Halloween was my favorite evening to work at this exclusive all-girls boarding school. I know I should have retired years ago, but something kept me tethered here. A rope of existential angst and remorse.
On my nights off, I floated around the grounds and ran my fingers over Hawthorne Hall’s ancient stone and creeping vines. Spider webs fogged every window, so they were pre-decorated for the holiday. The students added to the spooky vibe with winking jack-o-lanterns and handmade paper skeletons. The nearest town is too far for trick-or-treating, so the girls really dove into prep for the scariest of holidays.
I watched from the staff’s quarters in amusement as they played hide n’ seek and bobbed for apples. Their screams and laughter were punctuated by the pounding of hooves from the horses of the school’s riding academy. Frightened by the flapping ghost bedsheets and roaring bonfires, they galloped in the nearby field.
Cats, ghosts, witches, and princesses gobbled boysenberry cupcakes and toffee made for them by the new chef. Part of me wished I jump out from a tree with a “Boo” but I prefer to do my work when the moon glows.
Headmaster Howard, who also happens to be my father, was keeping a close eye on the sugared-up students from the forest edge, occasionally tripping a girl with a branch if she got too close. He had a dour scowl on his face with his black suit frayed at the cuffs and ankles. His horrid expression was familiar and I put one of my wizened hands on the sweetheart locket hanging from my neck.
The judgemental old fart was always looking to punish the girls, whereas I wanted to protect them. Just one of the many conflicts in our complicated relationship.
When all the candy was eaten, the bell at the top of the library tower tolled curfew. The wee goblins scurried to bed, and I began my nightly dorm check. With a frown, I saw the old windows had been cracked open, overgrown vines tumbling over the sills.
A hunched familiar back disappeared into the gloom of the hall. Biting my lip, I decided to call him out. “Father, do not open the windows. The girls will get a chill.”
He turned and shook one gnarled finger at me, a nasty smile on his face. It had been hundreds of years, but my insides froze anyway. How did that old ghoul still have any power over me? Even as an apparition, he could turn my bowels to liquid.
I dug deep and forced myself to sound authoritarian. “If you retire, I’ll retire. How long are we going to do this?”
Instead of an answer, he howled with laughter, the grating sound echoing in the halls and shaking my ribs. It took immense effort, but I willed my incandescent arms to close the sticky dormers.
“Get out of my halls or else I will slice you in half with a knight’s sword.” I pointed my own knobby finger at him and imbued force into my voice I didn’t have. Moving objects as a ghost takes immense effort. Convalescence was needed before I could do it again, but I was hoping my dad didn’t notice my exhaustion.
He cackled again but dissipated, his vapors rising through the ceiling. I can’t kill him with the iron swords decorating the school, but it still hurts and slows the old ghoul down for a few days. I’d been attempting to rid the school of him for eons, but I hadn’t found a way yet. Perhaps the extra powers given to spirits on Halloween would inspire me?
I paused to regain my strength when giggles rang out from a bunk room. Is there an age as delightful as twelve? I cracked the door open and gazed at the group of three sitting on the floor. They’d pulled their duvets off their beds, wrapped themselves up, and formed a circle around a pile of sweets and snacks.
With Headmaster Howard off haunting elsewhere, I could spare the time to listen…
#
Alexis shook her dark curls and flicked on a flashlight under her chin. “Halloween is the best night to tell horror stories and scare all you weenies.”
“Weenies! Speak for yourself, you can’t scare me,” Megan said, hugging her pillow a little tighter and blinking her dark eyes.
Emma peeked out from her blanket. “I heard Hawthorn Hall is haunted.” She was sitting criss-cross apple sauce and wrapped up like a baby, only her blue eyes, blonde fringe, and pale face visible.
“You heard right.” Alexis shone the flashlight up her nostrils. “I’ll tell you a ghost story.”
The wind whistled down the corridor, causing the hairs on Emma’s arm to stand up. “No, I’m scared enough already!”
The low long howl made me glad I’d shut all the windows. A bit of moonlight filtered through the dirt on the glass into the hall.
Megan, one of the braver girls, reached for a handful of prawn crisps. “The ghosts and demons are roaming free tonight.”
Alexis, encouraged, began, “I heard this story from my sister, and she promises it is absolutely one hundred percent true. It’s about a murder, a century ago, right here at Hawthorn Hall.”
The girls all leaned in to hear the tale, and so did I, putting one hand on a suit of armour to anchor myself.
“No way,” Emma said.
Alexis winked. “Way, and it’s about forbidden love.”
Emma flushed and her cheeks blushed an innocent pink.
Megan tossed her blanket off. “Wait! Don’t start without me. I need to go to the loo.”
