headed
that way.
The lamp and TV turned on in his mother’s
bedroom threw shadows out into the hall, illuminating the
seventies-style bamboo-striped wallpaper. It made Sam feel like
he was inside a tree, his mother’s bedroom a shabby, comfortable
nest on one of its branches.
Aaron was in the nest and well-launched into
his pitch. "My dad brings me chocolate from Switzerland every
time he goes, and it’s much, much better than this. So, if you
give me yours," his hand hovered over the gold edged saucer and
its three Godiva chocolates, "I’ll bring you some of mine."
"How about you get back to the kitchen and I
let you live until tomorrow?" Sam said.
Aaron pushed his silver rimmed glasses into
the bridge of his nose, crossed his arms over his narrow chest
and eyed Sam with the room-filling presence of a four foot tall
Lee Iacocca. "She was about to say I could have those."
"Sam, he said he’d bring me better
chocolates," Sam’s mother smacked the scratched wooden arm of
her easy chair. "Let him have them."
Sam fought the urge to choke life out of the
nine-year-old. He’d need taped evidence to prove it was
justifiable homicide. He crossed the room to his mother’s chair,
shooting a glare at Aaron. "He doesn’t have any Swiss
chocolates, Mom. He’s lying."
"I am not. My dad---"
"--Runs a tire store on the corner of 5th and
Elon. His only contact with the Swiss is when he needs his
pocket knife."
Sam’s mother seized his wrist. Her fingers
dug into Sam’s skin, marked by white ridges and faint bruising
that never completely healed.
"Why would he lie to me?" she demanded. She
whacked the chair arm, harder this time. Sam caught both of her
hands in his. Aaron’s eyes rounded and he stepped back.
"Aaron didn’t lie to you, Mom. He maybe
exaggerated a bit. He can’t bring you Swiss chocolate, but he’ll
bring you any other kind you want. What would you like?"
"Anything?" She peered up at Sam with wary
eyes. Sam pressed his dark head to the top of hers.
"Anything."
His mother jerked free and clapped her hands.
"I want Reese’s Pieces, Reese’s Pieces, Reese’s Pieces," she
sang.
Laura materialized out of the darkness of the
hallway. She met Sam’s eyes over their mother’s head. "Okay,
Aaron," Sam managed. "You’re going to bring Mom some Reese’s
Pieces tonight."
Aaron edged for the door. He jerked a quick
nod and vanished behind Laura. Sam dropped a kiss on his
mother’s cheek. "I’ve got to go, Mom. We’re going to go get your
candy."
"Aaron is going!" She caught his shirtfront.
"You hold me."
Laura laid her towel aside. "Let me hold you,
Mom. Sam’s going to get your candy."
"No! Sam holds me like John."
First Reese’s Pieces, then the reference to
Dad. The pounding started in Sam’s head. He breathed in through
his nose and let it out through his mouth. It was a quick focus
Mike had taught him to stave off the migraines, the
unpredictable rages, and the occasional desire to strip off his
clothes and run naked through the streets in the dead of night,
screaming like a berserker.
Sam’s lips tugged in a wry smile at himself.
His mother’s grip twisted into his shirt and he winced as she
took out several hard-earned chest hairs. Sam closed his long
fingers over hers.
"Liesl," he said sternly, "We’re not going to
have tantrums tonight. I’ll hold you for a minute, but then
Laura will have to hold you. If you don’t behave, there will be
no Reese’s Pieces."
Laura looked away. Sam’s mom set her lips in
a pout, but it didn’t last long. She knew when he meant
business.
"I wish I had eyes like yours," she blurted.
"You do, Mom." Sam pointed to the dresser
mirror. "See? They’re the same color."
She shook her head. "They’re different, Sam."
She could mean his eyes had less age lines.
Or she could mean something different, and Sam didn’t want to go
there. He couldn’t dip his toe into the pool of self-reflection
too often or he’d drown. Master Mike hadn’t taught him that;
he’d learned that one all by himself.
Sam scooped her up and bounced her playfully.
She giggled and held on, and he dipped her a couple times and
swung her slight body in circles to get her really laughing.
Laura sat down on the flattened, faded floral
print cushion of the easy chair and Sam deposited their mother
in her lap. "I’ll see you later," he whispered against his
sister’s cheek.
She nodded and caught his forearm briefly in
her chapped hand. He pressed his cheek tighter against her hair,
then he let them both go.
He hurried back up the brown hallway to a
hushed group of youthful knights. "Sam," Aaron whined. "I didn’t
mean—"
"Sshh!" Sam froze. "The dragon’s loose."
"Where?" "What dragon?" Four heads turned in
different directions.
"See the steam from his nostrils?" Sam
whispered.
"Ah, that’s just steam from Laura’s soup,"
Demetrios said.
"No," Sam shook his head. "There’s too much
of it for one pot of soup. See how it curls, like it’s been
blown out from his nostrils? If it was coming from the pot, it
would go straight up."
"Nunh-hunh!"
The windowpane rattled fretfully, then began
an ominous staccato.
"Get under the table!" Sam ducked beneath it
and Celia dropped with him. "He’s coming."
A rumbling vibrated the floor and crawled up
the walls. Laura’s framed drawings of herbs trembled against the
chipped paint. The other three children scrambled beneath the
butcher-block table. Demetrios clutched his mace by the sponge
ball.
"Sam," Larry whimpered. "What are we going to
do?"
"I don’t have my sword!" Sam hissed. "Celia,
do you have yours?"
"It’s not real!" she wailed.
"It’s real," Sam assured her. "Remember, this
is a dragon, and he believes in magic, too. You just have to
believe your blade is real, and it will be." The rumbling got
louder. The glasses stacked by the sink began to rattle. Celia’s
knuckles went white around her purple swordhilt.
"Okay, guys," Sam drew a deep breath. "Celia
can’t fight him alone. I’m going to make a break for the stairs
and get my sword. I’ll be back, I swear."
"No!" Demetrios hollered.
"Sam, don’t leave!" Light struck the window
like a gleaming eye. Larry shrieked.
"Hold him off! I’ll be back!" Sam rolled from
beneath the table and sprang for the stairs. He clattered to the
top just as the whistle of the six o’clock train that ran
through the woods behind the house shattered the illusion. A
chorus of groans rolled up to him.
"Sam, we’re going to get you!" Celia
threatened.
"I didn’t believe it!" Aaron boasted.
"Then why are you under the table, chicken
lips?"
Sam closed his bedroom door and grinned.
He crossed the room and opened his closet.
