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Hawk Hallow

Page 1

by J. D. Oliva




  Contents

  I

  II

  III

  IV

  V

  VI

  VII

  VIII

  IX

  X

  XI

  XII

  XIII

  XIV

  XV

  XVI

  XVII

  XVIII

  XIX

  XX

  XXI

  XXII

  XXIII

  XXIV

  XXV

  XXVI

  XXVII

  XXVIII

  XXIX

  XXX

  XXXI

  XXXII

  XXXIII

  XXXIV

  XXXV

  XXXVI

  XXXVII

  XXXVIII

  XXXIX

  XL

  XLI

  XLII

  XLIII

  XLIV

  XLV

  XLVI

  XLVII

  XLVIII

  XLIX

  L

  LI

  Author's Note

  I

  "They say on Halloween the dead walk among the living, searching for random souls to pull into the depths of Hell!"

  “Be quiet, Phil,” Karyn said as she playfully pushed her boyfriend in the chest.

  Phil chuckled as he pulled her in and stole a quick kiss. Phil took every opportunity to steal as many of Karyn's kisses as possible. Even after four months, he still couldn't believe she was with him. Neither could anyone else at Carter-Hallow High School. They were easily the least likely coupling in their senior class.

  Karyn Holm and Phil Callaway stood in line at the Haunted Hallow, fingers intertwined, waiting for the line to finally start moving. Karyn was dressed in a tight, black outfit accented by a set of cat ears nestled in her blonde hair. Phil wore jean shorts, a neon-colored hat, wrist bands and a t-shirt that read ‘Rise Above Hate.’ Even looking at the googly-eyed pair, they didn't seem to fit. But neither cared what their friends thought. They'd catch up with them later at the Barn Dance, but it was only 4:30 in the afternoon. They had plenty of time. Like most kids in Hawk Hallow, Minnesota, they had to visit the Haunted Hallow. It wasn't just part of growing up in town, it was part of who they were.

  Karyn was a five-foot three-inch cheerleader who moved to Hawk Hallow in the eighth grade after her father took a job as a medical sales rep at Hawk Hallow Area Hospital (HHAH). Her first year in town, she struggled to make friends, despite being very cute with a warm personality. Her mother chalked it up to people from small towns being guarded in their social circles. But things got better for Karyn after starting at Carter-Hallow the next fall. She made the cheer squad and was immediately thrust into the inner circle of her class' popular crowd. But she never forgot what it was like to be the outsider. Her warm personality quickly made her one of the most liked kids in the entire school. She had friends in all of the social cliques and could easily move between the cheerleaders, the honors kids, or even the strange, hippy kids that hung out in the back of the room. Everyone liked her, even those that tried not to had to admit that she was very genuine, a rarity in high school.

  Three weeks ago, she was voted Homecoming Queen and had already been accepted to the University of Minnesota. Her senior year was shaping up to be everything she hoped.

  Phil Callaway was born at HHAH and had spent his entire life in Hawk Hallow. He was a remarkably average, 5'10, 160 pounds with brown hair and eyes. A decent student with a GPA in the low 3.0's that if he weren't careful could slip into the high 2's. People often asked him if he was related to this person or that person. Phil figured it was because he was just so run of the mill. He was an avid fan of comic books and pro wrestling. Monday nights, when Wrestling was on TV and Wednesday afternoons- new comic book day, were like high holidays.

  After high school, Phil was also planning on enrolling at the University of Minnesota next fall where he debated studying either creative writing or international business. He felt those were solid fall backs if he couldn't make it in the hardcore world of professional wrestling.

  Despite being in the same grade for four years, the two of them had never met. Phil knew exactly who Karyn was and despite her ability to bounce between cliques, she had no idea who he was, until a Saturday evening that past June. Phil and his friends started their own backyard wrestling promotion. They held their events on the Davidson’s farm, where Phil and their son Jason had built a ring the year prior. Their shows became the thing to talk about around school. By the spring, they were averaging two hundred people per show. Phil was the promotion's star, with his surprising displays of athleticism and personality. He made a bigger impact on his peers in those small shows than he ever had walking the halls at Carter-Hallow.

