Summer Vacation Of The Living Dead - book 5

Story by Alex Reynard on SoFurry

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#5 of Summer Vacation Of The Living Dead


Summer Vacation Of The Living Dead

a gruesome little screwball comedy by Alex Reynard

-~*BOOK FIVE*~-

~***~

-CHAPTER SIXTY FIVE-

After it was all over, the Lopezes came to an unpleasant realization. What with

Max's funeral, all the meat they'd bought, and especially the repair bill for the

car, the family was about as rock-bottom in debt as it could possibly get.

But that was okay.

Because Tish had gotten one of her really, really good ideas about how to make

them all some fast cash...

~***~

-CHAPTER SIXTY SIX-

On a perfectly ordinary street, in a perfectly ordinary mid-size city, full of

streetlamps and sidewalks, a sleek, flawless black European sedan came swimming

through the morning traffic like a fog and slid to a halt beside a perfectly

ordinary streetcorner.

The doors opened, and three lively cubs emerged. Two coyotes and a cheetah. They

all seemed perfectly ordinary too.

As the cheetah boy went around to the trunk to begin unloading their equipment,

the two coyotes, obviously brother and sister, scooted around to the driver's

side window.

"So, same time as last Friday?" the driver asked.

"Yeah, Mom. We'll be right on time. Promise!" said the boy.

"I'm feeling really excited. I think it's gonna be a good day." said the girl.

"Okay then, I'll see you two furballs later. Be careful and be safe." The driver,

their mother reached out the window to hug her little ones.

"You've got money for lunch?" she asked, grinning.

The two little ones laughed, but what was so funny about that, an outside

observer could not hope to discern.

After a kiss was placed on each of their foreheads, and one for the cheetah boy

as well, the driver of the black sedan waved to the children and drove off,

leaving them on their own in the unfamiliar city.

"Okay, lets get set up. How about across the street there, by that coffeeshop?"

the girl coyote suggested.

Her two male companions agreed, and followed her.

They all made sure to cross at the crosswalk with the light. The two males were

lugging a small fold-up plastic table between them and the girl was peeking over

the top of a large and unwieldy cardboard box full of odd-looking apparatus.

Magic supplies.

They found a nice clear spot on the pavement, swept away a few leaves with their

tails, and began to set up their act.

The boys unfolded the table, and the girl dumped out everything in the box onto

it. There were two large, colorful balsa wood boxes, homemade, with bright

zigzaggy designs. A dark cloth for the table. A large, plain white sheet. A top

hat. And something unseen, wrapped up in a towel. Something that clanged

muffledly when it was set down.

There was also a banner, which the two coyotes hung up on the brick wall behind

them with putty. It read:

THE GREATEST MAGIC TRICK YOU WILL EVER SEE

donations gratefully accepted

By now, several passing fursons had stopped to ponder what these three kids were

doing here, and the banner piqued their curiosity even further.

The cubs all gave off an air of total assurance. When everything was set up, the

trio stood silently before their improvised stage. Just watching the gathering

crowd. Waiting for the number of people to be just right. And then the show would

begin.

As soon as the very first murmur of boredom reached the boy coyote's ears, he

motioned to his companions and they sprung into action. The cheetah boy flipped

on the top hat and instantly became someone else.

"Ladies and gentlemen!" he declared grandly, his voice as assured as any carnival

barker or snake-oil salesman had ever been. "Welcome to the Greatest Magic Trick

You Will Ever See! Everyone crowd around! Yes, get in close. We want everyone to

have a good look and be able to see everything clearly!"

The crowd pushed in, mumbling softly, wondering if they were about to see a

charming bit of fluff or an entertaining flop. None of them really took the

banner seriously.

Yet.

"Please take note of my assistants' clothing," the magician said. He waved his

paws around the two silent, smiling coyotes. The boy was wearing a bright red T-

shirt and faded blue jeans. The girl was wearing a rather gothic black dress.

Simple but spooky.

At the magician's command, the two coyotes stepped behind the table and arranged

the two balsa boxes before them. The boxes were just big enough for them to duck

down and slip their heads into. And when the magician waved his paw, they did so,

tails hung down obediently behind them.

As the crowd began to grow confused and intrigued, the magician boy ratcheted

their uncertainty up several notches by unfolding the towel to reveal two large,

extremely sharp-looking squarish blades.

He looked every audience member dead in the eye as he held up one of the blades.

With perfect dramatic timing and tension, he held up a piece of paper, passed it

along the edge, and listened to the gasps when it split down the middle like

nothing at all. The blades were real, and indeed, _very_ sharp.

The audience began to conclude where this was leading. It made them all nervous,

to say the least. These were just kids! Wasn't this, you know, kinda dangerous?

The top-hatted cheetah paid no heed to their worried and fearful faces. He

stepped behind the table, between his two assistants, holding a blade

outstretched in each paw. He slipped the blades into two notches in the top of

each box. Right where the two coyotes' necks would be.

The audience was really fidgeting now. This was not at all right. This was just

some kids and some homemade props. This was not teevee magic where you knew

everything was safe and faked. This looked really, truly, uncomfortably unsafe.

The magician made not a sound. The two coyotes, in unison, raised a paw and made

the 'thumbs up' sign. Then they clasped the sides of the boxes in their paws and

kept perfectly still. The magician still had his paws atop the very shiny silver

blades.