Sometimes, he imagined a secret alcove built at the back. Press
a button, guitars crash, light erupts, and boom, the panel
lifts, revealing his knight’s costume.
Dad’s suit bag was a pretty good substitute
for the dramatic alcove. He drew it out and unzipped it. He took
out the black linen Jacobite shirt and pulled it over his head.
The black tabard that went over that had a Celtic knot design
sewn across the chest with yellowed plastic pearls. Black woolen
leggings clung to his calves, making it easy to slide on the
flexible black boots. He put his mace in the belt at his waist,
strapped on his back harness and plucked his short sword from
the mounting over his unmade bed. He twisted, turned, flexed,
leaped and crouched, making adjustments until he was sure he had
full mobility.
He pulled his snug-fitting, chain mail coif
on his head, slung his gray cloak over his shoulders, taking
care to clear the hilt of the short sword, then bounded down the
stairs. Ten minutes later, he shepherded his charges out into
the spreading darkness and tuned into the currents that
whispered with the breath of Hallow’s Eve night.
Laughter and playful screams traveled the
cool air. Ghouls and goblins scampered on the shadowed fringes
of the streetlights. Sam responded to his kids’ chatter, quieted
them down to go over the ground rules, then they joined the
ranks of homemade princesses, Disney characters and broom-sworded
heroes.
By consensus, they followed Larry’s map the
length of the street, but when they turned onto Medlin Drive,
the children made a beeline for Ms. McGady’s driveway. Even
Larry capitulated to popular vote with minimal grumbling.
"Ms. McGady!" Sam called to her and waved,
following his knights down her walk. A troop of satisfied
characters from the Harry Potter books retreated through her
begonia border. Ms. McGady, a thirty-something divorcee with
dark Latin American eyes and riotous red hair that used to be
brown, wore a bonnet and a white blouse with puffy short
sleeves. Her long skirt twitched and a black cat peered around
her ankles, eyes narrowed disdainfully. A Pekinese burst from
behind Ms. McGady, knocking the cat over the threshold. The cat
hissed and scrambled back inside, but the dog barked and waddled
its way down the stairs. Sam crouched and the dog flung herself
into his arms.
"Hey, Calypso! What kind of guard dog are
you?"
"A fine one," Ms. McGady defended, her smile
as warm and welcome as Laura’s soup. "It’s you, Sam. Animals and
kids. They go to you like you’re the Pied Piper." She put her
hands on her hips and surveyed his group. "I’ve found the
costume to stump your Crusaders at last. Who am I this year?"
"Heidi!" Celia crowed.
"Nope." She crossed her arms under her bosom
and winked at Sam.
Don’t stare at her chest. You’re supposed to
be a chivalrous knight, and she’s twice your age. You rake her
leaves. Sam looked down at Cally’s shaggy blonde head. The
Pekinese snorted happily and slavered her pink tongue up Sam’s
nose.
"Laura Ingalls," Larry suggested.
"How do you know what Laura Ingalls looks
like?" Demetrios demanded.
"My sister watches it," Larry said
defensively.
"Best show ever put on TV," asserted Ms.
McGady, "Still is."
"Not better than the Batman-Superman
Adventure Hour," Aaron mumbled around a sucker. Sam pushed
Calypso aside and plucked the candy out of Aaron’s jaws.
"Hey!" Aaron protested.
"Didn’t we agree that we were going to check
these before we eat anything?"
"Mr. Grimmell gave them out," Aaron said. He
turned to Ms. McGady. "You’re the Sun Maid Raisin Girl," he
stated.
Ms. McGady’s mouth fell open. "Aaron, you’re
amazing. That’s exactly right." Celia, Larry and Demetrios
groaned. Ms. McGady hid a smile and handed Aaron two packages of
homemade cookies. She gave everyone else one, including Sam.
"You’ll need your strength," she teased him with a wink. "You’ve
got quite a handful with these five."
Sam blushed and looked down at the cookies.
They were carefully wrapped in cellophane. She had taped an
address label to the gathering point over a spray of black and
orange curly ribbon. His label had a magic marker drawing of a
grinning pumpkin on it. "Thanks, Ms.—five?"
He turned and surveyed his group. Larry.
Celia. Demetrios. Aaron. A princess.
The little girl who had joined his group
might be four years old. Most of her body weight had to be
snarled black hair and smoke gray eyes. She scratched her head
and her crown slipped down over her left ear. She brought her
cookies to her bud-shaped mouth and tried to eat them through
the cellophane.
"Hold on there, fair maiden." Sam dropped to
one knee before her. Where the hell were her parents?
"I’m not going to take them," he promised,
and she grudgingly loosened her grip so he could open the
wrapping. "What’s your name?"
"Melanie," she managed through the cookie he
handed back to her.
"Okay, Melanie. Where’s your mom or dad?" Sam
discovered a bobby pin hanging off the back of her collar and
used it to straighten and secure her crown.
She pointed across the street. The begonia
tramplers were at another door, and two men stood smoking on the
sidewalk, waiting for them.
"Ms. McGady, can you keep my knights
entertained for just a minute?"
The woman smiled. "I wouldn’t steal a girl’s
chance to be rescued by you, Sam. Go ahead."
Sam cleared his throat. "Okay. I’ll be right
back, guys." He whisked princess and cookie onto his hip and
headed across the street.
"Sirs?" Both men turned as Sam approached.
"Melanie here says she belongs to your group."
Sam put her down and she toddled into one
man’s leg. He caught her upper arm. "Melanie, I told you not to
wander off," he muttered.
"Cookies, Daddy. Want one?"
"No, I don’t want one. Jesus." Her dad rolled
his eyes at his friend, then turned his attention back to Sam.
"Thanks. I drew the short straw with my wife tonight. She’s at
home watching reruns while I’m out freezing my ass off."
Sam nodded. "Melanie’s a nice little girl."
He motioned to Ms. McGady’s porch. "I take some kids out every
year. My name’s Sam, if you want to use me next year. I live in
the green house on Terrace Street."
Melanie’s dad snorted. "Holiday daycare.
Pretty lucrative business."
Sam shook his head. "I don’t charge. Er,...
she’s wandering off again."
The man whirled on his heel and caught the
child by the arm. "Dammit, Melanie, if I have to tell you to
stay close one more time, we’re going home. You’re lucky I took
you out at all this year."
Sam stiffened. "With all due respect, sir,
the whole point is that it’s supposed to be fun for them."
Her dad scowled. "Listen, smartass –"
"Joe, come on," his friend intervened. "Let’s
not get into this. The kids have moved on."
