Victoria stared into the mirror of her childhood home, adjusting her eye shadow for the fierce angles she wanted. It really was a shame that she wouldn't be able to go out with her own friends like she'd planned, her costume was going to go entirely to waste underneath the puffy jacket her mother was forcing her to wear, but it wasn't that bad to come back and see her family after a few years. Somehow she'd missed all of the holidays since going off to college, not able to comfortably afford a plane ticket. This was an odd holiday to break that streak with, but waiting any longer felt like widening the gap too much.
"Vicky, are you almost done up there!?" Mom called from the first floor.
With one final second to run a comb through her long, black hair, Victoria stepped out to the top of the stairs. "I'm ready, already."
"Sweatpants, too, sweetie~ We talked about this."
It was going to be cold outside anyway, Victoria slipped the unflattering things on before making her way downstairs.
Brian was fitted away inside his homemade costume, going out as a robot for one of his last times trick-or-treating. The kid had gotten a lot taller since Victoria left, a cliche for good reason, but he still looked gangly within the painted cardboard. It wouldn't be long before he was too big for people to feel comfortable handing out candy to him, so Victoria prayed briefly that it wouldn't rain and turn his handiwork into mush while they were out.
Their mom grabbed him by the largest box, that was his head, and forced his peep holes down to see that she was handing him his grocery bag for the night. "Remember to be careful on curbs, and crossing the street, and don't turn too fast and bean some other poor kid in the head."
"Yes, mom." Brian had clearly been hearing the same thing for the last few weeks since he'd gotten caught cutting out cardboard with a snap-off safety knife.
"I know you're just going around the neighborhood, but don't go off with anybody you don't know or get too far away from the group. Victoria is going to be keeping track of you, and I don't want to hear any stories or you can forget about going back out next year. Understand?"
"Yes, mom."
"And don't accept anything that's not a branded candy. Those couple of cases of finding razor blades might have been flukes, but it's not worth the risk. And I bet you wouldn't want an apple anyway."
"Yes, mom."
"And the Stevensons say that after their party, you can throw out your costume in their recycling container. We don't need it taking up space in your room for the next five months, it's messy enough as it is."
"Yes, mom..."
Victoria stifled laughter behind her mother's back. Her little brother was lucky that he didn't have an ear out to pull for being so flippant. But that's just how teenagers were, and Mom had chosen to go through having one another time after Victoria, so sympathy was right out the window; she'd known what she was going in for.
She took her little brother by the hand as a clear sign to their mother that the time for overbearing was over and they had to head out soon if they were going to catch up to the group. The wavering lights of a half dozen kids and their handlers for the night were already twinkling in the window, so mom had only a few seconds before they'd be at her own door demanding candy.
"Alright, Bug, let's get going," Victoria said while twisting the handle of the front door right as the group of little ghosts and goblins... and princesses, and one mariachi, were about to knock.
Coming out and joining the touring group, Victoria was suddenly glad that she hadn't gone out in her first choice outfit. She pulled up the neck of her borrowed puffy coat to protect her cheeks from the autumn chill, not quite high enough to keep her nose from burning a little. At least it wasn't wet this year, that would have been a poor capstone to put on Brian's childhood: getting covered in cardboard mush.
Though, knowing Bug, he'd have just upgraded to using latex paint on his costume and been one of the few trick-or-treaters still taking part in the holiday. Victoria smiled; the kid she'd held as a baby now had hands that were bigger than hers...
She stood at the back of the group, reminding herself of her own trips out on Halloween. She'd never been one of those princesses; she'd been too lazy to do much more than a bedsheets ghost with hand-cut holes. At least, the holes had been hand-cut the first year until mom did some actual stitching on the outfit to make it comfortable (she'd been afraid that the holes would slip and Victoria would trip on something, into traffic).
As they went, one of the other handlers, a tall man in a plaid shirt, migrated toward her. He seemed like a hard worker, well-muscled with serious eyes and a trimmed beard that wouldn't get caught in his tools (a fate that Victoria's father had lost most of his own beard to once upon a time). It had been years, but one didn't forget an innocent crush.
"Mister Franklin?" she said.
And he looked at her fully for the first time that night. "Oh, it is Vicky. Then I suppose the lanky one dressed like a pile of boxes is Brian?"
"Don't let him hear you say that." She smiled, the elaborate circuitry on her brother's costume had been painted in the bright light of his room and wasn't so obvious unless he was standing directly underneath a lamppost. "And I see Gracie wanted to be the newest princess."
Paul Franklin chuckled deeply. "She's watched the movie at least a hundred times, but I'm just glad she's out of her zombie phase."
Victoria grimly remembered a sleepless night after babysitting the girl and Gracie had insisted on watching her favorites. "You should've dressed up too, had a little fun while you have the excuse. Pretty soon if you try to get into the spirit of things, you'll just be that creepy old guy dressed like... a serial killer? Maybe a slasher villain?"
"I'm a lumberjack," he said and snapped his suspenders. "Left the axe at home, didn't think that through before yesterday and there wasn't enough time to change into anything else."
"You just look like you're wearing your work clothes."
"Because I am. And I guess you wanted to dress up as a marshmallow monster?"
She scoffed. "As if. The costume I made wasn't to the old lady's liking, so she made me cover up as much as I could. It wouldn't have been inappropriate if my other plans hadn't fallen through, but I can always recycle it for next year, I guess."
"So, gonna leave me in the dark?"