No, this was wrong. That cheetah boy wasn't REALLY going to...? Was he...?

With not the slightest trace of emotion, he did.

The blades sank straight down to the bottom of the boxes with a stomach-churning

*CHOONK* sound.

The two coyotes went very, very still.

Someone in the audience shrieked.

The magician kept impossibly calm. Even when the first little trickles of scarlet

began to seep out from the edges of the boxes.

Now a LOT of people screamed.

But the magician froze them all with a fierce, piercing gaze. "STOP!" he shouted

in a commanding, Godlike tone.

And they did.

He stared at them reproachfully, angry with them for doubting his mystic powers.

His eyes told them firmly, 'You have not seen what you think you have seen'.

The audience went silent again, and crowded in even closer now.

With a small flourish of his wrist, the magician deftly unhooked several small

latches on the sides of each box, splitting the two pieces into four. He took

hold of the front portion of each box. He got a firm grip, paused for effect...

...And swiftly switched them.

Shrieks! Gasps! Horrified leaps into the air!

The two coyotes' bodies did not even move a millimeter. From where the blades

stopped, it was obvious the childrens' heads could not possibly have been hidden

behind, or somehow within the table. They were still in the boxes, alright.

The magician positioned the boxes to his satisfaction, then slowly, carefully,

withdrew the blades.

The audience did not breathe.

A moment passed. Nothing happened.

The audience began to get seriously nervous.

The magician kept his cool.

_Still_ nothing happened.

The audience was just about on the verge of calling the police to report a double

homicide.

And then, the boxes twitched.

With amazing suddenness, the two coyotes stood straight up, lifting their paws

high into the air, their firmly-attached heads grinning gigantic vaudeville

grins.

"TA DA!!!"

The magician smiled in a 'toldja' kind of way.

Then the audience's shocked silence became cheers of outright miraculous

astonishment when they realized that, even though the bodies had Never Moved An

Inch, the boy was now wearing the dress and the girl was wearing the T-shirt and

jeans!! The heads had actually switched!!!

It really was The Greatest Magic Trick any of them Had Ever Seen.

Whoops and screams and 'How the hell did you DO that?!?'s exploded in the warm

morning air. The three kids were totally swamped with adoration. The two coyotes

quickly tipped over the boxes and held them out for donations.

Fists slammed into pockets, wallets were flung open with wild abandon, and money

poured down like rain.

After the hundredth time or so of saying they wouldn't give up their secrets for

anything in the world, the crowd eventually dispersed, befuddled and awed grins

on their faces, heading off to tell their friends all about the impossible thing

they had seen. 'Hey, man, you're never gonna believe this but... Guess what I

just saw!!'

When the coast was clear, Tish and Max quickly darted under the table, and Nick

held up the white sheet for extra privacy.

Working swiftly and efficiently, they both grabbed hold of each other's head and

ripped it straight off their shoulders. Blood made little red circles on the

sidewalk.

"It's weird being you," Max mused as Tish handed his head to his body.

"Yeah, but it's cool as hell too! I gotta say, I'm really starting to enjoy

decapitation!"

Warm feelings of reattachment surged down their necks, into their shoulders and

their spines, as their heads returned to their rightful places again. Switching

more than just felt odd, it also seemed to confuse their bodies. Keeping their

heads mismatched like this only seemed to work for fifteen minutes or so, tops,

before their bodies would eventually reject the foreign noggin and just tumble

them straight off like heads of cabbage. That had been a rather disorienting

experience for them both in their early experimentation on Tish's idea.

The twins popped out together, back to normal, in under twenty seconds. A

perfectly respectable time, though not yet their best.

"Okay, all this cleared up in two minutes!" Tish barked, assuming command again.

The boys went immediately to work tossing things in the cardboard box while Tish

attacked the banner.

"You're really getting good at this, Nick!" Max complimented, as he and his best

friend folded up the dark tablecloth.

Nick was flushed with nervousness and pride, almost quivering with excitement.

"Thanks! I swear, I was scared spitless when we first started doing this, but now

I'm really getting into it! It's like I turn into a whole 'nother person out

there! I really *feel* all commanding 'n stuff when I'm performing!" He turned to

Tish. "And thanks again for letting me be the star of the show!"

"Well, you kinda HAD to be. You're the only one of us who can't take their head

off!" she reasoned.

Nick chuckled. "Seeing how much fun you guys have, I kinda want to too," he

admitted.

Tish sidled up to him, her eyes narrowed evilly. "Well, we could always just kill

you and bring you back to life with some of Grandma's zombie juice..." she

teased.

Nick pretended to seriously consider the matter. "I'll have to get back to you on

that."

Max was busy emptying out the balsa boxes into an enchanted chest Javier had

given him. It had no lock, but if anyone ever tried to grab it and run... Let's

just say they wouldn't be using that hand for anything but a paperweight for at

least the next few months.

"So, how much this time?" Tish asked eagerly, nearly salivating.

"At _least_ fifty!" he replied, mildly mind-boggled. "Again!!"

Nick grinned madly. Tish jumped up in the air and made a little happy squeak.

Max pounced on Tish and gave her a gleeful hug. "You are such a freakin' genius,

sis!! This has gotta be the second best idea you've ever had!"

She arched an eyebrow, puzzled. "Second? What was the first then?"