Joe cast Sam a sullen glance. "When you get a
job and pay a mortgage, you can lecture me about my kid. Until
then—"
"You’re right, sir. Absolutely right." Sam
turned his back on him, but gave Melanie a parting wink and his
cookies. He knew better than to be judgmental. He knew better,
but it didn’t stop him from doing it.
He headed back across the street. Ms. McGady
had his Crusaders bobbing for apples in the metal washtub on her
porch. Sam made it two steps up the walkway to them, then time
and motion stopped.
He heard the Voice.
He knew it anywhere, even in the most crowded
hallways at school. A tight place in his chest always listened
for it, probably the same way the shepherds of Bethlehem always
listened for angel’s voices after they had gotten to hear them
that one unforgettable night.
Sam turned and watched Jennifer Lind
Meriweather come down the street. Her friend, a tall, elegant
girl named Marcie, was dressed as a 1920’s flapper. Jennifer
sauntered beside her in jeans and a pale blue, fuzzy sweater
that showed her delicate collarbones. She had her left hand
hooked loosely into her back waistband, and her beige bra strap
was revealed by the slide of the neckline. She withdrew a
cigarette from her lips, and tossed back her rust-gold hair. The
satin sweep rippled across Sam’s memory, taking him back ten
Halloweens.
He had dressed up like Superman. Before his
mother could tell him to put a coat over the costume, he slipped
out of the house to join his friends. Jennifer Lind was one of
the friends. Sam loved her beautiful hair and her small nose.
She dressed like Lois Lane, so he knew they were meant for each
other. Now he knew she had dressed up like her mother, a
paralegal in one of the big city firms. At seven years old, he
did not know that secretaries as well as roving female reporters
dressed in silk blouses, carried notepads, and stuck pens behind
their ears.
They ran from house to house. Every light was
on. The adults exclaimed over their costumes, played with them,
and beamed them on their way. Jenny and Sam became a team,
racing other kids from door to door on opposite sides of the
street. They pulled out extra pillowcases and left their full
bags of candy at the street to go back to the same doors,
blending with another group to get more candy. If the adults
knew, they didn't let on.
It was a Leave It To Beaver memory. Jenny
Lind seized his hand, and her rust-colored hair brushed his
cheek. Then it happened.
He and Jenny had slowed to a walk, panting
for breath. Tires squealed behind them. Sam spun and three big
kids hung out the window of a hot rod, wearing gruesome rubber
masks and screaming like demons. Raw eggs struck Sam in the face
and chest. He spun away in reaction, but one of the boys leaned
out and grabbed a handful of his bulging Superman pillowcase.
Sam couldn’t get his wrist free of the twisted neck of the case,
and he screamed in terror as he was dragged with the car. The
boy in the mask yanked, hard, and the fabric uncoiled. Sam
skidded across the pavement on his knees, his wrist and lungs
burning. The car screeched away in a black ball of smoke.
Sam’s blue tights were ripped and his knees
bled. Tears blurred his vision. A shaken Jenny Lind cried as
eggs dripped down her mother’s borrowed blouse. The boys had
tried to get her candy, too, and missed, catching her mother’s
costume pearls instead. The beads were all over the street and
rolling down the gutter to the storm drain.
Sam unclenched his hand, feeling the memory
of Jenny’s touch fade. He could not stop Jenny’s tears. He could
not get his candy back. He could not stop the ache he felt
inside every time he saw her. That night of terrible loss had
bound his heart to her, a remembrance of sweet possibilities. He
still felt seven years old in her presence, as if he could
reclaim those possibilities if he could only make up for that
one night.
Jennifer walked by without noticing him, the
sway of her hips gradually vanishing into the night, her path
erased by bands of trick or treaters crisscrossing the street
behind her.
"Sam! Sam!" "He’s fallen under a spell!" "The
fairies have gotten him!" "Ms. McGady, get another bucket of
water!"
Sam snatched Larry and Aaron up under each
arm as Celia and Demetrios shrieked and dashed out of range.
Calypso danced around them excitedly, barking. "The fairies told
me to eat you unless you give me half of your cookies!" Sam
demanded.
Demetrios brandished his mace. "I’ll defend
my cookies with my last dying breath."
"Your breath makes people die," Celia
retorted. "You should defend a fair maiden with your last dying
breath, not cookies."
Larry wrinkled his nose. "Girls are just
trouble. Right, Sam?"
Sam grinned and dropped his charges. "You’re
right, Larry. But they’re the best kind of trouble around." He
nodded goodbye to a chuckling Ms. McGady and led his group back
down the walk. Celia’s hand crept into his while the boys
quarreled over who had the most candy so far.
"You really like that girl, don’t you, Sam?"
I’d die for her. He hadn’t had the courage to
speak to her since that Halloween night ten years ago, but his
soul belonged to Jennifer Lind Meriwether. Sam accepted it the
way he was able to accept nothing else and, in some twisted way,
he felt it was an anchor, holding him to sanity.
"Sam," Celia tilted her face up to him. "You
know I’ll marry you in ten years, if you want me to, but if you
like her, that’s okay. I don’t want you to be lonely waiting for
me."
Sam squeezed her hand, hard. He couldn’t
think of anything to say, so he settled for lifting Celia off
her feet and carrying her on his shoulders the rest of the way
down the street.
About fifty houses later, when the boys
started complaining about the weight of their pillowcases and
Celia grew quiet, Sam headed for D’s house. He dropped Larry off
with D, since Larry was spending the night. Demetrios’s mace
dragged the ground with a rasping noise as the two boys made
their way up the walk. Sam waved at Demetrios’ grandmother as
she opened the door.
Celia lived two blocks away. When they got to
her house, she gave Sam a long hug before running up the walk to
her mom. Sam nodded at Mrs. Friedrickson. She looked pretty
relaxed tonight. Maybe she’d spend some time with Celia and let
the kid tell her about her Halloween, rather than holing herself
up away from her daughter with a TV remote and a National
Geographic for her ‘personal quality time’, like she usually
did.
Aaron didn’t have much to say during the
four-block walk to his house, but Aaron was not a chatterbox
like most kids. He did a lot of thinking. Maybe plotting was the
better word. A smile tugged at Sam’s lips.
"Sam," Aaron stopped in front of his porch
stoop. "No one gave me any Reese’s Pieces tonight."
"Oh." Sam pulled at his sleeve, straightening
a fold of shirt bunched beneath the back harness. "So, you’ll
just have to get some at the store."
"But I can’t. Mom’s traveling, and Dad won’t
have time to take me. No one will take me." Aaron shrugged.
