The boy never goes out in daylight.
Oh, he could, and some do . . . but he doesn’t. Maybe that’s why he
is still alive. He holes up in crawlspaces during the day. There are
five houses he uses in rotation, all abandoned, none occupied by the
dead or the living. As the world spins and sunlight and shadows travel
the rooftops of his little town, he listens for a floorboard creak that
doesn’t belong, hoping he won’t be discovered by the familiar boogeymen
that have made this world their own since the dawning of
10/31—werewolves and witches, mummies and zombies, and other nameless
things the boy would rather never see.
The boy isn’t very large. The way things are these days, he figures
that’s a plus. He is less of a target at night, and for this reason he
has come to trust the darkness. Strange to trust darkness in a world
overrun with nightmares . . . but that’s the way it is.
It is not an exciting life. At night, the boy forages. He clings to
the black spaces, shunning lightning flash and Jack o’ Lantern glow.
During the day, he matches his silence with stillness. Occasionally, he
dozes. Mostly, he spends his time with a flashlight and books, or
sometimes a magazine. He likes the old ones with gory covers and
pictorial articles about monsters, because they teach him secrets about
the things he wants to avoid. On cold days he waits among wall studs and
insulation, and on hot days he tucks himself next to cool concrete
foundation. He lurks between sour earth and floorboards that rarely
creak with tread inhuman or human, and he moves little or not at all,
and he reads and learns, and he waits for night.
He waits until the pumpkins start to scream.
***
The pumpkins sit on porches. They sit there night and day. Some of
them for years now. The ones that survived grew and thrived in ways that
most pumpkins don’t, while the others rotted long ago. After the first
calendar page was left unturned in the wake of 10/31, those ordinary
pumpkins began the fast slide from orange to black. Within days their
mouths were choked with cobwebs of mold. Within weeks their eyes
collapsed into noses and their grins sagged into rotten frowns, as if
with some strange withering disease. The ones that didn’t sluice away in
the first rains petrified long ago. Those that remain are dry mummified
memories of a world that no longer exists, as much a part of ancient
history as candy, and costumes, and the idea of trick or treat itself.
But those other pumpkins, the ones that thrived—