"Raising my ass from the dead, of course," he responded matter-of-factly.

Tish giggled.

Nick glanced at his watch. "Hurry up, guys! We did, what, twelve shows last time?

Let's see if we can do thirteen today!"

The coyote twins nodded in assent, finishing up their packing in a flash and

taking off down the street under Tish's lead. She'd studied up on this city's

geography all last night, and knew the downtown better than any of them. So long

as there was a streetcorner, they had a venue. The most important thing was to

try to minimize repeat business as much as possible. The element of shock was

their greatest friend in this endeavor.

"So, you wanna hit that Chinese place back there for lunch?" Nick proposed as

they came to a stoplight. "It smelled pretty good."

"I dunno..." Max said apprehensively.

"You always wanna eat hamburgers!" Tish chastised.

"Fortune cookies, dude," Nick enticed.

"Oh, okay." Max relented. "Besides, they *might* have hamburgers."

The light changed, and the three friends skedaddled across the street towards

their next rendezvous with showbiz.

~***~

~***~

-~*EPILOGUE*~-

Halloween night!

The party was already in full swing. It was the one night of the year the whole

town really appreciated the Lopezes' big, spooky house up on the hill. Martina's

annual October 31st bash was always a clear-your-calendars event.

Costumed freaks milled about the livingroom, chatting, drinking punch and

scarfing cookies. Loud, boisterous music pumped ear-splittingly from the stereo.

The whole first floor was done up in fake spray-on spiderwebs and papier-mach‚

Dia de los Muertos skeletons. Little rubber bats dangled listlessly from the

ceiling.

Martina, dressed as a gorgeous vampiress, was on her way to the kitchen to

dispose of some dirty plates and cups. All along the way her guests complimented

her on the wonderful party. She always felt mildly miffed at the fact that most

of these people wouldn't even glance sideways at her at the laundromat or such.

But she kept her spirits high and concentrated instead on having fun. Adult life

was sometimes a lot like high school, she'd long since noted, and there really

wasn't much you could do about that.

With her thoughts elsewhere, she swept her tray of partyware into the sink and

accidentally slashed the living hell out of her forefinger on the knife she'd

used to cut the cake.

"Damn!" she barked.

She held her finger up. The cut had gone almost to the bone. Blood as red as

poster paint was oozing out.

Before anyone else noticed, she popped her finger in her mouth and suckled on it.

"Mmmmm..." The rich taste filled her mouth. She couldn't help herself. She took a

nibble.

A pair of huge paws fell on her shoulder. Squeaking, she turned around to face

her husband. He'd dug out his tuxedo and slicked back his hair to make himself

into a very dashing Dracula.

"Did I startle you, my pet?" he asked, mangling a Romanian accent.

She took her finger out of her mouth, pouting like a little kit. She'd gnawed off

the entire first knuckle.

"Awww, did you get a little booboo? Here, let me kiss it and make it better."

Making sure no one else was looking, Carlos took her paw in his and bit

romantically into the bloody stump, slurping hungrily.

All in all, having the whole family accidentally turned into quarter-zombies by

Thanatos' spell had worked out quite well. The intent had been only to have the

rest of the family share their aliveness with Max to make him be like them again.

However, a surprising amount of Max's zombieness ended up getting passed on to

the rest of the family in turn. It wasn't really a bad end result, just a little

surprising. They were now all virtually indestructible, they could turn off their

pain receptors like a lightbulb, they still felt alive, they didn't smell like

rotting meat, and Max was about as close to his normal self again as could be

hoped for. (He'd lost his amazing running ability in the process though, and

nothing at all seemed likely to bring it back. Still, he didn't mind too much. It

was worth it just to feel his heart beating and his lungs filling with air again)

The only small side effect was a mildly increased craving for meat. Fresh meat.

Red meat. Raw meat. They all felt it. And, well, their *own* flesh certainly made

for a nice snack once in a while.

Martina cooed and giggled as Carlos sunk his fangs into her finger, lapping with

gusto at the mess he was making. He stared into her eyes the whole time, with a

look that said, 'You are the most beautiful woman in the world to me, and I must

consume you'.

He stopped when he'd nibbled her digit down to the bone. He licked his chops.

"Delicious."

"You're so naughty," she reproached playfully. She stared at her mutilated digit,

concentrated, and willed it to heal itself. The flesh bubbled and warped for a

few seconds, then was good as new again.

The loving couple embraced. Carlos wrapped his powerful arms around her, and

Martina slipped a kiss to her slightly-undead romeo.

"Do you think the kids have started yet?" she asked.

"Possibly," he replied. "Soon they will return home, sacks bulging with

chocolates, and will be bouncing off the walls until December."

"Lucky I've got the elephant tranquilizers ready," she kidded.

"Actually, knowing them, they'll probably come home with another five hundred

dollars or so," said Carlos. And he was only *half* kidding that time.


After a modest three-week run, Max, Tish and Nick's brush with show business had

netted very close to ten thousand dollars. Making an average of fifty to sixty

dollars per show, with twelve or more shows per day... It all added up quite

fast, and also quite nicely. Everyone was _still_ amazed at just how brilliant

Tish's plan had really been. With an initial investment of a fold-up table, some

scrap wood from the basement and a top hat from the attic, the kids had

singlehandedly saved the family from crippling debt.