"Your mom won’t really remember anyway, will she?"
Sam stopped working at his sleeve. "Aaron,
why do you do this stuff? Why do you make promises you won’t
keep?"
"I meant to, Sam, it’s just…nobody gave me
any Reese’s Pieces tonight. Hey," the boy brightened and pulled
out Ms. McGady’s cookies. "I’ll give you these if you go to the
store for me."
Sam shook his head. "No deal, Aaron. You
promised my mom Reese’s Pieces. You get them tomorrow, or next
Halloween I’m not taking you."
"But—that’s not fair!" Aaron’s bottom lip
poked out. Sam sighed. He sat down on the top porch step,
presenting his back to Aaron, and ran his hand over his hair.
"Are you really mad at me, Sam?" Aaron
touched his shoulder.
"I don’t know," Sam said. "It’s really
important to me that you keep your promise."
"Why?" Aaron sat down next to him, his hip
pressed against Sam’s, as if he hoped physical contact would
bring exoneration.
Sam crooked an elbow on his thigh, braced his
chin on it and considered the younger boy. It was hard to know
what Aaron could and couldn’t understand. Maybe nine was old
enough to understand all of it. Aaron watched him with large,
apprehensive eyes and Sam’s throat got tight looking at him, at
his future. Why did things have to change? Why couldn’t Aaron be
a manipulative little kid that exasperated and amused, but did
no real harm? Why did they have to learn about consequences and
grow up?
"Aaron, you know how sometimes things happen
to you that make no sense?" Sam asked. "Things that hurt?"
"Like what?"
Like maybe your mom and dad make promises to
you they don’t keep, Sam thought. So Aaron did it, too,
unintentionally doing exactly what they did to hurt him. Parents
had a bond to their kid's soul that could never be broken, that
affected your actions in ways you could never imagine happening.
"Just things. You know ’em when you feel ’em."
Sam nudged the boy’s hip with his own, but his eyes stayed
serious. "You need a place to go, in here," he pressed his
fingers against Aaron’s chest, "Where you can figure it all out.
It’s tough to go there when you’re not telling the truth to
people—" he held up a hand before Aaron protested. "or to
yourself." Sam shook his head at Aaron’s expression. "You have
no idea what I’m talking about, do you?"
Aaron looked down at the tips of Sam’s boots
and fidgeted. "I’ll get the candy, Sam. Somehow. I promise."
"I know, Aaron." Sam stood up and drew the
boy with him, hugging him. To his surprise, Aaron hugged him
back, looping his arms around Sam’s hips and pressing his cheek
to his ribs. Sam smoothed a hand over his curly brown hair.
Aaron drew away after a silent minute and straightened his
glasses.
"Bye, Sam."
"Good night, Aaron."
Sam waited while Aaron unlocked the door with
the key around his neck and listened for the latch.
It was about 9:00. The midnight tournament
was at Snow’s Cut campground, only a couple miles if he took the
railroad tracks behind D’s house. He headed in that direction,
and contemplated what was ahead to dispel the shadows that had
come from his talk with Aaron. It was going to be a good
tournament. Sam liked it okay when they did the tourneying in
front of crowds, but he liked it best like it would be tonight,
just the players. Being lost in it was better than performing.
He slipped behind D’s grandmother’s harvested
vegetable garden and skidded down the steep incline of the path
that led through pine trees to the railroad tracks. The rails
reflected the moonlight, creating a silver path. He walked
between them, and imagined Jennifer walking with him. He’d hold
her hand while she tried to walk on the metal rail, and catch
her if she slipped, or they’d each walk a rail, holding hands in
the middle to steady each other.
It was a good fantasy. He stuck with it for
awhile, until the woods truncated for the Howe Street
intersection. The neon sign of Patel’s Railside Convenience
Store colored the rails gold and violet. Sam turned off. If
Aaron made good on his promise, Sam's mother would get two bags
of Reese’s Pieces. Sam believed Aaron really would try, but he
knew promises sometimes got broken, despite the best intentions.
The store light was garish after the
moonlight. Sam quickly found the candy, paid for it and returned
to the stillness of the tracks. The candy clicked in the pouch
on his hip. He tightened the noose on the bag to still the
rattling, but the weight was still there, a few ounces as
distracting as a feather resting on his nose. It filled his mind
with voices and images, and brought the dull headache back.
His mother had held him in her arms that
Halloween until he cried himself out. Then she emptied the large
plastic pumpkin they used to distribute their own treats and
smiled. "John, honey, go get the car keys. We’re going to the
store, and Sam’s going to fill this up with any candy he wants,
except Reese’s Pieces. All those Reese’s Pieces are mine."
She knew they were his favorite.
"Nunh-unh!" He wiped at his eyes and lunged
for the pumpkin. She was twirling around in her gypsy costume
and did not see him. The plastic pumpkin bounced off his
forehead.
"Oh, Sam, Sam—" she knelt in front of him,
her hand folding over the bump. "You poor thing. What a night.
Are you okay? Mommy’s just being silly. You can have all the
Reese’s Pieces."
Sam was relieved to see the faint trail that
led off the tracks. It wound through a half mile of woods and
would end up behind Snow’s Cut.
He liked the hushed stillness of the real
woods. He came here when he could, laid flat on the cool earth
and listened. He stopped being a person and became part of
something that made a lot more sense, the smell of earth and
decaying leaves, and the sway of trees against a blue sky.
Harsh laughter shattered the temporary peace
of the picture. Sam stopped. It was the kind of laugh someone
made when they weren’t really laughing, when they were
convincing themselves or someone else that they were having a
good time. He peered through the darkness and focused on a dim
mushroom of light off to his left, near the ravine. Probably
someone fooling around, drinking. Sam took another step, and
heard the Voice.
Jen was probably with some of her friends.
There was no reason for him to go check it out. Sam turned,
turned again. He should make sure she was all right, though. Of
course, if she was making out with some guy, he’d feel like crap
for the rest of the night. Sam sighed and headed toward the
light.
He crept up to the firelit clearing and
crouched in the shadows at the edge. Jen faced him across the
open space. She stood, one hip cocked and an arm wrapped loosely
around her waist as she held a cigarette in a hand extended
toward the ground. Her thumb flicked the butt, but there was no
ash. Her attention was on Reginald Bartlett, who tended the fire
at the center of the clearing. A duffel bag hung from the tree
branch over his right shoulder.
Reg was a self styled badass, a menace to
anything weaker than himself. Since he was over six feet tall
and 200 pounds, that was a lot of menace. What in the hell was
Jen doing in the woods with him? And not just him.
