Read Halloween: Magic, Mystery, and the Macabre Online
Authors: Paula Guran
Tags: #Magic & Wizards, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Horror, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Anthologies, #Fantasy, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
long black hair underneath. Then I strode out into the wet streets.
Raindrops struck my chin and drummed on the waterproof boxes.
Everything had to be sealed against the frequent rains. Even my robe resisted soaking in the water. But in this downpour, it wouldn’t last long.
The wheels of the cart splashed through puddles and sprayed
against my boots. Tied up for the night, the boats in the canals bobbed in tune with the choppy water. No one else walked the streets, only MARIA V. SNYDER [159]
the Halloween Men stood in their dark corners, watching for law-
breakers. I yanked my hood lower even though my navy Columbina
with the sedate silver trim met all government regulations. My back burned as I imagined their gazes piercing my skin and searching the depths of my soul for guilt.
Normally my forays into the city were a welcome break, but not
tonight. I hustled through the city, delivering the special-ordered masks. On my return trip, I took a shortcut through the food district.
At the bakery, a lantern glowed behind the closed curtains.
I pushed opened the door.
Bianca yelped in surprise and reached for her Columbina sitting
on the counter. But then she relaxed. “Don’t scare me like that, Nella! I thought you were a Halloween Man. Your soaked robe looks black.”
“You wouldn’t have to worry if you wore your mask.” I averted
my gaze from her exposed face. Nineteen like me, we’d been friends since I delivered a mask for her mother two years ago.
“I don’t have to wear it, we’re closed for the day.” She leaned on her mop.
But this was a public area. And the image of the Halloween Men
still burned in my mind.
“Besides,” she said. “It was digging into my temple.”
I crossed to the counter, leaving behind puddles that Bianca
mopped up without comment. Her half-mask matched the color of her
buttery yellow robes, marking her as a member of the confectionery class. Brown, orange, and red beads outlined the edges and around
her eyes. I turned it over. The velvet had worn off along the one side, exposing the leather underneath. I dug into my pockets and found a patch, fixing the problem.
“Here.” I held it out to her. “You can put it back on.”
She laughed and waved me off. “Put it on the counter.”
When I didn’t move, she strode to the door, locked it, and drew
the shades. “Better?”
A little. I set it down.
“Relax,” she said. “Your stodgy father isn’t here. Master-follow-the-rules-to-the-extreme Salvatori.” She huffed with derision. “Not letting you take off your mask in your very own home is a form of abuse.”
[160] THE HALLOWEEN MEN
Not bothering to correct her for the hundredth time, I settled on
the stool behind the counter. I was allowed to remove my mask in
the privacy of my bedroom, but she never remembered that detail.
Plus I suspected I resembled my mother and seeing me was painful
for my father. At least I hoped that was the real reason, otherwise Bianca might be correct.
Unaffected by my silence, she continued, “Once you have your
own home, you can do whatever you want. Oh! I almost forgot.” She
handed me an envelope stuffed full with money. “They loved your
masks, Nella. I sold every one.”
Fear mixed with pride—a strange combination. “You didn’t!”
She waved away my concern. “No, I didn’t tell anyone you made
them. They bought them because they’re fabulous, not because of
your family name. I’ve orders for a dozen more!”
Overwhelmed, I said, “I can’t . . . ”
But she didn’t hear me. She prattled on about our future shop—a
place that would provide all your party needs: cakes, confections, food, decorations, and themed masks to match. Even though parties
were held inside homes, the Halloween Men considered them public
events and all guests had to wear masks. Wealthy hosts provided
masks for their guests as a party favor.
Unless it was Halloween, of course. The only day the citizens
could go out in public without their masks on. The day the Halloween Men retreated to . . . no one quite knew where. Rumors speculated
they disappear back to hell where they’d come from. Who else but
demons would conquer our city and force us to wear masks as a
punishment? Others claimed they ascend to heaven. That they were
angels sent to discipline us for our vanity and shallow nature. And a few people were certain the Halloween Men took off their masks and enjoyed the day among us.
