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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter Additional Halloween Contest
Entry The newsletter devoted to
spreading love and cultural awareness around the world. This newsletter is to
provide one additional story for the Halloween Contest. It is not to be considered that the publisher
favourites these stories over the other.
The membership makes the decision on which author is our winner for the
best Halloween Story and which poet is the winner of the best Halloween
Poem. Happy Halloween everyone. Staring Into the Face Of Death
On Halloween
Arthur Levine The face was all black and marbled and cracked. It had
thin ridges protruding near the cheekbones with the hint of dried blood seeping
out of them. I suppose at my age you get used to these things because I wasn’t
scared; well maybe just a little bit. I am twelve years old and a boy genius. I
know when someone is trying to fake me out, and yet this damn face looked real
somehow. The worst part was that it was right in my face. I guess I was too
nervous to rip it off and expose another young guy like me out for some
Halloween pranks and candy. The part that really scared me was that it kept
following me. Why was it after me? What had I done? I tried to run away from it;
dodging and weaving down a side alley a few blocks from my home, but no matter
what I did, or how fast I ran, it stayed right in my face. I yelled out at it. I said, “Get away from me.
You’re not real. You are just trying to scare me and screw up my mind. I have
your number. You’re a phony. I’m not scared of you. You’re just a Halloween
prankster. Get out of my face.” The death mask didn’t
respond. There wasn’t a sound coming from it. It just kept dogging me. I tried
to rationalize about what was happening to me. “Johnny,” I said to myself.
“Don’t let this creep get the better of you. You are too smart to be scared off
by some dumb Halloween mask. Don’t let him scare you. Laugh in his face. That’s when it happened. I
gathered all my courage and told the Face of Death I knew he was a phony and I
laughed in his face. And then I felt it. It was like a searing pain in the pit
of my stomach. I felt so sick; I thought I was going to die. I dropped my own
mask of an alien crocodile man-eater, and ran home as fast as I could, yelling
at the top of my lungs. “Mommy, mommy, let me in. The
Face of Death is after me and he is trying to kill me. I feel like my stomach
is going to explode. I am in terrible pain. He is killing me. Help me. I’m too
young to die like this.” My mother tried her best not
to laugh in my face. She asked me how much candy I had eaten. I was so scared
that I told the truth for a change, and admitted to eating about a half a bowl
full from trick or treat scavenging during the earlier part of the evening. My
mother suggested a trip to the bathroom, a glass of warm milk, and getting in
bed and going to sleep. I did what she said, and the pain started to go away. I
was so relieved. I was lying in bed thinking
how stupid I had been to get scared by a mask on Halloween. I felt much better,
and realized how silly I had been. This was Halloween, that’s all. I was safe
now in my bed, in my bedroom where I could be a child again, and not feel
scared of the dark because I kept my night light on and my mother was
downstairs watching TV. And then it happened. I was just dozing off when I
heard my mother scream. “Johnny,” she yelled, “Come quick, it is your father.
He fell down and grabbed his chest. I think he has had a heart attack. Run next
door and get Doctor Able to come right over. Hurry Johnny, please hurry,” she
cried. I ran downstairs, and saw my
father lying on the floor. He looked like he wasn’t breathing and white bubbly
foam was coming out of his mouth. I ran outside and jumped off the front porch
to go to our next-door neighbor, Doctor Able, for help. That’s when I saw him again.
The Face of Death was right in front of me keeping me from getting to the front
door of Doctor Able. I tried to run past him, but he wouldn’t let me. Now I
knew he wasn’t here for me, but I was still scared. Doctor Able came storming
out of his house with his black medical bag; my mother must have called him.
Suddenly The Face of Death disappeared. I don’t know if this was the
real thing, or just a Halloween prank gone horribly wrong, or my boy genius
imagination run wild, or a terrible coincidence? My father recovered thank
goodness, but I almost never go out on Halloween any more. I’ve come as close
to facing death, as I want to on that holiday. Well maybe I’ll just go down the
street for a little candy if the spirit of Halloween moves me, but I want to
warn you to watch out for the Face of Death. Next year it could be you or your
family that he is after. Next year this story could be real. Next year it might
be your sense of reality that is challenged. Have a happy Halloween, and don’t
eat too much candy. Arthur Levine ***** Hi, I am Arthur Levine, the
author of the novel Johnny Oops. To read more about Johnny and his fictional
wild escapades please access: http://johnnyoops.blogspot.com
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| << November01, 2007 - Carol's Corner - The Publisher's Personal Column |
November02, 2007 - Fascinating Facts and Tantalizing Trivia - A Hartson Dowd Column >> |
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