Todd Ingle leaned against the tree behind
her, the perpetual smirk with which he infuriated teachers
apparently permanently frozen on his flaccid, drugged-out face.
Jason Darby squatted on the ground, digging a shallow trench
around the circumference of the clearing with a hand spade.
Jen wasn’t paying any attention to them. Her
eyes rested on Reg in a way that knifed Sam somewhere below his
intestines. Fine. He could go now. She was fine, he felt like
manure. The universe was as it should be.
"Hey! Don’t fall asleep on me!" Reg flicked
his wrist and whacked the duffel bag with his tree branch poker.
A squall came from inside, followed by a staccato of hissing.
The bag jerked, bulging out the fabric. Sam saw the pale glint
of a claw pierce the bag. The hissing subsided to a growl, then
a pitiful mewling.
Sam’s attention darted to Jen. The boys were
laughing, but she wasn’t. She managed a half smile for Reg, but
her eyes weren’t joining the party. She didn’t like it. Good.
Maybe she’d get out of there.
"Is this supposed to be more fun than Tracy’s
party?" she asked. "What are you guys going to do, shaving cream
him?" Jen shifted to the other hip and tossed her head. Her hair
tumbled over her right breast. Sam didn’t like the way Todd’s
eyes followed it, like he was looking at something he had
already bought.
"Tonight’s a night for power," Jason scoffed,
sitting back on his heels. "That’s baby stuff. Todd, where’s the
rope?"
Todd pushed away from the tree and brushed
Jen’s backside with his arm.
"Hey, watch it." She twisted out of his
range, but he crowded her, laying an arm around her shoulders.
"Aren’t we more fun than Tracy’s party?"
Jen blew smoke in his face. "Not really," she
said. He backed off, coughing, but the smirk didn’t waiver. He
picked up a coil of rope. The stench of oil flared Sam’s
nostrils.
"He-ll-oo? Is anyone going to answer my
question or are you guys in a trance?" she snapped.
"C’mere, Jen," Reg invited. He held out a
hand.
The cat quieted, but its thrashing brought
Sam the smell of its fear. Sam eyed the bag. There was the
possibility he could make a dash into the clearing, pull it down
and make a run for it while they were still off balance. He was
sure he knew the woods better. The sack was tied to the branch
with a simple bowline, easy to pull off. The muscles in Sam’s
jaw tightened. Either that cat was getting away, or he was going
to get the piss kicked out of him. Sam just hoped the odds would
be three against one, not four.
Jen skirted the duffel bag. "You should let
him go, Reg. He stinks. He’s messed himself."
"Soon enough." He caught her hand. Sam could
see both of their faces from his spot. His mind calculated the
intent in Reg’s even as his heart imprinted every emotion
crossing Jen’s. Neither expression brought him a great deal of
comfort.
"I’m glad you came with us tonight, instead
of going to Tracy’s," Reg told her.
A light stain rose in Jen’s cheeks and she
looked off to the right, directly at Sam. As usual, she didn’t
see him. For once, it was a blessing.
"Well,…" she shrugged. She looked back at Reg
and there was something softer to her smile. "I’m glad I came,
too. I’m just not into this cat thing, Reg. What are you going
to do to him?"
"Girls are so soft," Todd scoffed.
Reg’s mouth lifted in what passed as a grin.
He looked like he was baring his teeth. He stood up, his chest
brushing Jen’s as he rose. She had her cigarette to her lips.
His fingers closed over hers and he grazed his index finger over
her lips.
"You talk too much, Todd," Reg said. He
pinched the butt from her grasp and flicked outward, sending the
cigarette spinning.
"Fire in the hole, guys."
Flames spouted out of the ground. "Jesus!"
Todd leaped back and Jason kicked the last section of oil-soaked
rope into the trench. The fire grasped it and enclosed the
clearing in a circle in the space of a breath, strobing everyone
with flickering shadows.
Sam scrambled backwards to maintain his cloak
of darkness. Jennifer shrieked and stumbled forward into Reg.
"Thanks a hell of a lot, Reg," Jason snapped.
"You nearly burned the---"
"Oh, shut up. Get the other stuff ready." Reg
put a hand on Jen’s neck. Her eyes moved from the lick of flames
to his face. Her eyes were as round as the moon riding overhead,
and almost as much white was showing.
"Hey, Jen, it’s okay," Reg chuckled. "Relax.
We’re just doing a little magic. Do you believe in magic, Jen?"
Smoke tendriled around them, blurring Jen’s
features and her reaction. The cat meowed plaintively.
"Are you kidding?" Jen made a breathless
hiccup that might have been an attempt at a snort. "That
cigarette had a good bit of drag left to it, you know."
Sam saw Reg’s grip tighten on her collarbone,
and then his thumb rubbed over her jugular.
Jen pulled back, but didn’t step out of his
armspan. "You guys are acting really weird. What are you going
to do with the damn cat?" Her voice cracked over the profanity.
Reg grinned. His eyes were lost in caverns of
shadow. He looked demonic. "No Halloween is complete without
somebody’s cat getting sacrificed."
Jen swallowed. She stepped away from him. "No
way," she said, shaking her head in disbelief. "No way. I don’t
want any part of that. C’mon guys, this is dumb."
"When you sacrifice something," Reg murmured,
"You gain power. You get to be invincible for awhile."
Sam tore his attention from Jen and Reg.
Jason and Todd were spreading a pea green army blanket inside
the circle of fire. Todd reached into a mesh backpack, like the
ones used to carry books to school, and withdrew four black
candles and a silver bowl.
Fear crawled into Sam’s stomach. Ms. McGady,
Laura’s kitchen and the innocent touch of Celia’s hand were
suddenly unreal. He had stepped into a nightmare, and become
part of the dark landscape of Reg’s mind.
"There are other ways to get power," Reg
purred. He moved in on Jen again. When he touched her shoulder,
she flinched. Sweat made the armpits of Sam’s shirt cold. His
fingers dug into the forest floor. Reg put his lips to her ear.
"There’s sex."
"What?" She stared into his face.
"Jason’s been reading about it," Todd
offered.
"I didn’t know you could read," Jennifer
retorted, but her voice was high and thin. She fumbled in her
pocket, brought out another cigarette, dug in the other pocket
and drew out her lighter. She clicked out a flame, but her
fingers shook. Reg put his hand over them. Either the act or
Reg’s touch calmed her, because she seemed cooler when she
tucked the lighter back in her pocket and took the cigarette
from her lips to exhale.