It was the biggest day of the year with the grandest parties,
parades, and entertainment on every street corner. Which reminded
me . . .
I interrupted Bianca’s dreaming to tell her about the Halloween
Men’s visit. “And since I have a curfew again, I can’t stay and make more masks.”
MARIA V. SNYDER [161]
“They are
legal
, Nella. They can’t arrest you because they don’t like your designs.”
Guess her father hadn’t terrified her with stories about the
Halloween Men since she was little. Mine did. All because of my
mother. Had she broken the strictest law?
“Bianca, do you know what happens if you’re caught without a
mask on?”
She plopped the mop into the bucket. “I’ve heard they drown
you in the Grand Canal, but Mister Cavella says they lock you in the dungeons forever.”
“You don’t know?”
“No one does. No one has ever returned. Now stop fretting,
Nella.
You
of all people will never be caught without a mask on, plus no one but me knows
you
made those masks. And they’ll only be worn at private parties. Besides, I’ve already bought the material and supplies for you. They’re in the icing room.”
“My father knows.” And that was more than enough.
“Oh, Nella, don’t let your father ruin your life.”
“He’s—”
“Lonely and doesn’t want you to leave him like your mother.”
I understood why she’d think that—the rumors claimed she left
him. The truth was too hard to explain. And if I could just move out on my own, the pressure of those past sins would no longer haunt
me.
“I’ll find a way to make them.” I promised.
“Yay.” She ran to the back and returned with a box.
When I returned to the shop, my father was already upstairs in
our apartment. I stashed the box of supplies in the workroom and
then joined him for a late supper on the second story that housed
our living area. Our bedrooms were on the third floor, and an attic occupied the entire fourth floor.
After Father retired for the evening, I snuck back downstairs and
carried the box and a lantern to the attic. Careful not to make any noise, I cleared an area in the far corner—the one over my bedroom and as far away from my father’s ceiling as possible. I set up a work area.
[162] THE HALLOWEEN MEN
As sleet tapped on the roof, I cut leather into butterflies, snails, cat faces, and diamond shapes. I let my imagination run for hours.
Finished for the night, I considered. My father never came up
here—the boxes were full of Mother’s belongings, but just in case . . . I remembered putting a box of old sheets up here . . . somewhere. I
dug around and opened one promising box.
Instead of sheets, I found clothes, then cookware, and then a box
full of bright colorful masks. Odd. I examined one in the lantern
light. Not my father’s elegant conservative style, more brassy and bold. More like my true style. Mother’s?
I sat back on my heels in shock. She had been a
mascherara
, too.
The glass bead rolled across the table. I bit back a curse and lunged for the escaping purple bauble before it fell. The sound of a bead hitting the floor would be enough to cause Father to look up from
his work and with a single glance convey his extreme irritation over my clumsiness. The bead clung to my sticky fingers. I fumbled in an effort to glue a line of them along the edges of a basic black funerary Bauta. Most customers purchased the traditional somber color for
their deceased loved ones.
Tired from working late the last three nights, I struggled to
concentrate on the task at hand.
The bell jingled, signaling a customer. Father stood, smoothed
the few wrinkles that dared to crease his midnight blue robe, and
parted the curtains separating the back workroom with the rest of
the shop.
No longer feeling as if under a microscope, I relaxed and
concentrated on the pesky beads. I’d wanted to use the bigger size, but Father refused to let me add expensive materials to my masks.
Very few customers purchased my creations when they sat beside a
master craftsman’s. Which was another reason why I decided to keep making those other designs. The Halloween Man’s words,
before we
have to teach another young
mascheraro
a lesson
replayed in mind
.
I banished those thoughts—they wouldn’t find out—and held
my newest creation at arm’s length, examining it with a critical
eye. Not nearly as edgy as my masks for Bianca, it met all the
MARIA V. SNYDER [163]
government requirements for a funeral mask, but it had my own
personal . . . flair.