Not to say Carlos and Martina hadn't been working their own tails off too. By

October, they had saved up enough on the side to present both their pups with

shiny new bikes for their birthday. And they paid special attention to making

sure Tish's had a chain-guard, so that no more loose pantlegs would cause

accidental trainwrecks and zombie resurrections.

The twins' thirteenth birthday had been an explosively joyful celebration. For

Tish, it was all made so much better just to be able to look over and see Max

there beside her in his goofy cardboard party hat. This was the moment she had

worried so hard that she would have to spend alone. And yet her brains, faith and

hard work had kept her beloved brother from being snatched out of her life

forever. She deeply felt both pride and gratitude. On the other hand, Max's

thoughts that day had run mostly to cake.

The two coyotes were on their new birthday bikes at that very moment, pedaling up

to Nick's house so he could join them in trick-or-treating. Now that they were

thirteen (bad luck for everyone else, so it must mean good luck for them, they

reasoned), they both knew the era of free candy was drawing to a close. So,

they'd both made a firm commitment to making their last few Halloweens count as

much as possible.

They dumped the bikes in the yard by the bushes and rung the doorbell.

Bonnie Chainsaw opened the door for them, brandishing a plate of cookies shaped

like little chocolate bats. "Happy Halloween, you two!" she sang out cheerfully.

"Nick'll be ready in a second. He's putting his finishing touches on."

"Thanks, Mrs. Chainsaw!" the twins said in stereo as they grabbed for the

cookies.

The reason Nick's mom hadn't gone absolutely batshit hysterical when a seemingly

dead little boy walked through their door was that they'd already gone through

all that already.

Max and Tish and Mom and Dad had all pondered for a long time after Max's rebirth

what exactly they were going to do with him now. Having him just suddenly

reappear from beyond the grave would certainly create some very odd social

scenarios for the rest of the town. Martina thought for sure they'd have to move,

a suggestion both kids simply would not accept. They loved their house, and Nick,

way too much to just give up and leave.

They'd debated the issue for days. And finally, Tish had gotten fed up with all

the indecision and went ahead and cut the Gordian knot. She dragged Max outside

with her and went downtown to the V6 to go see 'Razor Smile' with him. Most

people simply looked puzzled for a second and then turned away. Those that did

ask, 'Hey, aren't you supposed to be dead?' were simply and sharply told that

they must be thinking of somebody else. This worked beautifully a surprising

amount of the time. People simply chose to believe something they knew was a lie

rather than have to force their brain around something that was physically

impossible. Max was quite impressed by Tish's keen grasp of psychology.

(The ticket-taker armadillo, upon seeing Max again, gave him an odd little not-

quite-surprised smile, and merely asked if he still had his Customer Appreciation

Value Card. Which he did.)

People they actually *knew* however, were a different matter entirely. For some

casual acquaintances and distant relations, the family concocted an elaborate

bullshit story about switched obituaries and a camping trip and all sorts of

other confusing details.

But for people like Mr. and Mrs. Chainsaw, who had actually been at the funeral

and seen Max in the casket, the easiest thing to do was to just tell them the

truth. The Lopezes had all gone over to Nick's house one warm night several

months ago and, after the initial screaming was over with, laid out the whole

story for the Chainsaws to deal with as they saw fit. Nick begged his mom and dad

in the most pitiful tones imaginable to let him and Max stay friends. And

eventually, the two grownup cheetahs' brains just said 'What the hey' and

accepted it. Their son was best friends with a couple of one-fourth zombies.

Sure, why not? Tish had again guessed correctly that the capacity of a furson's

mind to accept complete insanity in order to preserve the pleasant status quo was

indeed limitless.

But back to All Hallows Eve...

Tish bit down nice and slow on her cookie's pointy-eared head. "Ahhh, the first

sugar of the night. This must be what crackheads feel like when they get their

fix."

Max chortled. "I doubt it," he mumbled as he ate his bat's feet.

"Why do you DO that?" Tish finally asked, having witnessed her brother eating

animal crackers that same way for years. "Everyone knows you're sposto bite off

the heads first."

Max shook his head. "No way! Think about it like this; a cookie's purpose is to

get eaten, right?"

"Yeah."

"So then maybe they *like* getting eaten. If you just bite the heads off, then

it's all over for them right there. But if you take the time and start with the

extremities, making your way up the body and saving the head for last, then they

can enjoy it longer." he postulated reasonably. "It's my way of thanking them for

being tasty."

Tish stared at him, dumbstruck. "Damn. Now I'm gonna have to start doing that."

Max's smug reply was cut off before it even began as Nick leapt heroically out of

the hallway at them. "Hey guys! Whaddaya think?"

"Holy crap!!"

"Daaaaaaymm!!"

Nick was decked out in a _seriously_ sweet homemade Ryk Steelstone costume. Ryk

was, of course, the main character on the Japanese import show Timebenders, and

his battle suit looked like a big heroic robot all covered in red, white and gold

pointy things.

Nick clunked forward, his motion surprisingly unimpeded by the bulky costume. "My

Dad and I spent months building this thing in the basement. It even lights up!"

He pulled down the helmet's visor and yellow light poured out of it.

"That is the coolest costume I have ever seen in my life," Max said, and Tish

immediately nodded.