#
I hid behind the armored knight. Megan flounced out of the room and down the hall to the communal baths. Yellow eyes gleamed a few yards away. Was that my father hiding behind another suit of armor with the sword held aloft? Rare for him to return for another dalliance so soon, but it was Halloween. Maybe he was also inspired by a well of evil energy.
My malevolent parent clapped his hands together and the weapon tumbled out of the knight’s hands; the blade angled toward Megan’s head. Moving as quickly as my ghostly bones permitted, I caught the hilt of the sword and pushed it. Megan gave a little scream and jumped as the clang reverberated down the hall.
She ran the rest of the way to the toilets.
I picked up the sword and swung it at him, but he swirled out of the way. The tip just hissed through a tiny bit of his belly.
I gritted my teeth. “Father, I’m warning you, I’m not going to let you hurt another one of my girls.”
He ignored me and crept back down the hall. I dropped the weapon and escorted a trembling Megan back to the room. If she only knew how close to true danger she had been. My work protecting these students is becoming harder with every decade. Headmaster Howard – my father – must be permanently retired.
#
Megan collapsed back onto the carpet and re-bundled herself in her duvet. “Oh my god guys, like, I almost died. One of those swords fell again.”
Emma mumbled through a mouth of chocolate. “I heard a helmet clipped Serena last year on Halloween. She ended up in a hospital.”
“You, okay?” Alexis asked Megan, ignoring Emma.
Megan nodded, consoling herself with another bag of crisps.
Alexis patted her arm. “The story will distract you from your own near-death experience.”
“Great, go on,” Megan said.
“A foreign student, Ana, joined for a year and rumor has it, the headmaster’s daughter fell in love with her,” Alexis said. “She was exotic and could have been a supermodel!”
“The headmaster has a daughter? How come I never heard of her?” asked Emma.
Megan rolled her eyes. “Alexis said it was, like, one hundred years ago, duh.”
Alexis raised her voice. “Anyways, both women loved horses and they would go for romantic midnight rides.”
“What’s wrong with that?” Emma chewed on the edge of her duvet.
Megan threw a pillow at Emma. “Nothing, obviously, stop interrupting.”
My hand hurt; I was holding my locket so ferociously. Beautiful Ana, I kept her picture near me always. The storm was intensifying, the vines battering against the windows, and the old hunting pictures shifting on the walls.
“The old guy was a homophobe. He devised a plan. He knew the ladies liked to meet in the barn, so he waited for a stormy night. One where the wind blows like it is tonight. He sent his daughter off on an errand in the next town right before the storm struck. Then he came back and typed a note for the foreign student. The note said ‘meet in the barn at midnight for a special ride.’”
Emma nodded. “Nothing good happens after midnight.”
Alexis shone her flashlight into each girl’s face. “The school had a stallion that it kept for breeding called North Fire, but he was a wild thing. A son of Northern Dancer and his bloodlines were worth millions, but he was a savage. No one went in a field or stall alone with him. He was heavily tranquilized when he had to be handled.”
A shiver ran down my spine. Horses were gorgeous animals, but so powerful, and very capable of harm.
“When the foreign student arrived, the school master let the stallion out into the ring. He was leading him with a chain and muzzle but took both off when he let him loose. The stallion was half mad already in fear from the storm and galloped straight at her,” Alexis said.
“What happened to the student?” asked Megan.
“North Fire trampled her. She died.”
“That’s it? That’s the story?” asked Emma.
A tear slipped down my face as I sank down to the floor. A tree branch thumped on the window across from me. A crack appeared, fracturing like an ice cube.
“Yup, they couldn’t prove it was murder,” said Alexis.
“Anything happen to the headmaster? His daughter?” Megan grabbed the flashlight and shone it back in Alexis’s face.
“The headmaster’s daughter was so devastated; she poisoned her father, and then herself. She even poisoned Night Fire. Rumor has it, their tortured souls roam this place.” Alexis turned off the flashlight.
The girls rocked in their blankets and laughed nervously.
“I hate it when animals die in stories.” Megan pouted. “But if it was hundred years ago, I can get over it.”
Emma smiled shyly at Alexis. “Let’s go to the barn and see if we can pick out Night Fire’s stall.”
“Our pretty little mouse is getting brave.” Alexis clapped.
The girls traded their duvets for jackets and Alexis slipped the flashlight in her pocket.
Enough was enough. I took a deep breath and stood in front of the door, holding my arms out. “No girls, tonight is not the night to visit the stables!”
My guts churned and my blood turned to ice as they walked right through me. I summoned all the energy I could from the waning power of All Hallow’s Eve. “Girls you MUST NOT GO TO THE BARN.”
My father loved the old pitchforks and threshing tools in the barn. There were so many ways he could hurt my girls. Tonight, on Halloween, his evil spirit was feeding on the energy of the holiday.
