STEVE RASNIC TERN
HALLOWEEN STREET
HALLOWEEN STREET. NO ONE could remember who had first
given it that name. It had
no other. There was no street sign, had never been a street
sign.
Halloween Street bordered the creek, and there was only one way to get there --
over a
rickety bridge of rotting wood. Gray timbers had worn partway through the
vague red stain.
The city had declared it safe only for foot or bike traffic.
The street had only eight
houses, and no one could remember more than three of
those being occupied at any one time.
Renters never lasted long.
It was a perfect place to take other kids -- the smaller ones,
or the ones a
little more nervous than yourself -- on Halloween night. Just to give them a
little scare. Just to get them to wet their pants.
Most of the time all the houses stayed
empty. An old lady had supposedly lived
in one of the houses for years, but no one knew
anything more about her, except
that they thought she'd died there several years before.
Elderly twin brothers
had once owned the two center houses, each with twin high-peaked
gables on the
second story like skeptical eyebrows, narrow front doors, and small windows
that
froze over every winter. The brothers had lived there only six months, fighting
loudly
with each other the entire time.
The houses at the ends of the street were in the worst
shape, missing most of
their roof shingles and sloughing off paint chips the way a tree
sheds leaves.
Both houses leaned toward the center of the block, as if two great hands had
attempted to squeeze the block from either side. Another three houses had
suffered outside
fire damage. The blackened boards looked like permanent,
arbitrary shadows.
But it was the
eighth house that bothered the kids the most. There was nothing
wrong with it.
It was the
kind of house any of them would have liked to live in. Painted bright
white like a dairy so
that it glowed even at night, with wide friendly windows
and a bright blue roof.
And flowers
that grew naturally and a lawn seemingly immune to weeds.
Who took care of it? It just
didn't make any sense. Even when the kids guided
newcomers over to Halloween Street they
stayed away from the white house.
The little girl's name was Laura, and she lived across
the creek from Halloween
Street. From her bedroom window she could see all the houses. She
could see who
went there and she could see everything they did. She didn't stop to analyze,
or
pass judgments. She merely witnessed, and now and then spoke an almost inaudible
"Hi" to
her window and to those visiting on the other side. An occasional "Hi"
to the houses of
Halloween Street.
Laura should have been pretty. She had wispy blonde hair so pale it
appeared
white in most light, worn long down her back. She had small lips and hands that
were like gauges to her health: soft and pink when she was feeling good, pale
and dry when
she was doing poorly.
But Laura was not pretty. There was nothing really wrong about her
face: it was
just vague. A cruel aunt with a drinking problem used to say that "it lacked
character." Her mother once took her to a lady who cut silhouette portraits out
of crisp
black paper at a shopping mall. Her mother paid the lady five dollars
to do one of Laura.
The lady had finally given up in exasperation, exclaiming
"The child has no profile?
Laura
overheard her mother and father talking about it one time. "I see things
in her face," her
mother had said.
"What do you mean?" Her father always sounded impatient with her mother.
"I don't know what I mean! I see things in her face and I can never remember
exactly what I
saw! Shadows and...white, something so white I feel like she's
going to disappear into it.
Like clouds...or a snowbank."
Her father had laughed in astonishment. "You're crazy!"
"You
know what I mean!" her mother shouted back. "You don't even look at her
directly anymore
because you know what I mean! It's not exactly sadness in her
face, not exactly. Just
something born with her, something out of place. She was
born out of place. My God! She's
eleven years old! She's been like this since
she was a baby!"
"She's a pretty little girl."
Laura could tell her father didn't really mean
that.
"What about her eyes? Tell me about her
eyes, Dick!"
"What about her eyes? She has nice eyes..."
"Describe them for me, then! Can
you describe them? What color are they? What
shape?"
Her father didn't say anything. Soon
after the argument he'd stomped out of the
house. Laura knew he couldn't describe her eyes.
Nobody could.
Laura didn't make judgments when other people talked about her. She just
listened.
And watched with eyes no one could describe. Eyes no one could
remember.
No, it wasn't that
she was sad, Laura thought. It wasn't that her parents were
mean to her or that she had a
terrible life. Her parents weren't ever mean to
her and although she didn't know exactly
what kind of life she had, she knew it
wasn't terrible.
She didn't enjoy things like other
kids did. She didn't enjoy playing or
watching television or talking to the other kids. She
didn't enjoy, really. She
had quiet thoughts, instead. She had quiet thoughts when she
pretended to be
asleep but was really listening to all her parents' conversations, all
their
arguments. She had quiet thoughts when she watched people. She had quiet
thoughts when
people could not describe her eyes. She had quiet thoughts while
gazing at Halloween
Street, the glowing white house, and all the things that
happened there.
She had quiet
thoughts pretending that she hadn't been born out of place, that
she hadn't been born
anyplace at all.
Laura could have been popular, living so close to Halloween Street, seeing
it
out of her bedroom window. No other kid lived so close or had such a good view.
But of
course she wasn't popular. She didn't share Halloween Street. She sat at
her desk at school
all day and didn't talk about Halloween Street at all.
THAT LAST HALLOWEEN Laura got
dressed to go out. That made her mother happy --
Laura had never gone trick-or-treating
before. Her mother had always encouraged
her to go, had made or bought her costumes, taken
her to parties at church or
school, parties the other kids dressed up for: ghosts and
vampires and
princesses, giggling and running around with their masks like grotesquely
swollen
heads. But Laura wouldn't wear a costume. She'd sit solemn-faced,
unmoving, until her
mother finally gave up and took her home. And she'd never go
trick-or-treating, never wear
a costume.