Nick looked at them then, a bit puzzled. "So where are your costumes then? You

just look like a pair of hobos."

Max and Tish were bedecked in some ratty old clothes they'd bought a few days

before from the local Goodwill shop. They both grinned secretively at their

cheetah pal.

"You'll see. We just have to get outside to show you," Tish said mysteriously.

Nick got an impish grin on his kitty muzzle. "And here I thought you were gonna

dress up as Wednesday and Pugsley. Oh, wait, no; that's how you dress every

single *other* day of the year!"

Max and Tish nearly fell backwards laughing. Nick had gotten them _good_ with

that one.

"You've been saving that joke up for months, haven't you?" Tish asked slyly.

Nick said nothing, but nodded just a little.

Mr. Chainsaw came up from the basement a second later, handing Nick the laser-

pistol-thingy he'd left down there. He gave Max and Tish a hearty hello and

wished them all good hunting this evening. Bonnie passed out some more cookies

just before they left, and Tish made sure to eat hers feet-first this time.

Once outside in the chilly, goosebumpy October air, Nick asked his companions,

"Okay, so really, where're your costumes? Do you have 'em packed up on the bikes

or what?"

The twins grinned, and got into character right before his eyes.

Nick stared on in disbelief. "Aw, hell! How can I possibly compete with THAT?" he

wailed.

Tish giggled. "That's the whole point! You go in first and we stand behind you.

They see you first, go, 'What a nice costume!', then they see us and have a heart

attack."

"Ohhhh, okay," Nick said, catching on. "Clever."

"We're hoping that at least a few people will get so scared they'll run back into

the house and spill the candy everywhere," said Max. "Then it's all ours for the

plundering! Ha-ha-HAAAA! We brought, like, seven extra bags, just in case."

Nick nodded. "Sounds like a plan."

Just as they were about to go skulking off into the shadowy night, a trembling,

frantic voice rang out behind them. "Guys! Guys! Wait up!"

The trio turned around and were more than a little surprised to see a little

transparent black squirrel rushing up to meet them.

"Croak! What're you doing here?" Max asked.

"I'm not too late, right? You guys haven't started yet?" he panted.

"No, in fact your timing's perfect, dude."

Croak grinned with relief. "Alright, cool! Thanatos decided it was okay for me to

come up here dirtside and go trick-or-treating with you guys tonight. I've never

done it before. Or at least, I don't remember if I have. But it sounds like fun.

That is, if you don't mind me coming with you?"

"Of course not!" Tish said reassuringly, make-believe patting him on the

shoulder. It was still a little awkward being friends with someone who was

noncorporeal.

"Yeah, we'd be happy to have you tag along," said Nick. Croak had been popping up

intermittently since the events of the summer, and had become an unofficial

fourth point of their triangle. He really was a nice kid, if a little behind on

current events.

"Where's your costume?" Tish asked.

"I could go as a spinning purple flame," he joked, "But I've got something else

in mind."


Several minutes later, a doorbell rang.

"TRICK OR TREEEEEAT!!!" came the traditional atonal screech.

A sweet little old lady appeared at the door, leaning through the screenless hole

with a bowl full of fun-size chocolate bars, to get a good look at the little

devils on the porch. "Oh my! What an impressive robot costume!" the elderly skunk

said to Nick.

He beamed proudly and listened to the satisfying 'crinklethunk' of the candy bar

hitting the bottom of his bag. "Thanks! I'm a Timebender!"

"Well then, that's a very impressive Timebender costume!" she said with a smile.

She turned to regard the boy, or girl, standing next to him. She couldn't quite

tell, since the kit was wearing just a simple sheet with eyeholes cut in it.

"I hadda throw something together last minute," Croak said sheepishly.

The kindly skunk nodded. "That's perfectly alright, dear. You still get candy."

'Crinklethunk', right in his bag.

"Thank you!" Croak said happily.

The red Timebender and the sheet-ghost moved aside, and when the little old lady

got a good look at the two kids behind them, she nearly soiled her housedress.

"Good lord!!!"

"Don't worry, Lady. It's just special effects," Tish said with a cheese-eating

grin.

Max was holding his own severed head in his paws, his neck stump glistening

vermilion in the porchlight with white bone poking through. Tish's left eye

dangled grotesquely down her cheek, and she had a fleshy, dripping hole right

through her chest and out the back, so big you could thread a baseball bat

through and not touch the sides.

They held out their bags and smiled angelically.

"My goodness!" the skunk said, once the initial shock had passed. "Those are some

VERY scary costumes indeed!"

"They cost a bundle, but they were worth it," Max lied.

"It's amazing what you can do with latex and facepaint these days," Tish

bullshitted.

"Well, I think you both deserve two candy bars each instead of one! You've

obviously put a lot of work into those get-ups!"

Crinklethunk-crinklethunk. Crinklethunk-crinklethunk.

"Thank youuu!" they singsonged to the old lady as they merrily descended the

concrete porch steps. She waved to them and stared, still in awe. She'd never

seen such realistic zombie costumes before, not even in the movies!

Nick glared murderously at his two smugly smirking friends. "I work my ass off

for months, get hot glue all over my fingers more times than I can count, and you

spend ten seconds on your outfits and get *twice* the candy I do!!!"

Tish and Max giggled. "Oh, relax!" Max said. "Soon as we get home, we'll dump

everything out and split it three ways, right down the middle."