"Now, what the hell are you guys talking
about?"
"A woman lays on the ground—" Jason began.
"Naked," Todd said. Jen narrowed her eyes at
him.
"She holds candles on her body," Jason
continued, "Like she’s the altar. You sacrifice an animal over
her and all the ritual participants do it with her to increase
the rush."
Jen cleared her throat. From ten yards, Sam
saw the tremor in her fingers when she brought the cigarette
back to her lips.
He had never used a mace and sword against
someone except in tournament. Sam closed his eyes and breathed.
He had to figure out what to do, and then do it. Without
hesitation, without doubt.
Jennifer turned and faced Reg straight on, so
all Sam could see was Reg’s face above the back of her head.
"You guys are thinking I’m this living altar, right?"
"C’mon, Jen, you’re not a virgin." Reginald
said. "Doesn’t it turn you on, even a little bit? Just imagine
it." He shoved the sack, hard, and the cat screamed. Jennifer
jumped. Todd took a step closer to her, outside the range of her
vision. Jason pulled a handful of short cords from the backpack.
No moment required more discipline than the
moment before a charge. Tension prickled over Sam’s arms. The
beating of his heart accelerated until it was the roar of drums
and the blood-firing vibration of trumpets. He curled his
fingers around the handle of the mace at his belt and began to
work it loose.
Reg put his hand against Jen’s cheek, keeping
her attention on him. "We’ll paint you up with old Mephistocles’
blood here and then each of us will jump you. Think of the way
it would feel. You would be like a goddess."
"The book says you get a high, better than
the best drugs you’ve ever done," Jason rasped, holding the
cords behind him, where only Sam could see them.
"Me—Mephistocles?" Jen looked toward the bag.
"Isn’t that Ms. McGady’s cat?"
"Yeah," Todd laughed. "We knocked the bitch
over for her cookies and the cat bolted. We stumbled on him
getting away and Jason stuck his butt in the duffel bag."
"You…you didn’t hurt Ms. McGady?"
"Hell, no." Todd snorted. "Just knocked the
cookies out of her hands and shoved her back on her ass."
Sam narrowed his eyes and took a tighter grip
on the mace.
"C’mon, Jen." Reg stepped closer, touched her
hair again. One step more and he’d be occupying the same space.
"What the hell’s all that special about your life now? We’ve got
to take power now, feel like the gods we are, even it’s just for
a little while. Don’t you want that? What have we really got to
look forward to, except this moment?" His voice lowered, but Sam
heard him like the whisper of a ghoul through a graveyard. "I’ve
been thinking about being with you for a long time. This will
make it really special."
Jason rolled his eyes at Todd and stuck a
finger down his throat. Todd ignored him, watching Reg and Jen
with the intensity of the gang rapist next in line. Sam shifted.
If he jumped out now, he could maybe distract them enough to
give Jen a chance to bolt. The only problem was, Reg’s words had
apparently hit a nerve. Jen wasn’t acting like she wanted to
bolt anymore.
She gazed up at Reg, her cigarette
accumulating ash. He bent his head and kissed her, and her arms
slid up around his beefy neck.
Sam swallowed shards of glass. He didn’t want
to watch, but somehow he couldn’t help himself as Reg’s hands
slid down her back, and lower. It suddenly felt as if his soul
occupied Reg’s body, and Sam could feel Jen’s body under his
palms, and it was his mouth stealing the breath from hers.
Jen’s free hand clamped down on Reg’s neck
and she jammed the lit cigarette into his ear. Reg howled. Jen
shoved away from him and tore the sack from the tree. Reg
grabbed at her, but she flung the duffel bag over the line of
flames. It rolled past Sam into the shadows, and Mephistocles
burst from it with a yowl of fear. The cat streaked away.
The momentum of Jen’s throw had knocked her
to her knees. She scrambled for flight. Reg snagged her by her
beautiful hair and fell upon her, his knees in her back. "Bring
me the rope, Jas!" he snarled.
Jason lunged to Reg’s aid. Sam leaped over
the ring of fire, roaring his battle yell, and swung the
unspiked mace at Jason’s head. It slammed into the boy’s temple
and Jason fell to his knees. Sam swung again, hitting the soft
base of the skull, and Jason toppled face forward at Todd’s
feet.
Todd froze, his face a mask of confusion and
fear. Sam ripped his short sword free and leveled mace and sword
on Todd. He had done it a thousand times in practice, but it
felt like the first time he had ever done it. His heart
triple-hammered beneath his tabard. He hoped he hadn’t hurt
Jason too badly, but he couldn’t afford to look.
Jennifer screamed and thrashed in Reg’s
grasp. Reg struck her in the face when she tried to turn on her
back. Blood came out of her nose and Sam made an animal-like
noise he didn’t recognize. His concern for Jason vanished. He
wanted to go to her, but first there was Todd.
"This doesn’t have to be your fight, Todd,"
Sam managed hoarsely.
"Get him!" Reg screamed. Jennifer bit his
hand and he cursed, punching her again.
"Todd," Sam snarled, bringing the other boy’s
attention back to him. There was sweat shining on Todd’s
forehead. He looked as scared as Sam felt. "This can end here,
Todd," Sam said.
Todd looked between Sam and Reg. Sam kept the
mace swinging, but he made his eyes his weapon, channeling his
fear into ferocity, like a cornered lion. Come on, Todd, get the
hell out of here.
Todd bolted.
A potent silence settled over the clearing as
Todd’s trampling retreat died away. Sam turned to face Reg and
Jennifer. The world narrowed to their white faces and the
leaping, crackling flames enclosing the three of them.
Things had come full circle.
He hadn’t protected her ten years ago. He
hadn’t gotten his candy back. He hadn’t stopped the drunk driver
from running head-on into his parents’ car that same night.
An impulsive moment of love shouldn’t end in
bright lights, screaming metal, and a father’s death scream.
Reality dropped its comforting mask of indifference that night
and revealed malevolence. Sam was now 17 and his mother was
forever 7.
The fire leaped, fueled by what built inside
Sam. The next few moments were a strand of the Fates’ tapestry
woven only for him. He could do it now. He would protect Jen
this time. He had to. She didn’t have anyone else.
"It’s time to let her go, Reg." His voice
sounded strange to him, higher than usual, the child speaking
through the body of a boy who was almost a man.
Reg sneered. "Throw away that stick, and
we’ll see about that."
"I won’t drop my weapon."
"Chicken?"
Sam shook his head. "I have nothing to prove
to you."