  It was on a cool Tuesday night in mid-June when Phil and Jason held another of their HHWF (Hawk Hallow Wrestling Federation) shows on the Davidson farm. Jason's sisters sold tickets, while the audience sat on hay bales arranged like stadium seats around the ring. Before the show started, Phil looked out on to the crowd.

  "Dude, how many people are out there?" Phil asked.

  "My sister says she sold two hundred and fourteen tickets."

  Jason never looked out on to the crowd before the show. He was too busy getting into his character, the masked Puma. Looking at the faces made Jason nervous. But it only made Phil more excited. He wanted to get them all riled up and cheering. He was, after all, the babyface (good guy).

  "Holy shit," Phil said.

  "What?"

  Phil stayed silent as he watched five girls he recognized from the halls walk in and take their seats in the front row.

  "What is it?"

  "It's the Yellow Jackets."

  The Yellow Jackets were what everyone called the cheerleaders, named for the bright gold-colored coats they wore in winter months. Even in June, when they were dressed out of uniform, the nickname stuck.

  "Who cares?" Jason said.

  Phil cared. Not once had he considered the possibility that Karyn Holm would come to one of his shows. He had to make an impression. It was probably the only chance he'd get. Phil Callaway was far too shy to talk to Karyn Holm, but Kassius Klaw, his boisterous alter ego, would have her attention in no time.

  As the opening chords of Led Zepplin's Immigrant Song echoed, Kassius made his way to the ring. He stepped into the ring and raised his hands toward the crowd and they greeted him with more of a polite applause than a thunderous ovation. It wasn't good enough. He grabbed the microphone from Andrea Davidson, who was pulling double duty as the ring announcer.

  "Let me tell you something. For a month, I've been plotting and planning. I’ve been dreaming and scheming. Waiting to get my hands on the punk bitch that stole my title! So, Puma, get out here, it's time to whoop that ass!"

  Within seconds, the crowd of now two hundred and forty-seven teenagers was laughing and chanting for Kassius Klaw to take out The Puma. The Puma was of course a masked Jason Davidson.

  The best friends, playing bitter enemies sized each other up and exchanged the various holds and moves they learned from hours of studying their heroes on YouTube. During the match, Kassius whispered, "throw me over the ropes" to Puma, who obliged by whipping his opponent across the ring as hard as possible. Kassius took the slight bit of momentum and with every bit of his limited athletic ability, jumped over the top rope and came crashing down onto the front row, right where Karyn Holm just happened to be sitting. Though he had no training whatsoever, Phil had seen enough wrestling in his life to know how to fall--or at least he believed he did-- and wound up with his head directly on Karyn's lap. She was startled at first. Her friends had talked her into coming, but she didn't expect to be part o
f the show.

  "Where am I?" Kassius feigned being woozy.

  He could tell she was too afraid to move, not sure what he was going to do next.

  "Are you okay?" She whispered.

  Kassius looked up toward her and shot her a quick wink. Karyn blushed, and would have smiled back, but Puma grabbed him by the hair and pulled him back into the ring. The match ended five minutes later after Kassius hit Puma with a pile driver, a remarkably dangerous move that had legitimately ended many real-life pro wrestling careers. Neither Phil nor Jason had any business trying a move like that, but the crowd's standing ovation told them it didn't matter.

  There were two hundred-plus people on their feet cheering, but to Phil Callaway, there was only one.

  After the show, Karyn stuck around while Phil and Jason cleaned up the farm. While they were sweeping up the garbage left by two hundred forty-seven people, Phil came up to Karyn.

  "What did you think?" He asked.

  Karyn chuckled and said, "It was a lot more fun than I expected."

  "I'm Phil," he said extending his right hand.

  "I thought your name was Kassius."

  "Only in the ring," he smiled, almost embarrassed.

  "I'm Karyn," she said.

  "I know."

