“You sure?” she asked, unable to hide her pride at hearing Zack’s answer.
“For now. Yeah. I’m good.”
She patted his knee again. “You certainly are.”
Zack smiled and looked out his window again. In an open field, six Korean War soldiers (whom Zack had also met last summer) were greeting all sorts of other soldiers: guys from World War II, Vietnam, the Civil War, the Spanish-American War, even the American Revolution. They tapped a keg of what probably wasn’t root beer and passed around frothy mugs to celebrate Memorial Day on Halloween night.
“If you change your mind …,” said Aunt Ginny, who was also staring out the window, admiring the rowdy army men.
“I’ll let you know,” said Zack.
“Don’t you worry, Zack,” said Aunt Ginny. “This isn’t your fault. My sisters and I made this mess—years ago. It’s our duty to clean it up before we leave.”
Zack nodded, even though he had a funny feeling that, somehow, he’d be on the cleanup crew, too.
Norman followed Jenny Ballard through the graveyard gate.
“Come on.”
“Where are we going?”
“To meet your ancestors.”
“Why?”
They made their way through the empty cemetery.
“What if you could show everybody in North Chester who you truly are?” Jenny asked breathlessly. “What if you could become a man to be feared?”
Norman liked the sound of that.
“And no one could give me grief or call me a nerd or make fun of me? Not Steve Snertz or those brats who tossed eggs at me tonight because I stopped handing out candy after the earthquake?”
“They wouldn’t dare, Norman. Not after you become the man I know you can be!”
“Oh, yeah? And who’s that?”
“You, of course. But ruled by the lionhearted souls of your ancestors.”
They stopped in front of what looked like a small mildew-stained chapel made of massive stone blocks. The weathered wooden door at the front of the crypt was sealed with a lock shaped like a black heart. Norman read the name inscribed over the entrance:
ICKLEBY
He felt his pulse quicken.
He was an Ickleby. These were his ancestors.
Blood surged to every muscle in his body.
“Wouldn’t you like to be one of the invincible and almighty immortals, Norman?”
Norman did not answer her.
He simply grinned.
It was after eight p.m. and nobody had rung the doorbell for half an hour, so Judy figured she’d seen her last trick-or-treaters for the night.
“We found the sage candles,” said Aunt Hannah, hovering in the foyer, clutching a white tube.
“Pyewacket showed us where to look,” added Aunt Sophie.
“Pyewacket?”
“Virginia’s cat.”
“Oh. Great,” said Judy, who had no idea how a cat knew where the sage candles were stored. “Speaking of candles, I’m going outside to blow out the jack-o’-lanterns.”
“Oh me, oh my!” gasped Sophie.
“Is that wise?” asked Hannah.
“Well, if I don’t, they’ll wilt the pumpkins. Or maybe the wind will knock them off the railing and we’ll burn down the house. Again.”
“But …”
Suddenly, there was a horrible shriek—an angry yowl followed by banging, something falling, a crash, and another yowl.
“Mister Cookiepants?” snapped Aunt Hannah. “Leave Mystic alone!”
“Mystic?” cried Aunt Sophie. “Leave your sister alone. Bad cat! Bad, bad, very bad!”
The two aunts hurried up the stairs to referee a catfight.
Judy went out to the porch, picked up the pumpkin lids, and blew out the candles one by one. As the wicks smoldered, she savored the scent of fresh-baked pumpkin pie.
“We should all smell so good when we die, am I right?”
A stout young man swaggered toward the porch steps. He was costumed like a character from the musical Grease. Slicked-back hair. White T-shirt. Blue jeans. A pack of cigarettes tucked into his rolled-up shirtsleeve. When he moved into the porch light, Judy could see that what she’d thought were the white tips of cigarettes were actually writhing maggots.
“Can I help you?” asked Judy.
“Your people vaporized my son tonight. Sent him packing.”
“What?”
“You’re a Jennings, right?”
“Who are you?”
“They call me Little Paulie.” He reached into the pocket of his jeans and pulled out a blunt black handle that had a silver button on its front. “Little Paulie Ickleby.”
Ickleby.
The ghost Zack and Ginny had battled at the hardware store had been an Ickleby.
This Ickleby pressed the button on the black knife handle. A sharp steel blade sprang up.
“Go away,” said Judy. She fumbled in her pocket for a match to relight one of the jack-o’-lanterns. Couldn’t find one.
The ghost put one foot on the first step.
“Hey, don’t be a wet rag. Word from the bird: If you didn’t want me to drop by, you shouldn’t’ve blown out your overgrown turnips. Jack-o’-lanterns protect you, sister. Frighten spooks away.”
Okay. The folktales were true.
Little Paulie Ickleby lurched up to the second step.
“First you Jenningses drag us away from home.”
He climbed the third step.
“Next you rub out Eddie Boy? My favorite son? Now all I got left is chickenhearted Herman!”
Little Paulie slashed his knife angrily to the left.
It scratched a deep scar into the porch railing.
The knife blade could do serious damage. It was real.
Because tonight is Halloween, Judy realized.
“Where’s your son?” asked the ghost, his eyes narrowing to reptilian slits.
“What?”
“You people take my son; we take yours. An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a boy for a boy.”
Little Paulie lunged forward.
Behind Judy, the front door flew open.
A cat hissed.
“Duck!” shouted Aunt Hannah.
“Incoming!” shouted Aunt Sophie.
The two aunts leapt onto the porch and hurled smoldering white smoke bombs at the feet of Little Paulie Ickleby.
Pyewacket, Aunt Ginny’s gray-and-white cat, sprang over to swat its paws at the greaser’s knees. Little Paulie froze in his tracks and dropped the switchblade knife so he could clench his throat.
“You’re … bad … news!” he gasped in pain.
“Especially for you, young man,” said Aunt Hannah.
The aunts leaned over the gulping specter and started to chant. “It is time for you to leave. All is well. There is nothing here for you now.”
Judy could’ve sworn that the ghost was starting to fade away, like somebody had just unplugged him.
“Go now, Paul Ickleby,” said the two aunts. “Go. Complete your passing.”
With one last pitiful, choking whoop, the ghost disappeared.
And somewhere, high in a tree, a bird cawed harshly.
Zack was feeling pretty good as the van headed up Stonebriar Road for home.
He’d hang on to his ghost-seeing gift, at least until Halloween was over. He’d protect his friends and family.
They’d already dropped off Malik and Azalea.
“Sorry we had to cut Halloween a little short,” said his dad, turning into the driveway in front of their house.
“That’s okay.”
“If you like, Zack,” said Aunt Ginny, “we can go to the grocery store tomorrow. I suspect all the Halloween candy will be half price.”
He chuckled.
But then he saw Judy and his dad’s other two aunts up on the porch. All three were waving their arms over their heads the way people do when they’ve just witnessed a car wreck on the highway. Zipper shot his ears up, sensing trouble.