"Oh, yeah?" Reginald made a quick lunge and
grabbed one of Jason’s ropes. Sam started forward, but Reginald
drew a switchblade. It caught the moonlight and spun open in
that way that was oh-so-cool. In the movies.
"Come closer and I’ll gut her." Reginald
teethed the blade and bound Jennifer’s wrists behind her.
"Why would you do that?" Sam took another
step forward. Reginald brought up the knife.
"Because I can." The moonlight caught Reg’s
dark brows and shadowed his features, turning the boy into a
monster. He rose. "Drop the sword and mace and get out of here,
Sam, or I’ll hurt you so bad you’ll wish you were dead." He spat
on the ground near Jen’s face. "Don’t worry, I’m not going to
kill her. Someone with her rep isn’t going to run to the
police."
Sam’s eyes flicked to Jennifer. Her torn
sweater rode up over her bra. Blood ran over her lips and
crusted in the hair snarled across the lower half of her face.
Her body quivered with terror and shock.
Sam drove the sword into the ground and flung
the mace out of the clearing. He let the momentum carry him
around in a spin and forward, narrowing the gap between himself
and Reg. The side of his foot connected with Reginald’s
outstretched hand and knocked the knife out of his fingers. The
blade plunged into Reg’s sneaker.
There were no movie pauses for short
witticisms. Sam spun in a second kick and hit Reg’s head. Reg
fell to his knees. Sam followed with a sharp drive into the
boy’s massive solar plexus. Reg went flat on his back across
Jennifer.
Sam pulled the short sword from the ground
and held it to Reg’s throat. Jen stared up at him with wide,
frightened eyes, like a terrified animal. He couldn’t imagine
what she was thinking. She looked like she was hardly breathing.
Sam knew he wasn’t.
The adrenaline reversed its flow and he
fought the sudden dizziness and thundering roar in his head. Reg
whimpered as the point of the sword pressed into flesh. Jen
sucked in a breath. Sam steadied his stance and blinked,
bringing them back into focus. Jen’s cheek pressed into the mud
of the forest floor, and her nose was swelling.
Sam took a step back from them both and
jumped as his heel hit something behind him. He looked down and
saw the Norman Rockefeller tin with Ms. McGady’s cookies. He
stooped and picked it up, keeping an eye and the sword on the
wheezing Reg.
Sam flicked his attention over the cookies,
took in their careful wrapping and curly ribbon tassels, and his
body began to shake. He wanted to hurt Reg, hurt him in a way
that would make him hurt every day for the rest of his life. His
hand trembled on the hilt, his other hand knotted into a fist on
the tin. A sword wasn’t good enough. He needed to beat Reg’s
face, over and over again until it was unrecognizable.
A sound launched itself, and came forth as a
guttural cry of rage. He swung the blade over his head.
Reg screamed, or maybe it was Jen, but all
Sam saw was Reg’s mouth opening on an O of terror as the blade
came down on him. Sam thrust it with all his strength into the
narrow strip of earth between Reg’s elbow and his chest.
Sam flung himself to one knee beside Reg’s
other side and grabbed a twist of sweatshirt, yanking him
halfway off the ground. The hilt rocked back and forth with the
force of the drive.
"Do you see this?" Sam thrust the tin in
Reg’s face. He knew he was screaming, because of the force of
air it took him to get the words from his lungs, but in his head
it was a whisper, the strongest sound in the universe. "This is
a fucking miracle, and you pissed on it, Reg. You pissed on it.
What-the-hell-is-wrong-with-you?" He yanked him up and down with
every syllable, his hand screwing harder into the neckline of
shirt. Reg gagged and grabbed his wrist, whimpering, babbling,
but none of it made any sense to Sam. Either Reg was beyond
English or he was.
"Sam."
He stopped, because he always did when she
spoke. Always. The promise of her voice was something Sam could
count on, believe in, even choked with tears and terror as it
was now.
"Sam." He looked at her. His face was so
close to Reg’s that the other boy’s hair brushed his forehead.
"Sam, please stop." Tears ran out of
Jennifer’s eyes, over the bridge of her nose. "Help me, okay?"
She jerked Reg’s body with a sob. "I’m really scared. Please,
stop."
Sam dropped Reg and the tin. What was he
doing? Jen trussed like a calf to be slaughtered and him trying
to murder Reg Bartlett on top of her prone body. This wasn’t
him, who he was. He closed his eyes, not worrying about Reg, and
drew three deep, focusing breaths to steady himself and to calm
the blinding ache in his head.
He opened his eyes, and stared into Reg’s
face.
"Get out of here. Now."
Reg stared at him. Sam stood up and hauled
him to his feet. "Get out of here," Sam repeated.
"I don’t…" Reg looked back at Jennifer.
"What…"
"Get the hell out of here!" Sam roared.
Reg stumbled over to a groaning Jason. Sam
fell to his knees by Jen’s side and untied the cord with shaking
hands. He barely noticed Reg and Jason getting to their feet and
crashing away into the woods.
Jen didn’t say a word. He needed to say
something, make her feel okay. He helped her turn over and sit
up. When he opened his mouth, nothing emerged.
Just speak, dammit. Say something profound
after ten years of not saying a word to her, of thinking about
her every second of every day.
"Are you okay?" he blurted.
She shook her head and passed the mud-stained
sleeve of her sweater under her bloody nose. She winced and Sam
caught her hand. "Here, don’t do that. Your nose might be
broken."
"Me—Mephistocles—"
"He’s okay. He got away." Sam placed his
hands under her arm and elbow and helped her to her feet. Her
leg shook against his. She was going to fall down. He didn’t
think about it. He just bent and scooped her up in his arms,
cradling her under her back and knees.
Her body felt like cotton, not the cosmetic
kind Laura bought in the store, but the natural kind his first
grade teacher brought to class when they were studying
agriculture. All natural, silken soft, with a billowy fullness
that made him want to squeeze his fingers in it and feel it
envelope and give way to the pressure, all at the same time.
She shivered so hard she shook Sam’s body. Or
maybe he was shaking. He needed to get her and her broken nose
to a hospital, fast. Jen looped her arms around his neck and put
her face against his skin. He pressed his nose in her hair. It
smelled like blood, and decaying leaves, with a faint, fragrant
trace of shampoo.
Life was like this, tragedy or magic balanced
on the pinhead of a moment in time. Magic had won, this time,
and he held its purest essence in his arms. Because it might be
the last time, he’d carry her as long as he could.
Sam tightened his grip on her, and exited
their nightmare with heaven in his grasp.
