"The gruesome ghoul, the grisly ghoul, without the slightest noise,
Waits patiently beside the school, to feast on girls and boys..."
-"The Ghoul," Jack Prelutsky
***
The first time the Night People came for Amina she was six years old, and it was Valentine's Day, and also her birthday.
She stayed up late that night with a flashlight, looking at the Valentines from her classmates and chewing the small, chalky candy hearts the teacher gave out.
The cards were flat, pink and red cartoons that didn't really make sense to her. When she thought of a heart she imagined something meaty and hot, not a shape cut from paper. But at least the candy was nice.
It was approaching midnight when she heard scratching at the window. And, peeking out of the covers, she saw a man standing there. This should have frightened her, but it didn't. In fact, although she didn't really know why, she was thrilled.
The stranger wore a black coat and a hat with a wide brim, and his eyes looked like shiny pennies. He tapped the window with his sharp, unkempt nails again, asking to be let in.
Amina tiptoed to the window and opened it. The man reached in to pick her up and sat her on his shoulder. She held on, anticipating a swift ride, and together they ran off into the night, Amina feeling perfectly secure.
The stranger's coat, she discovered, was not a foul thing, but smelled of savories and spices and things deep in the ground which were not yet rotten. When she got older, she would recognize them as funeral scents.
It was a cold night and she had only pajamas, but she didn't mind. With the winter wind in her hair she felt free. She wasn't surprised to discover they were going to the cemetery, with its aged trees and leaning monuments and the somber, shadowy opulence of the Millionaire's Row tombs up on the hill.
The stranger lifted her over the fence and set her down softly, then clamored over it himself. A single candle glowed on top of a nearby headstone, where the grave was open and the box taken out. Here were a dozen people dressed in black. They welcomed Amina like old friends.
The sight of the open coffin and the smell of grave dirt didn't bother her. Even when she saw what the Night People were doing with the unearthed body (her unspeaking protector soon joined them, leaving Amina perched on the headstone to watch) it didn't seem wrong.
Bodies are put into the earth to be eaten, after all. Why should bugs and worms be the only ones to do it?
But when they offered her a seat at the feast, she shook her head. They frowned and muttered, but Amina's silent guardian quieted them with a gesture, and no one seemed to want to challenge him. They left Amina be.
When it was over, he put her back on his shoulders and carried her to her window again. She felt bad about declining the night's offer, but she knew that it wouldn't have been right to eat anything. It wasn't time yet. Something was missing...
The man in black tucked Amina in and kissed her on the forehead, and as soon as he was gone she went right into a dreamy slumber, feeling warm and safe as she never had before.
At breakfast the next morning her parents piled food high on her plate, but she wasn't hungry. They must have seen something in her face, because their smiles faltered when she looked at them. A furtive glance passed between them, and they left the table. Amina didn't mind. She preferred being alone.
She never told her parents about the nighttime visit, but she imagined they knew anyway. They still loved her, but it was a cold, panicky affection, like they were afraid of what might happen if they didn't.
For her part, Amina didn't think about either of them much. She knew they weren't really her parents. She had a new family now, and eventually they'd come back for her. She couldn't say when, but for the rest of her life she never doubted that it was true.
***
When Amina was 20 they came again. It was another Valentine's Day, and it was also her wedding night.
Her parents were dead by then (a freak accident, a ferry collision), but in the meantime she'd met Jim, picking him from one of her classes at the university.
He sat next to her for an entire semester without saying anything, but now and then he'd look at her without realizing she noticed.
One day she trapped him after class and told him he should take her out. He tried to shy his way out of it, but she didn't let him. Amina always got her way eventually.
Jim took her out like she said he would, and then he did it again, and after a while he forgot to be shy around her anymore, although he never did talk much. That was fine with Amina.
It went without saying they'd be married the next year, although neither of them had money for a wedding. Jim worked as a security guard and Amina worked at the library, or the music store, or the farmer's market, depending on what day of the week it was.
They made just barely enough for a two-room apartment. It was a small, drafty place, but Amina liked it. It was near the cemetery.
The wedding would be a small affair, just the two of them and a few of Jim's friends, because Amina had no real friends (who would come out in the daylight, at least), and Jim's parents disliked Amina so much that they refused to put in an appearance.
That was all right too. Just the two of them would have been enough.
Did she love him? Not quite. She loved his earnestness, and the quiet way he did every little thing without compromise. She loved the feeling of his slumbering body in bed. She loved that he got up every day with no preconceptions and laid down each night with a sense of deliberate amazement.
And she loved that he was never so afraid of her that he wanted to leave. If anything, fear brought them closer. But she had to admit that something was missing.
After the wedding dinner they went back to the apartment. Jim promised that someday they would have a real honeymoon, just as extravagant as they wanted. She told him she didn't care about things like that (even though she understood that those promises were more for him than for her). Only one thing about the wedding night interested her.