  After two hours, they had shared their life stories with each other and planned to hang out together that Friday. Phil wanted to take her to the Hallowed Grounds, a thirties-styled movie theater that showed old monster movies on weekends with King Kong vs. Godzilla on its marquee. Never in a million years did she ever imagine going to a movie like that, but something about Phil made her interested enough to sit through seventy-five minutes of grown men in rubber suits throwing cardboard buildings at each other. Phil returned the favor a week later when he attended a youth cheerleading event watching Karyn's sister, Laurel, and the Hawk Hallow Young Rebels All-Star Cheer squad. How people could actually compete in cheerleading was beyond him, but seeing how excited Karyn was and how she cheered her little sister's team on reminded him of wrestling. Then he got it.

  A week later, they cemented their status as a couple in the most traditional of teenage ways,

  "Do you wanna go out with me?" Phil asked.

  "Of course," she replied, as they sealed their pact with their first kiss.

  When word got back that the captain of the cheerleading team was dating the quiet kid who wanted to be a pro wrestler, the community of Carter-Hallow was shocked. Phil had become something of a cult figure at school, and his shyness gave him a somewhat mysterious presence, but dating Karyn was something else.

  As their senior year started, the two were inseparable. Phil started attending football games to watch Karyn perform. One Saturday a month, Karyn attended the HHWF show, always seated in the front row. To no one's surprise, Karyn was elected Homecoming Queen, while Phil proudly watched from the stands. Though his social status had improved, he still wasn't high enough up the ladder to be on the homecoming court himself. Not that he cared, he was still in disbelief that he was in love with the Homecoming Queen. Not that he had shared that information with her. Yet. He was planning on telling her tonight at the Barn Dance. But first they'd hit the Hallow.

  Phil had worked at the Hallow every fall since the eighth grade. Dressing in bloody rags and chasing people around a dimly lit hallway with a bladeless chainsaw was the perfect way to spend his weekends. But with this being his senior year and having a girlfriend--his first girlfriend--he decided not to volunteer this fall. At least, that's how he justified it to himself. The truth was, the Haunted Hallow came under new ownership this year. It was an easy decision not to return.

  "I wanna go to the Hallow first," Karyn said when he picked her up that afternoon.

  "I don't know. It's always the same old stuff," he said.

  "For you. But I've never been there before."

  "You've never been to the Haunted Hallow?"

  "No, it's scary," she laughed. "C'mon, it'll be fun!"

  “All right, now we have no choice."

  Phil didn't even want to visit the Hallow this year, let alone work it. He was surprised when Karyn said she wanted to go to the Hallow before the dance. He put up a little resistance at first, but then remembered his plans for the evening and what he was going to say to her. He wanted the night to be exactly what she wanted before telling her how he felt. He guessed that she would be more likely to return the sentiment if they'd had a good night together. Besides, it might be interesting to see what the new owner had done with the place.

  As they progressed to the front of the line, Karyn squeezed his hand and held a nervous smile as they walked through the dimly lit entrance. Phil knew every corner of the Hallow better than anyone, and was taken slightly aback when they came up on what could only be called a spiraling light vortex. As the lights spun in clockwise rotation that made it hard to focus, Karyn's free hand grabbed Phil's shirt sleeve tight. She was getting scared and Phil loved it. Over the years, he saw countless girlfriends clutch their boyfriends in fear; it was fun to be on the other side of things for a change. Karyn was right, this was gonna be fun.

  They exited the tunnel and found themselves in an empty hallway.

  "Let's go this way," she said.

  "We're supposed to turn right," Phil said back.

  To Phil's surprise, there wasn't a place for them to turn right. The only path lead to the left.

  "C'mon," she said pulling his hand toward her.

  There never was an option to go left. But that was under the Burks. Now, there was clearly a second option. That was both intriguing and scary.