* * *
They called her parents at the hospital. Most
of the emergency staff were in costume. Casper the Ghost gave
him a blanket for Jen, and Freddy Krueger brought her an ice
pack to hold on her nose. Sam held it for her, so her fingers
wouldn't get cold.
At length, Jen started to cry again, in
gulps. He dropped the ice pack into the chair next to him and
put an arm around her shoulders. "It’s okay, Jen, hush, it’s
okay…"
She nodded, then shook her head and sobbed
some more. He held her with both arms.
"You have the worst case of hat-hair I’ve
ever seen," she quavered at last. He had pushed the coif off
when they reached the hospital.
"You sound like Elmer Fudd," he teased
gently. "I’m glad we’re both okay," he admitted.
"You were so great, Sam," she choked.
"You were so great," he said. "You saved
Mephistocles."
She laughed, a shaky sound with a load of
relief and a little bit of hysteria in it. "My totem."
"Your what?" Sam released her reluctantly
when she shifted.
She brought her hand up to her double pierced
left ear. The second hole had a tiny cat-shaped earring.
"I love cats. I collect them. You know,
figurines and all? Ms. Carlson, that English teacher who’s so
into Indians, says that everybody has an animal spirit that
guides them, and sort of matches their personality. God," she
looked away. "I sound like an idiot."
Sam imagined her in front of a big bay
window, curled up like a feline on a sofa kissed by the morning
sun, while he fondled her neck and hair. "You don’t sound like
an idiot," he said.
She shrugged and wrapped her arms around
herself, rocking a bit. "So is this how you normally spend
Halloween?" she asked. Her red-rimmed eyes coursed over his
costume and she choked on a chuckle. "Rescuing damsels in
distress?"
Sam smiled. She had such gorgeous green eyes,
even though they were raccoon-like now, with smeared mascara and
eyeliner. Somewhere over the years she had gotten a small scar
on her chin. He wanted to ask her how it had happened. He wanted
to know everything about her, but he could tell the horror of
the past two hours was still haunting her.
Instead, he opened his mouth and told her
about his young Crusaders. He told her about all the training in
martial arts and medieval tournaments. He told her about his
mom, and about his memory of the last Halloween he had spent
with his parents, and with her.
For ten years, he hadn’t been able to even
say hello to Jenny Lind Meriwether in the halls at school, as if
he was a knight ensorcelled, unable to break the spell of
silence laid upon him by the events of ten years ago. Now, the
enchantment was lifted, but her green eyes, emeralds in a pond
of cream, were still able to bespell him. They drew words from
him he did not think he could have said aloud, even to himself.
Maybe she listened because it took her mind
off everything else, but she listened, and as long as she
listened, he would tell her anything she wanted to know.
She reached out tentative fingers, touching
the design on his chest. "What’s this mean?"
"It’s a Celtic cross."
"The pearls look strange," she sniffled and
lifted her hand. Sam stopped it with one of his. He caught the
drip of blood with the gauze pad Freddy Krueger had given him.
"The pearls are kind of like dimestore things," she observed,
"and the rest of the outfit is so authentic."
"No," he shook his head. "The pearls are the
most real thing on the whole costume."
Jennifer’s eyes widened. "My pearls from that
night."
Sam nodded. "My lady’s favor," he said
quietly.
She stared at him. "God, you’re unreal." Her
eyes filled with tears again.
Sam flushed and looked down. "Sorry, it was
dumb. I didn’t mean—"
"No." Her hand fluttered beneath his gaze and
brushed his cheek, raising his face to hers again. She dropped
her hand. "It’s just, it works for you. All of this," she
motioned to the costume. "What you did tonight. It’s like you
aren’t pretending. It’s like this is really who you are. You
look at me, and I feel like---" she stopped, her color rising
all the way to her hair line. "It—you make me feel like some
kind of maiden, a damsel in distress." Her whisper, the most
potent sound in the universe, filled his ears. "You make me feel
like a virgin, and I haven’t felt that way in a long time."
He could have stopped breathing right then,
and her words would have filled his lungs for hours. He managed
a half smile and raised the ice back to her nose.
"My sister says a virgin is just somebody
who's never been in love." He put a hand against the side of her
head to help him steady the ice, and yes, to feel her hair. It
did feel like satin, and it reminded him of the gauzy curtains
that floated in the summer breeze coming through the window of a
white bedroom.
She hiccuped over a sob. "I guess that makes
me a virgin, then." She looked up, looked directly at him,
pinned him with green sorceress eyes that demanded truth. "How
about you?"
He shook his head. He made himself hold that
gaze, even though it took ten times more bravery than facing
Reg. "I haven’t been a virgin since the day I met you."
Jennifer glanced away. The emergency doors
opened to admit a gurney and two interns, and the open doors
gave Sam a view of the parking lot. "Uh-oh," Jen said. "That’s
my parents’ car. I guess I’m in for it."
The spell was broken. She had released him.
For one incredible moment, he had gone on one proverbial knee
and offered her his heart. Maybe it didn’t matter so much that
she didn’t offer him the same. Maybe it was enough to let her
know his heart was hers for the asking. Sam wrapped the ice pack
in a towel, twisted it so she’d have a warm handle to hold it
by, and rose. She grabbed his hand.
"Sam," she took a deep breath. "I want to see
you. Don’t disappear on me again, okay?"
I’ve always been here. "I won’t." He squeezed
her fingers. He wanted to bring them to his lips, kiss them, but
he was out of knightly courage.
She worked her fingers in between his, lacing
them together, not just the loose, easy-to-slip grasp. "I mean
it, Sam. I want to see you again. I mean, be with you, go out
with you. I mean," she flushed and looked away. "If that’s okay
with you?"
A star burst in Sam’s chest and sent super
sonic heat rays through every aching muscle.
"That would be great," he grinned.
"Okay." She let out a breath. The double
doors bounced against the cement block walls, admitting a pair
of adults, vexed and worried-looking enough to leave no doubt as
to their identities.
Jen glanced at him. "You better get out of
here," she cleared her throat. "This is going to be worse than
dragon-slaying."
Sam smiled and raised her hand, pressing his
lips to the skin, and feeling all squoozy inside at the slight
tremor he felt in her fingers, the way her eyes suddenly got a
little softer. He slid back down next to her and picked up the
ice pack.
"Did I mention dragons are my specialty?"
THE END
This story is dedicated to the two Teds in my
life, both modern day knights in a world that thinks it has
outgrown knights, when it actually has never needed them more.
Joey W. Hill writes epic fantasy, mainstream
fiction and women's erotica. For more information about her
published and upcoming works, log onto her website at
www.storywitch.com.
