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Friday Flash – Trick or Treat

October 28, 2011 by Icy Sedgwick 18 Comments

I walk along the street towards the next house. Fake cobwebs drape across the porch, and several grinning pumpkins light my way up the path. Further down the street, giggling children run from house to house. They stop to compare candy collections on the sidewalk. I chuckle to myself, a deep rumble inside my hood.

I ring the doorbell. Moments later, an elderly woman with rollers in her hair comes to the door – Mrs Phelps, if memory serves. Horror crosses her face as she takes in the black cloak and scythe.

“Trick or treat!”

Mrs Phelps spots my candy bag, an upturned skull on a leather thong, and a glorious smile appears among the wrinkles of her face. She picks up the dish of candy beside the door and offers it to me. I reach out and dip my bony fingers into the bowl, selecting a miniature Mars bar. I can’t resist Mars bars, and this is the one time of year I can get them.

“Happy Halloween, dear!”

“Thank you. Likewise, I’m sure.” I dip my head in greeting since she can’t see my face inside my hood.

I turn to leave. Before she closes the door, I hear her tell her husband how lifelike some of the costumes have been this year. A smile erupts on my hidden face.

I visit more houses, collecting candy from smiling grandmothers and truculent fathers. The old man in the rickety old house on Claymore Street can’t afford candy so he gives me an apple instead. I make a mental note to postpone my next visit to him.

I reach Winchester Street and head for the first house. Two small children stand on the porch. The girl is dressed as Princess Fiona from Shrek and the boy is dressed as a werewolf. This house bears no Halloween decorations, and a couple watch TV in an upstairs room. They ignore the children ringing the doorbell.

I head up the path to tell the children to try another house. Before I reach them, the front door flies open and a woman stands framed in the doorway. Fury burns in her eyes. Ms Wakefield.

“Trick or-” begin the children.

“Go away! Every year it’s the same, you all descend on the neighbourhood like locusts, demanding we hand over whatever you want or you’ll play some kind of vicious prank! It’s nothing but begging, so no, I won’t give you candy! Now get off my porch!”

The little girl bursts into tears. The little boy stares at the woman, frozen halfway between leaving and staying.

“Oh stop your whining and piss off. Go and beg from someone else!”

She catches sight of me hidden in the shadows at the bottom of the path.

“You can f**k off as well! Aren’t you a little old to be trick or treating, or do you just do it for the kids?”

She slams the door so hard one of her insipid plaques falls off the wall. The crash prompts a fresh wave of tears from the little girl.

The little boy leads her down the path. I hunker down and hold out my skull of sweets. They stop a few feet away, the girl hiding behind the boy. The boy stares at my skeletal hand. His name is Greg, but I forget his surname.

“I’m sorry she was so mean.”

“She made Bethany cry,” says Greg.

“I know, and that was horrible of her. Take a couple of my sweets, and head on home.”

“Mom says we shouldn’t take candy from strangers,” says Greg.

“Mom is quite right but just think of this as the candy the nasty lady could have given you.”

Greg still hesitates but Bethany darts forward. She grabs the apple and disappears behind the boy again. She mumbles something about not wanting to rob me of candy.

“Are you sure?” asks Greg.

“Yes.”

Greg chooses the smallest piece of candy in the skull. They nod their thanks and run away down the street. I turn back to the house and stalk up the path. The moonlight glints on the blade of my scythe.

Looks like the lady of the house chose a trick after all.

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Filed Under: Creative Writing, Flash Fiction

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Comments

  1. Peter Newman says

    October 28, 2011 at 9:43 am

    Nice story.

    I’ll probably be the lone sympathiser for Ms Wakefield…

    Reply
  2. Rebecca L Dobbie says

    October 28, 2011 at 9:57 am

    Hehe..yet another gem. Well done..:)

    Reply
  3. Tony Noland says

    October 28, 2011 at 10:57 am

    Always, always, ALWAYS give out candy. It’s form of insurance, innit?

    Reply
  4. afullnessinbrevity says

    October 28, 2011 at 11:17 am

    Well wikkid, Icy.
    Adam B @revhappiness

    Reply
  5. Craig Smith says

    October 28, 2011 at 2:52 pm

    Poor Greg and Bethany, so cute.

    Ms. Wakefield deserves everything she gets after treating them like that.

    Reply
  6. theothersideofdeanna says

    October 28, 2011 at 3:57 pm

    Peter, don’t worry – you aren’t the lone sympathizer of Ms. Wakefield. 🙂

    This is a fun, perfectly scary story for the season Icy. Great work!

    Reply
  7. Tim VanSant Writes says

    October 28, 2011 at 4:24 pm

    If only Karma always acted so quickly.

    Reply
  8. Eric J. Krause says

    October 28, 2011 at 5:42 pm

    Serves her right. Not answering the door is one thing–I don’t mind that one bit–but coming out and yelling at the children? Yeah, she’s getting what’s coming to her. Excellent story!

    Reply
  9. Jen Brubacher says

    October 28, 2011 at 6:07 pm

    Make me sympathizer number three then. You shouldn’t trick or treat if there’s no pumpkin!

    Good one, Icy. Great mood.

    Reply
  10. Kirsten Mortensen says

    October 28, 2011 at 6:16 pm

    Like it! Very similar idea to mine —

    http://kirstenmortensen.com/fridayflash-costume.htm

    Reply
  11. FARfetched says

    October 28, 2011 at 7:36 pm

    Ah yes, the Reaper has a heart and he loves little children! Love the sense of justice impending…

    Reply
  12. John Wiswell says

    October 28, 2011 at 9:40 pm

    Very cute, Icy, and I echo the advice not to trick-or-treat without Jack O’Lantern symbols.

    Reply
  13. Steve Green says

    October 28, 2011 at 10:15 pm

    Nicy Icy, with one small flaw, a person is NEVER too old for trick-or-treating, us older uns like free candy too, don’t we? 🙂

    Reply
  14. Raven Corinn Carluk says

    October 28, 2011 at 11:27 pm

    Wickedly great.

    My husband used to trick-or-treat with a real scythe. He used to cut up pumpkins or hedges of people who gave him bad or no candy. One of his friends bumped him once, and he put the scythe through the front door.

    Though, he never quite got so Reaperish.

    Reply
  15. Helen says

    October 29, 2011 at 7:30 am

    Oh dear if the grim reaper comes calling you’d better hand over the goods! I don’t think his trick will be throwing eggs!

    Nice Story Icy!

    helen-scribbles.com

    Reply
  16. Al Bruno III says

    October 29, 2011 at 8:23 am

    Terrific read.

    Reply
  17. laradunning says

    October 30, 2011 at 5:19 pm

    Ha ha! Fun read!

    Reply
  18. Icy Sedgwick says

    October 31, 2011 at 1:16 pm

    Glad everyone has enjoyed Death’s jaunt trick-or-treating!

    Reply

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Who is Icy Sedgwick?

icy sedgwick

Icy is a folklore blogger and host of the Fabulous Folklore podcast. She is based in the north east of England, where she was born and raised amid the folk tales and legends of Tyneside and Northumberland. Icy is fascinated by history, cinema, art, and the occult, and griffins will always be her favourite mythical beast. She also writes dark fantasy novellas, Gothic short stories and the occasional weird Western, and she holds a PhD in Film Studies!

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