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Holiday banners hung above Main Street and fluttered in the breeze. Giant carved pumpkins sat at every shop and business, each decorated with themes relating to the stores.

An old '55 Ford truck was carved in the pumpkin that sat in front of Binkley's gas station. An owl on top of a stack of books sat near the library steps. A jail cell represented the sheriff's office. A cornucopia sat at Pixies, and Lou Edna's face topped off with a pink wig was proudly displayed in front of the hair salon.

The air had taken on the crispness that signaled the season. The leaves had relinquished solid green for a gaudy splash of color. The sky was a crystal clear sea of blue.

Ghosts, witches, monsters, and ghouls hung from the porches of the stores along Main Street. Festivity and celebration ran through the town. Costumed children and adults milled about. Frankenstein's monster handed out candy to the children; witches poured out cups of steaming hot chocolate. Vendors sold crafts. Musicians played on makeshift stages. Candy apples were hawked up and down the way. Everyone was in a party mood.

"Hobie's gonna help me in the pumpkin carving contest later this afternoon," Hadley said. "I hope we win. I really do. Can you imagine what I can do with that grand prize?"

"A hundred heads of cabbage!" Maury said.

Maury looked at Hadley like she'd sprouted another head.

"I know. It's great, isn't it?" Hadley said. "I think this year's festival is the best ever. Don't you? Pixies is sponsoring the contest this year. If I win, I just know Hobie will let me have the whole load. And wouldn't that be something!

Think of all the coleslaws, Maury! Tropical, buttermilk, everything coleslaw. There's cabbage with pasta and stuffed cabbage. I could make kraut. I could boil it or fry it or disguise it in a casserole. How about cabbage chips? Could be the next big thing! A little olive oil, a dash of seasoning, dry them out, and throw them in a zip bag. They would probably last forever. Or maybe, I could have Krautfleckerl."

"You could have your head examined," said Maury. "What in the world is . . . whatever you said?"

"It's a cabbage dish," said Hadley. "The cabbage sits in salt for 30 minutes. Cook some pasta. Squeeze out the excess water from the leaves. You fry up some onions and caraway seeds in some oil and season them. Throw in your cabbage. I think some polish sausage wouldn't hurt. I've been meaning to try it since I ran up on it while surfing for recipes. There are so many ways to eat up a hundred head of cabbage, Maury! Just use your imagination!"

"Think of your digestion! Forget that, I'm your sister. I'd have to help you eat up all that cabbage! Think of my digestion, for goodness sakes!

It's a contest, just a contest! You're not going to win a Caribbean cruise! But listen to me," said Maury. "I am wasting my breath. The way you are over any contest, it wouldn't surprise me if you put on that stupid mask you're wearing and paraded naked down Main Street on a swayback mule just to be awarded the grand prize of 500 gallons of sludge!

It's your competitive nature. You can't help it! I saw it in you when we were kids, and you had to go over twice in Mrs. Mulrooney's yard to steal rocks because the first one you picked up was dog poop. Yep, I can just see you on that mule. You'd do that in a second. I know you, Godiva, remember?"

"Don't be silly," Hadley said. "How much sludge did you say?"

Hadley acted like she was going to unbutton her jacket.

"Hadley!" Maury said.

"Oh, Maury," Hadley said, "I couldn't do that, anyway. Even if I wanted to. A long, flowing Godiva wig would ruin the whole effect of this spectacular mask! I've really never seen anything like it! It's so supple. The way it fits your whole head, it feels like a glove. The rubber is hot as blue blazes, though. The way my face is sweating under this thing, my cheeks may lose 20 pounds.

Do you think it will give me the Marlene Dietrich look? You know, they say the studios made her pull her back teeth out to achieve that hollow- cheek effect. I wouldn't go that far because I like my teeth, but a little sweat might go a long way, you know. What do you think? Am I on to something?"

Maury, who only had a small, black, robber's mask covering her eyes, screwed up her mouth and stuck out her tongue at her older sister.

"On something might sum up what I'm thinking right about now," said Maury.

"Oh, where's the little kid inside you?" asked Hadley. "Mine never left me."

"I know," said Maury.

"I might have a block party and barbecue 30 or 40 heads," Hadley said. Wouldn't that give the neighbors something to talk about? That would be all I had on the menu! I'd make them eat them with their bare hands. No forks. No plates. A little liquid soap might not be a bad idea. But I still bet I'd draw a crowd. Free food draws 'em like flies to a church social."

"You're not right," said Maury.

"I'm just getting wound up," said Hadley. "There's cabbage rolls and soups. I can think of a million ways to use them up. But you are right, I'd have to scarf down a whole lot of leaves before they spoiled. Well, that's all right. And if I run out of ideas, there's always endless recipes on the Internet."

"You and your Internet," said Maury. "You're getting as weird as that tabby cat that lives with you."

"Onus would turn his nose up at cabbage," Hadley said, "no matter how I tried to jazz it up for him."

Maury's attention was drawn to a commotion up the street.

"Hey," said Maury. "What's this?"

"I don't know," said Hadley. "I don't think it was on the festival agenda."

Down Main Street ran a screaming goblin. Its voice was high and thin. Eerie. It was hard to tell whether the goblin was screeching or screaming.

Nobody could begin to guess who it was.

The creature was tall and dressed in black rags. A hood covered its head. In one enormous claw, it held a sickle, just like the Grim Reaper. In its other hand was a bloody butcher knife.

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