"That would violate the laws of physics," Tish noted.

"Seriously?" Nick asked (referring to the candy).

"Sure! You're our partner in crime. You help jack up the shock value," she

explained. Then she turned to Croak, having realized something out-of-place just

then. "Hey, if you can't touch anything while you're here, then how the hell are

you wearing a sheet and holding that bag?"

Croak grinned, wondering when they were gonna figure that out. "Oh, the sheet's

an illusion," he said, making it vanish for a couple of seconds and then

reappear. "The bag's special. I made it all by myself. It's real, made of stuff

from the Beyond, but it's got this nifty lining inside that can interact with

matter. Thanatos was really impressed; it's some pretty hard magic involved."

"Good for you then," Nick said, quite fascinated.

"Can you actually eat candy though?" Max asked.

"No, but I can let it pass through me and absorb its essence. You guys can still

eat it afterwards, but it'll taste kinda bland."

Max looked duly impressed. "Okay, I guess we'll be splitting up the candy four

ways then."


Thanatos had followed along to the mortal plane, just in case Croak got into any

trouble while he was out frolicking with the dirt-dwellers. He didn't think that

was very likely though. Croak was a very capable and resourceful young lad, and

routinely made him proud. To be honest, the boy often seemed more competent than

most of the rest of his staff.

After exchanging pleasantries with Carlos and Martina, asking them if their new

and improved bodies were giving them any trouble and such, he went to go stand in

the corner for the duration of the party and wait for his assistant's return.

He was drinking nonexistent punch from an illusory cup when he was approached by

two aging bunny hippies.

The couple actually had been real live hippies during the sixties and, not having

come up with any better ideas for this year's Halloween party, had dug around in

their closets for their old love beads and paisley vests and peace buttons and

Lennon-style purple and orange sunglasses.

"Whoa, man! Great costume!" the groovy chick said.

"Erm, yes. Thank you," Thanatos said quickly. Not making eye contact. Being

visible to this many mortals at once made him uneasy.

"Who are you supposed to be?" the far-out guy asked. "CATS from Zero Wing? All

your base, dude!"

"Um, no," said Thanatos, having no idea what the hell he'd just said.

"Jareth from Labyrinth?" the chick ventured.

"_NO_," the Lord of the Dead growled, quashing down the urge to smite them.

The two bunnies recoiled at his bad vibes and backed off, muttering to

themselves.

"Well HE sure wasn't having a nice day!"

"Yeah. He's probably one of those Final Fantasy anime characters or something and

was pissed we didn't recognize him."


"You know, it just hit me," said Max.

"A brick?" Tish guessed.

"No, you goof, the irony that we're all dressed up as what we already are," he

said. "We're both zombies, Croak's a ghost-"

"...And Nick's a time-travelling Japanese robot guy," Tish finished.

"Really? I hadn't realized," Nick said, playing along. "That'd probably be a

really big help catching up on homework 'n stuff."

Croak guffawed.

"Holy crap, guys!" Tish shouted abruptly, pointing dead ahead. "Look!"

It was every Trick-or-treater's greatest moral dilemma. On the porch of the house

in front of them, a giant bowl of miscellaneous goodies stood unguarded. Beside

it was a yellow construction paper note: 'We're out at the Halloween party.

Please take _one_. BE HONEST!'

Max and Tish grinned demonically.

"So, dump the bowl in the bags and run?" Tish suggested.

"Ohhhh yeah," Max concurred.

Croak gave them the evil eye. "You do, and I'll make sure my boss sends you

straight to the seventh level of Hell when you die."

So, they compromised.

They all took two and ran off into the night, laughing semi-evilly.


When Javier and Jeff finally arrived, they went for the opposite tactic of the

twins.

When the doorbell rang, a random party guest went to answer it, and was

immediately frightened so bad he made a quarter-sized spot on the front of his

shorts.

A gigantic black bat in a trenchcoat stormed in, wings outstretched, screaming

"BRROOOOOGAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH!!!!!"

"Javier! Good to see you again!" Carlos called out merrily as everyone else at

the party gathered their remaining nerves and checked themselves for heart

arrythmia.

The two best friends came together in a hearty, manly embrace. "I am sorry I am

so late, my friend," the big bat said. "Jeff's car is still a piece of shit, and

he drives like a blind dope fiend. We got off course a few miles back."

"Well, everything's okay now. You're here, aren't you?" Carlos said with a strong

pat on the shoulder.

Martina came over and joined them. "But you're not wearing a costume though," she

said disappointedly. She'd been wondering what kind of weird thing a monster

hunter would wear to a Halloween party.

"Do I need one?" he shrugged in his beloved trenchcoat and wide-brimmed hat.

"They certainly don't think so," he said, indicating the other guests.

"Good point," Martina conceded.

"Where is Jeff?" Carlos asked.

whirr-thunk whirr-thunk

"His costume takes a little while to put on," Javier explained. "He will be here

shortly."

Whirr-Thunk Whirr-Thunk

"What's that sound?" Martina asked.

WHIRR-THUNK WHIRR-THUNK

Arms dealing, even to a limited clientele of strictly monster-hunters, is a

lucrative business. And if your worldly needs are modest ones already, then you

wind up with a lot of spare cash laying around. And, if you're someone who likes

to build things anyway, and are good at it, then you find yourself with the means

to build your own six-and-a-half foot tall, 200 pound, aluminum reinforced,

chrome-plated, blue, red and silver transforming semi truck/robot costume.