After she'd told her mother that she wanted to go out that night her mother had
driven her around town desperately trying to find a costume for her. Laura sat
impassively
on the passenger side, dutifully got out at each store her mother
took her to, and each
time shook her head when asked if she liked each of the
few remaining costumes.
"I don't
know where else we can try, Laura," her mother said, sorting through a
pile of mismatched
costume pieces at a drugstore in a mall. "It'll be dark in a
couple of hours, and so far
you haven't liked a thing I've shown you."
Laura reached into the pile and pulled out a
cheap face mask. The face was that
of a middle-aged woman, or a young man, cheeks and lips
rouged a bright red, eye
shadow dark as a bruise, eyebrows a heavy and coarse dark line.
"But, honey. Isn't that a little..." Laura shoved the mask into her mother's
hand. "Well,
all right." She picked up a bundle of bright blue cloth from the
table. "How about this
pretty robe to go with it?" Laura didn't look at the
robe. She just nodded and headed for
the door, her face already a mask itself.
Laura left the house that night after most of the
other trick-or-treaters had
come and gone. Her interest in Halloween actually seemed less
than ever this
year; she stayed in her bedroom as goblins and witches and all manner of
stunted,
warped creatures came to the front door singly and in groups, giggling
and dancing and
playing tricks on each other. She could see a few of them over
on Halloween Street, not
going up to any of the houses but rather running up and
down the short street close to the
houses in I-dare-you races. But not near as
many as in years past.
Now and then her mother
would come up and open her door. "Honey, don't you want
to leave yet? I swear everybody'll
be all out of the goodies if you don't go
soon." And each time Laura shook her head, still
staring out the window, still
watching Halloween Street.
Finally, after most of the other
kids had returned to their homes, Laura came
down the stairs wearing her best dress and the
cheap mask her mother had bought
for her.
Her father and mother were in the living room, her
mother having retrieved the
blue robe from the hall closet.
"She's wearing her best dress,
Ann. Besides, it's damned late for her to be
going out now."
Her mother eyed her nervously.
"I could drive you, honey." Laura shook her head.
"Well, okay, just let me cover your nice
dress with the robe. Don't want to get
it dirty."
"She's just a kid, for chrissake! We can't
let her decide!" Her father had
dropped his newspaper on the floor. He turned his back on
Laura so she wouldn't
see his face, wouldn't know how angry he was with both of them. But
Laura knew.
"And that mask! Looks like a whore's face! Hell, how can she even see? Can't
even see her eyes under that." But Laura could see his. All red and sad-looking.
"She's
doing something normal for a change," her mother whispered harshly.
"Can't you see that?
That's more important."
Without a word Laura walked over and pulled the robe out of her
mother's arms.
Alter some hesitation, after Laura's father had stomped out of the room, her
mother helped her get it on. It was much too large, but her mother gasped "How
beautiful!"
in exaggerated fashion. Laura walked toward the door. Her mother ran
to the door and opened
it ahead of her. "Have a good time? she said in a mock
cheery voice. Laura could see the
near-panic in the eyes above the distorted
grin, and she left without saying goodbye.
A few
houses down the sidewalk she pulled the robe off and threw it behind a
hedge. She walked
on, her head held stiff and erect, the mask's rouge shining
bright red in the streetlights,
her best dress a soft cream color in the
dimness, stirred lightly by the breeze. She walked
on to Halloween Street.
She stopped on the bridge and looked down into the creek. A young
man's face, a
middle-aged woman's face gazed back at her out of dark water and yellow
reflections.
The mouth seemed to be bleeding.
She walked on to Halloween Street. She was the only one
there. The only one to
see.
She walked on in her best dress and her shiny mask with eyes no
one could see.
The houses on Halloween street looked the way they always did, empty and
dark.
Except for the one that glowed the color of clouds, or snow.
The houses on Halloween
Street looked their own way, sounded their own way,
moved their own way. Lost in their own
quiet thoughts. Born out of place.
You could not see their eyes.
Laura went up to the white
house with the neatly trimmed yard and the flowers
that grew without care. Its color like
blowing snow. Its color like heaven. She
went inside.
The old woman gazed out her window as
goblins and spooks, pirates and ballerinas
crossed the bridge to enter Halloween Street.
She bit her lip to make it redder.
She rubbed at her ancient, blind eyes, rubbing the dark
eyeshadow up into the
coarse line of brow. She was not beautiful, but she was not hideous
either. Not
yet. In any case no one ever remembered her face.
Her fine, snow-white hair was
beautiful, and long down her back.
She had the most wonderful house on the street, the only
one with flowers, the
only one that glowed. It was her home, the place where she belonged.
All the
children, all the children who dared, came to her house every Halloween for
treats.
"Come along," she said to the window, staring out at Halloween Street. "Come
along," she
said, as the treat bags rustled and shifted around her. "You don't
remember, do you?" as
the first of the giggling goblins knocked at her door.
"You've quite forgotten," as the
door began to shake from eager goblin fists,
eager goblin laughs. "Now scratch your swollen
little head, scratch your head.
You forgot that first and last, Halloween is for the dead.