  When the couple turned left into a room that Phil had never seen before, he clutched her just as tightly as she had him. The room looked like a decrepit church with thick, black stains that ran in jagged streaks down the dirty, beige walls. Broken pews lined the floors and led to the altar where a man was sitting in what looked sort of like the metal throne from that show Karyn watched on HBO. The man seated atop looked like a priest draped in a large, flowing robe. The closer they drew to the altar, the more they wondered if this was a man in costume or a dummy perched to draw their attention. Like Dorothy and the Scarecrow, they inched closer and closer until they were right in front of the throne. They stopped and stared at this priest/king. He wasn't moving. Or breathing.

  As Phil drew closer, he was convinced it was just a dummy. Until its head snapped up and he grabbed Phil by the shirt and pulled him up so hard that it ripped their interlocked finger grip apart. Karyn fell forward and landed hard on the altar floor.

  "Boo," the king said with a thick southern accent.

  "You're not supposed to touch the customers. It's against the rules," Phil shot back.

  When Phil worked at the Hallow that was Mr. Burk's number one rule. Never, ever grab the customers. But this shoddy looking king in black sunglasses, with his handlebar mustache, was doing just that.

  "Is it really?" The king said back.

  The king let Phil go and stood up from his throne. Phil immediately grabbed Karyn's hand and started to head out of the room.

  "Now, now, now, where y'all think you're going," the King in Robes asked.

  “We're gonna find your manager," Karyn said.

  Her knees were already scraped up and bloody.

  "But I'm right here," the king said again.

  Phil wanted to start yelling at him, but something was happening. The room started to change shape. It almost seemed like the walls began to flow like water. Like in the tunnel, Phil couldn't focus his eyes. By the way Karyn grabbed his shirt, he could tell that she couldn't either. As many years as he'd worked in the Hallow, he knew what kind of tricks Mr. Burk could pull off. Much of it was like a work of art, but there was something different about this. It was far too real.

  "Would y'all like to file a complaint?" The king asked.

  The shape of the room contorted and bent around them, and neither Phil nor Karyn knew if they were leaning against the wall or crawling on the
floor. Phil pulled himself toward the king and grabbed his leg. The king looked down and slid his sunglasses toward the bridge of his nose. A piercing blue light flooded the room, and neither of them could see what the king did next: which was good, because had Phil seen what the King in Robes did to Karyn, he would never forgive himself.

  II

  Cody Burk's cleats sank into the thick, black mud as he watched the center place his muck-covered fingers along the white laces of the ball. The Morrisonville Quarterback looked across the line and knew the five-foot-seven-inch linebacker would blitz as soon as he called "hike." It wasn't that Cody was bigger than the rest of the players on the brown and black stained fields at Hawk Hallow Middle School. He was average height, average weight, but Cody Burk might have been the most athletic kid on the field. But that wasn't what scared the Morrisonville Quarterback. It was the look on Cody's face. In that one glance, the Quarterback truly believed that Cody was going to hurt him. With the score 24-20, the Morrisonville Mighty Victors were behind late in the game, but were driving. Cody had blitzed into the backfield on each of the last two plays and though he never touched the Morrisonville Quarterback, he came close enough.

  It was third down and thirteen yards to go from the Hawk Hallow twenty-five yard line. Someone had to make a play. This was Cody's chance to make that play and seal the victory.

  "Hike!"

  The center snapped the ball and just like the Quarterback expected, Cody blitzed. Before the center knew what happened, Cody was in the backfield looking for someone to hit. The Quarterback saw him coming and eyed up his receiver down the field. Cody beat the line of scrimmage and saw the Quarterback. He locked in, lowering his shoulder to charge. The Quarterback flinched. He saw Cody coming, but then he stopped. No one touched him or even tried to block him. Cody just stopped. The Quarterback took advantage. He let loose and heaved the ball down field, where his receiver caught it for the touchdown.

  Final score: Morrisonville 26, Hawk Hallow 24.

  Cody watched the Mighty Victors storm the field and carry the Quarterback on their shoulders. He had his chance, he could have been the hero, but he wasn't. They lost, again. The Hawks of Hawk Hallow were 0-3, and while he wished he could have blamed the offense for not scoring enough, Cody knew this one was all on him. He choked. Again.

 

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