The curtains parted with a snap of fabric. “You have a customer,”
Father said from the threshold.
I stared at him.
Did he just make a joke?
No. Standing, I wiped my hands along my robes, earning a stern glare. I adjusted the
Columbina on my face, checking to ensure it hadn’t moved while I
worked.
“Hurry up,” Father said. “They’re waiting.”
I slipped pass him and entered the storefront.
Sleet pelted the big display windows and the wind howled
outside. Two men wearing the gray robes of the manufacturing class stood in the center of our showroom. They wore charcoal-colored
business Columbina
s
trimmed in gray and red. The man on the right examined one of my funeral masks.
Aware that Father remained in the doorway, I asked, “May I help
you, sirs?”
The man holding the mask said, “Master Salvatori tells us you
designed this?”
Was he a spy for the Halloween Men? “Yes, sir.”
“We’d like to order one just like it except trimmed with our
family’s colors.”
Shocked, it took me a moment to find the proper words. “I’m
sorry for you loss, sir.”
He nodded and although he kept his lips pressed in a thin line,
amusement sparked in his deep blue eyes. Odd.
I retrieved the order sheet from the desk. “What colors, sir?”
“Red and gray, miss. And we’d like them on a white base.”
White? I glanced up. While still within regulations, the color
was . . . unconventional for a funeral mask. “When do you need this by?”
“Two days. Will that be a problem, miss?”
“No, sir.” I’d finish it by tomorrow. “Where should it be delivered?”
“One forty-two Canal Street.”
In the heart of the factory district—no surprise. I noted it on the sheet.
[164] THE HALLOWEEN MEN
“How much?” the man asked.
“Oh, my father . . . er . . . Master Salvatori will assist you with the price.”
The men glanced at each other as if I’d said something significant.
My slip earned me another stern glare from Father before he turned cordial for the paying customers. Well as cordial as my father
managed. He had a reputation of being gruff, but his masks were
sought after by all the elite. Of course these men would get a discount since they chose one of my designs. Still, every bit helped.
Father shot me a look and I hurried to the back room. I abandoned
my current project to work on the special order, pulling a piece of white velvet from the shelf.
When Father joined me, he said, “I expect that mask for Mister
Cattaneo to be your very best.”
I glanced at him. Did he purposely steer the customers to one of
my masks? Was this his way to lessen the blow of trying to prevent me from making more masks for Bianca? Hard to tell.
The row of homes along Canal Street fronted a narrow waterway and
even narrower sidewalk. Water sloshed over the edge. My cart’s wheels barely fit as I navigated the broken pavement and dodged the waves.
The four-story-high houses appeared to have been squashed
together by a giant. One forty-two no exception. However, its
windows remained dark unlike its neighbors. I knocked on the
door. Gray paint peeled off the thick wood and the bottom third was bloated and warped by the constant soaking from the canal.
After banging again, this time with more force, the door swung
open, revealing a young man with short black hair and deep blue
eyes. I started at him a moment, taken aback by his sharp nose,
handsome features and welcoming smile. Realizing too late he wore
neither mask nor robe over his clothes, I glanced down at the box in my hands. Heat spread down my back.
“Your order, sir,” I said although he had to be only a few years
older than me.
“Ah yes, Miss Salvatori. Do come in.” He cupped my elbow and
drew me inside, closing the door behind me with a thud.
MARIA V. SNYDER [165]
Panicked, I raised my head. Lanterns blazed in a sitting room to
my left. The scents of pine oil and wet muck dominated.
“This way.” He headed down a hallway.
Clutching the box to my chest, I hesitated. This was unusual.
He returned. Amusement glinted in his eyes, but he remained
polite. “My mother wishes to inspect the mask before we pay the
balance. She’s waiting in the back parlor.”
Understandable. I didn’t have my father’s reputation for quality.