I screamed again, “STAY OUT OF THE BARN.”
“Did you hear something?” Megan asked, leading the way.
“Nope.” Alexis picked up the pace.
#
The moon was full and its silver glow illuminated the crushed stone path. The wind whipped the long hair of the girls as they scurried, hunched against the chill. I wasn’t the only one following the girls down the path to the barn. The yellow eyes of my father glowed in the trees. He laughed with delight, this was a true treat for him.
In the barn, Megan patted the nostrils of an old grey Arabian school horse over her stall door. I touched my locket when I saw Alexis take Megan’s hand, but the headmaster was glowering at them from the far door.
“Stay away from those girls, Dad.” I shook my finger at his wavering apparition.
The girls moved on to the next stall door where a brown gelding stuck his head out checking their pockets for treats. The headmaster grinned and looked up at the loft. They were standing under the hay chute. One of those heavy bales…
“Dad, don’t you dare.” I put my hands on my hips.
He ignored me and floated towards the ladder.
In a dark corner of the barn, I heard a familiar snort and whinny. I ran down to the abandoned stall and saw Night Fire pawing the ground. His eyes were red and his coat shiny black. I regretted poisoning him all those years ago, and rarely visited the barn. Preferring to avoid my father and the creature that killed my love. The memory was too savage for even decades to fog. My stallion had been my second love after Ana. Both wild and wonderful.
I opened the stall door and leapt on bareback. His muscles clenched and I reveled in the feeling of his strength and power. Riding was my favorite sport back in the day. With a squeeze of my thighs, we lunged out of the stall.
My father had one foot on the hay loft ladder. “Time to toss some hay.” He spat the words at me, his chapped lips curling off black teeth.
“Get down old man! I am tired of your treachery!” I called over the clop of my horse’s shoes.
Night Fire trotted on the aisle cobbles, his metal-clad hooves creating sparks like little fireflies. Skidding past the girls, he picked up speed. His tail swished with aggression as he bucked but didn’t dislodge me.
I gave his neck a pat. “Night Fire, Halloween imbues us with the power for poetic justice. Harness the fury of your wild stallion predecessors!”
My father was halfway up the ladder.
Snorting as if to answer me, Night Fire struck the hay ladder with his front hooves. I clung to his mane to avoid being thrown. The ladder flew off its hinges and clattered against the far wall.
The old grey Arabian mare whinnied in fear. The girls gasped and clung to one another in shock. My stubborn father held on and tried to vaporize as I spun my horse towards him.
“Not this time Dad! It ends tonight.”
Night Fire reared high and came down on my father’s head, trampling him under his striking hooves. The old man screamed as he became a spray of grey otherworldly ether. His crusty voice faded as the mist dissolved.
I smiled. My father was no more. That wasn’t him turning to vapor. That was the last vestiges of his evil soul returning to whatever darkness beckoned in hell.
A chill wind burst open the stable doors, rattling all the horse stall bars, and stirring up the hay. My school girls screamed and dropped to the ground, hugging each other.
Night Fire reared again. “Whoa, big boy,” I patted the stallion’s neck.
“What was that?” Emma asked as tears streamed down her face.
Alexis shivered and pointed. “The ladder just flew across the barn! It’s like there’s a poltergeist in here.”
“Who’s going to believe that?” Megan grabbed the hands of her friends. “Let’s get out of here, before they blame us for vandalizing the barn.”
The three ran back to the dorms and I watched them go. Night Fire was now quiet beneath me and gave a contented snort. I smiled, watching the moon light catch their shiny hair as they disappeared towards Hawthorne Hall.
That was the last generation of young girls my father would terrorize. With a gentle click and pressure from my calves, Night Fire and I trotted out onto the grass. I already felt lighter on his back. Years of anger wafting away. While I still had strength, I squeezed Night Fire’s sides and he broke into a gallop. The night sky’s stars twinkled and we rose towards them. The stallion’s body disintegrated beneath me, the two of us becoming thinner, more ethereal. Together we became a mist over the treetops, the last time either of us would ride on Halloween.
I can’t wait to see Ana. I can finally leave my beloved Hawthorne Hall.
Angelique Fawns (she/her) is a journalist and speculative fiction writer. She began her career writing articles about naked cave dwellers in Tenerife, Canary Islands. After selling her first story to EQMM, she fell in love with weird fiction, which is ACTUALLY stranger than non-fiction. You can find her lurking at @angeliquefawns on X, Blogging about upcoming calls at www.fawns.ca, or gazing into the abyss hoping it stares back at her. Over 80 stories published. Find some in Mystery Tribune, Creepy, Amazing Stories, and Apparition Lit.