Jeff burst through the door, screaming, "I'm Optimus Prime, bitches!!! BOO-

YAH!!!"

Martina put a paw over her eyes. "Did you *really* have to bring him?"

Javier nodded enthusiastically and, spotting Thanatos, went off to annoy him.


Croak ended up being a total godsend.

Aside from his special magic bag being able to interact with matter, it could

also hold a surprising amount of it. An _infinite_ amount, actually. So, whenever

anyone's bag got full (which was quite often actually), they'd just dump it out

in Croak's and continue on. Good deal.

Now, after a long and arduous journey fraught with peril but bringing untold

rewards and terrified homeowners, there was only one house left. The big one up

on the hill with the bright lights in the windows and the party music you could

hear thumping all the way down in the valley.

Their bags bulging obscenely and their little footpaws aching, the happy foursome

trudged up the very last driveway of the night.

"I think it's fair to say we got more candy tonight than any other Halloween

ever," Nick said, weary but elated.

"Hell yeah," Max agreed, finally putting his head back on his shoulders where it

belonged. It had been a drag trying to juggle it and the bag of candy all night

long. He'd dropped it twice. And cement is not a very forgiving thing to drop

your severed head on. "So, you wanna sleep over tonight?"

Nick shook his head. "Sorry. I'd like to, but Mom's pumpkin pie will be done

baking by the time I get back, and that's kind of like a family tradition for us

to all eat a slice at midnight."

Tish nodded understandingly. Even next-day leftovers of Mrs. Chainsaw's pies were

legendary.

"Dang," said Max. "Our mom's a good cook, but yours cooks her ass under the

table. Seriously. You lucky kitty."

Nick smiled proudly.

"Can you stay over?" Tish asked Croak.

He too shook his head. "Sorry, but Thanatos'll probably take me back home not

long after we get to your house. He's not, like, a jerk or anything. It's just

not a good idea for us to stay too long in the mortal world. I'm already feeling

kinda wiggly. Plus, you know how he's always busy."

"I guess dumb people die on Halloween too," Max said thoughtfully.

When the cubs finally reached the front door, they could tell the joint was

jumpin' just from the amount of noise coming from inside. Tish put her eye back

in, and finally let her chest canyon close up. It had been trying to heal itself

all night long, and she'd been periodically picking at it to keep it fresh and

disgusting-looking.

They all bellowed out one last weak 'Trick or treat!' and a pretty lady vampire

came to the door. "Sorry, we're all out of candy. How 'bout hugs instead?"

Martina asked. The kids giggled and each received a hug as they entered. Martina

and Croak were both a bit startled when her arms passed right through him.

Tish and Max surveyed the party mayhem going on all around them. Lots of people

smiling and talking, lots of really neat costumes. They spotted Thanatos and

Javier conversing off in a corner (and surprisingly, Thanatos wasn't fuming with

rage), and they both knew that the sight of Optimus Prime disco dancing in their

living room was one that would be burned into their brains for all eternity.

Sprinkling customary 'hello's here and there, the quartet fought their way

through the throng to the staircase and up to Max's bedroom.

With the door closed behind them, all was relatively peaceful, though the floor

did still vibrate a bit from the bass notes below. The four friends all crashed

on the floor, moaning and rubbing their tired feet. Croak did too, out of

sympathy, even though he'd just been floating all evening. Nick was relieved to

finally be able to take his costume off. It was cool, yes, but also very heavy

and sweaty.

"So, let's see it," Max said eagerly. He tipped out his bag on the hardwood and a

perfectly respectable pile of candy emerged. He had to fight his inner self to

keep from just diving in and cramming stuff in his mouth right away.

Tish followed, producing an avalanche with a slightly bigger circumference than

her brother's. "Mine's bigger," she said in a sultry voice, perfectly aware of

the double entendre.

Nick went next. His pile wasn't nearly as big as either twins'. "Damn. Well, it's

not like it matters anyway. We're splitting it all up, right?"

The twins nodded, and then they all looked to Croak.

"Spill it," Tish urged impatiently.

Croak grinned ear to ear and dumped his bag out.

The candy gushed forth like a river, easily flowing over all three of the other

piles and engulfing them like The Blob. It was undoubtably more candy than any of

them had ever seen in one place in their whole lives.

"*Fuck*!!" shouted Tish.

"The motherlode!" Nick exclaimed.

Max's eyes glazed over.

"Okay, okay," Tish said, assuming command. "Remember the ritual. One piece of

candy now, then we can all go crazy once everything's divided up, okay?"

The boys all agreed. "Okay," Croak said. "I've never done anything like this

before. So whatever you guys usually do."

They all carefully selected the one thing that made their mouth water the most.

One of the many differences between the twins that they'd always been grateful

for was that, candy-wise, everything Max loved best, Tish hated intensely and

vice versa. So, Tish always got all the Jolly Ranchers and Max ended up with

sixty or so rolls of Smarties. Tish: Squirrel Nut Chews and Dots. Max: Lemonheads

and Chik-o-stix. Chocolate stuff was beloved equally by both. And they also

equally _detested_ Necco Wafers.

