Manuel crossed himself again. “Yes,
Harley thought they were crazy, that was plain enough. But he let them have their way. He sat in the truck while Manuel went to get a piece of milky plastic rain sheeting and two other men to help him. Amanda stood near the pickup’s front fender and watched the men cover the pumpkin, anchor the sheeting with wooden stakes and chunks of rock.
Harley had little to say during supper that night, and soon afterward he went out to his workshop in the barn. He was annoyed at what he called her “foolishness,” and Amanda couldn’t really blame him. The incident with the pumpkin had already taken on a kind of surreal quality in her memory, so that she had begun to think that maybe she and Manuel and the other workers were a pack of superstitious fools.
She went out to sit on the porch, bundled up in her heavy wool sweater, as night came down and blacked out the last of the sunset colors over the ocean. An evil pumpkin, she thought. Good Lord, it was ridiculous – a Halloween joke, a sly fantasy tale for children like those her father used to tell of ghosts and goblins, witches and warlocks, things that went bump in the dark Halloween night. How could a pumpkin be evil? Pumpkins were about as harmless a fruit as there was. You made pies and cookies from them, you carved them into grinning jack-o’- lanterns; they were a symbol of a grand old tradition, a happy children’s rite of fall.
And yet…
When she concentrated she could picture the way the strange pumpkin had looked, feel again the vague aura of evil that radiated from it. A small shiver passed through her. Why hadn’t Harley felt it too? Some people just weren’t sensitive to auras and emanations, she supposed that was it. He was too practical, too logical, too much of a skeptic – a true son of Missouri, the “Show Me” state, where he’d been born. He simply couldn’t understand.
How did the damned thing get in their field? Where did it come from?
What
She found herself looking out toward the east field, as if the pumpkin might somehow be pulsing and glowing under its plastic covering, lighting up the night. There was nothing to see but darkness, of course. Silly. Ridiculous. But if it were picked…she did not want to think about what might happen if that woody, furrowed stem were sliced through, that thick dark orange rind cracked open.
The days passed, and October came, and soon most of the crop had been shipped and the balance put away in the storage shed, and Manuel and the other laborers were gone.All that remained in the fields was the massive exhibition pumpkin that Harley would enter in this year’s contest, and the dwarfs and damaged and withered fruit that had been left to decay into natural fertilizer for the spring planting. Those, and the strange pumpkin near the east fence, hidden under its thick plastic shroud.
Amanda was too busy, as always at harvest time, to think much about the pumpkin. But she did go out there twice, once with Harley and once alone. The first time, Harley wanted to take off the sheeting and look at the thing; she couldn’t let him. The second time, alone, she had stood in a cold sea wind and felt again the emanation of evil, the responsive stirrings of terror and disgust. It was as if the pumpkin were trying to exert some telepathic force upon her, as if it were saying, “Cut my stem…open me up…eat me….”
She pulled away finally, almost with a sense of having wrenched loose from grasping hands, and drove away determined to do something drastic: take a can of gasoline up there and set fire to the thing, burn it to a cinder, get
But she didn’t do it. When she got back to the house she had calmed down and her fears again seemed silly, childish. A telepathic pumpkin, for heaven’s sake! A telepathic evil pumpkin! She didn’t even tell Harley of the incident.
More days passed, most of October fell away like dry leaves, and the weekend before Halloween arrived – the weekend of the Pumpkin Festival. The crowds were thick on both Saturday and Sunday; Amanda, working the traditional Sutter Farm booth, sold dozens of pumpkins, mainly to families with children who wanted them for Halloween jack-o’-lanterns. She enjoyed herself the first day, but not the second. Harley’s new exhibition pumpkin weighed out at 348 pounds and he fully expected to win his long-awaited second blue ribbon, but he didn’t. Aaron Douglas, who owned a farm up near Princeton, won first prize with a 360-pound Connecticut Field giant.
Harley took the loss hard. He wouldn’t eat his supper Sunday night and moped around on Monday and Halloween Tuesday, spending most of both days at the stand they always set up near Highway One to catch any last-minute shoppers. There were several this year: everyone, it seemed, wanted a nice fat pumpkin for Halloween.
All Hallows Eve.
Amanda stood at the kitchen window, looking out toward the fields. It was just after five o’clock, darkness settling rapidly; a low wispy fog had drifted in off the Pacific and was curling around the outbuildings, hiding most of the land beyond. She could barely see the barn, where Harley had gone to his workshop. She wished he would come back, even if he was still broody over the results of the contest. It was quiet here in the house, a little too quiet to suit her, and she felt oddly restless.
Behind her on the stove, hard cider flavored with cinnamon bubbled in a big iron pot. Harley loved hot cider at this time of year; he’d had three cups before going out and it had flushed his face, put a faint slur in his voice – he never had been much of a drinking man. But she didn’t mind. Alcohol loosened him up a bit,
stripped away some of his reserve. Usually it made him laugh, too, but not on this
night.
The fog seemed to be thickening; the lights in the barn had been reduced to smeary yellow blobs on the gray backdrop. A fine night for Halloween, she thought. And she smiled a wistful smile as a pang of nostalgia seized her.
Halloween had been a special night when she was a child, a night of exciting ritual. First, the carving of the jack-o’-lantern – how she’d loved that! Her father always brought home the biggest, roundest pumpkin he could find, and they would scoop it out together, and cut out its eyes and nose and jagged gap-toothed grin, and light the candle inside, and then set it grinning and glowing on the porch for all the neighbors and trick-or-treaters to see. Then the dressing up in the costume her mother had made for her: a witch with a blacked-out front tooth and a tall-crowned hat, an old broom tucked under one arm; a ghost in a sewn white sheet, her face smeared with cold cream; a lady pirate in a crimson tunic and an eye patch, carrying a wooden sword covered in tinfoil.
Then the trick-or-treating, and the bags full of candy and gum and fruit and popcorn balls and caramel apples, and the harmless pranks like soaping old Mrs. Collier’s windows because she never answered her doorbell, or tying bells to the tail of Mr. Dawson’s cat. Then the party afterward, with all her friends from school – cake with orange icing and pumpkin pie, blindfold games and bobbing for apples, and afterward, with the lights turned out and the curtains open so they could see the jack-o’-lantern grinning and glowing on the porch, the ghost and goblin stories, and the delicious thrill of terror when her father described the fearful things that
prowled and hunted on Hallowmas Eve.
Amanda’s smile faded as she remembered that last part of the ritual. Her
father telling her that Halloween had originated among the ancient Druids, who believed that on this night, legions of evil spirits were called forth by the Lord of the Dead. Saying that the only way to ward them off was to light great fires, and even then…even then… Saying that on All Hallows’ Eve, according to the ancient beliefs, evil was at its strongest and most profound.
Evil like that pumpkin out there?
She shuddered involuntarily and found herself trying to peer past the shimmery outlines of the barn. But the east field was invisible, clamped inside the bony grasp of the fog. That damned pumpkin! she thought. I
Then she thought: Come on, Mandy, that’s superstitious nonsense, just as Harley says. The pumpkin is only a pumpkin. Nothing is going to happen here tonight.
But it was so quiet…
Abruptly she turned from the window, went to the stove, picked up her spoon to stir the hot cider. If Harley didn’t come back pretty soon, she’d put on her coat and go out to the barn and fetch him. She just didn’t like being here alone, not tonight of all nights.
So