With sweets in hand (Croak kind of held his in a corner of the bag), Tish cried

out just before anyone took a first bite, "Wait!"

Everyone looked at her.

"I propose a toast!"

"But we're all out of Jelly!" Max protested.

She immediately decked him. "You know what I mean, Captain Retardo."

"Tee hee," said Max.

"I propose a toast," Tish continued, "To legalized extortion once a year! To

trick-or-treating!!"

They all reached out and tapped their treats together.

"Cheers!!"

And then the debauchery began.


By eleven thirty, the party had finally wound down enough that the stereo was

silent, the snack table was barren and only Javier, Nick, Thanatos and Croak

remained. Jeff had already left, having caught the eye of a comely young pony

lass dressed up as She-Ra. They'd left early and were now at a nearby motel doing

God-knows-what to each other.

Max, Tish and Nick were all sufficiently bloated with sugar, and were sort of

sleepy and wired at the same time. Croak had said that the experience alone was

enough for him, and wanted to keep only a modest bagful of his share of the

candy. They'd all tried to convince him to take a full quarter, he'd certainly

earned it, but the little specter politely refused, saying that eating food made

of matter was kinda weird to him anyway. Like trying to eat soup with chopsticks.

Thanatos had ducked out for a little while earlier to go slaughter some undeads,

lest the work pile up too much, but had come back just in time to escort his

young ward back home to his waiting warm bed.

Croak gave his three friends big hugs and really wished he could actually feel

their touch as they returned them. "Thanks, guys. Tonight's been great! I haven't

had this much fun in ages."

They all told him he was welcome, and said it had been fun having him too.

"You're welcome to drop by anytime you like," Martina reminded him.

"Thank you very much, Mrs. Lopez," he said charmingly. "Maybe someday you guys

can visit me at my place."

"How?" Nick asked.

Tish flinched. "Wouldn't we have to... um, die?"

"Well, yeah," Croak admitted. "But just for a little while." He looked up to his

boss, his gaze asking, 'Does that sound feasible?'

Thanatos considered it. "I suppose so. It would be a simple matter to extract

your souls temporarily. Your bodies would lie in a coma-like state until you

returned."

"Sounds jolly," Javier interjected.

"Who said YOU could come?" Thanatos huffed, but he was grinning underneath. Truth

be told, he'd grown to rather like Javier. It wasn't often he met anyone with the

balls to challenge him so often. The two of them had established a sort of gruff

camaraderie.

"Can we? Pleeeease?" Tish begged her parents, and Max joined in. "I bet the land

of the dead is *cool*!"

"Actually, it's rather a lot like here," Thanatos admitted. "There's just no such

thing as physics where I come from."

Carlos and Martina rolled their eyes, but were unable to resist their childrens'

wiles. "Oh, all right," Carlos said. "I guess we're still in debt to you over the

magic act thing."

"Thanks Daddeee!" the twins singsonged.

"Could I ask a favor too?" Nick asked Mr. and Mrs. Lopez.

"Sure, Nick," Martina said.

"Could you guys drive me home? I really don't wanna have to walk all the way

back. My paws are killing me."

"Sure thing, kiddo," the coyotefemme said warmly, giving his headfur a rustle.

Javier, meanwhile, went to get a soda from the kitchen.

"Oh, yeah... we left our bikes over there," Tish realized.

"I guess we can just pick 'em up in the morning," Max suggested.

"I'll just run upstairs and get my costume," Nick said. "And my candy!"

But just as he was starting up the stairs, Javier's voice startled him, and

everyone else too. It was calm, but still exuded importance: "Come here please!

Everyone!"

Puzzled, the group in the livingroom all marched into the kitchen. "What's up?"

Max asked.

Javier was staring out the kitchen window, his nose almost touching it. The glare

from the overhead light kept the rest of them from seeing what he was seeing, for

now. "Tish..." he spoke slowly, "did you, by any chance, spill any of that potion

when you brought Young Master Max back to life?"

She thought about it a bit. "No... I'm pretty sure I didn't."

"Not even a drop?"

"Yeah, I'm sure. I-" She stopped cold, coming to a horrible realization. "Wait,

does puke count? Max barfed all over the place right after he got alive again."

Javier nodded. "That would do it." He waved them all closer with his wing. "Look.

Out there."

They all crowded around to see.

He pointed with his wing towards the old town cemetery.

The dead were crawling up out of their graves in droves.

Disoriented skeletons, dressed in rotting tuxedos and gowns, shambled about

aimlessly. Worm-eaten flesh dripped slowly from old bone. They were searching for

something. Flesh. They hungered for flesh, and it would not be long before they

all recognized their desire and banded together to swoop down on the sleeping

city below.

"Oh shit," said Martina.

"Exactly," Javier agreed.

"But why now!?" Tish burst out. "I zombified Max *months* ago!"

"True, but this is Halloween night," Javier said seriously. "It is different."

Thanatos backed him up. "You mortals have turned it into a harmless holiday, but

some of you still remember why this day is special. On this night, the barrier

between the realms is thin, and things like this have a way of just

...happening."

Tish felt really, really guilty. "I'm sorry."

"It's not your fault," Javier told her reassuringly. "You could not have

predicted this. But I am glad now that I stopped by."

"So, are we gonna go fight them or what?" Nick asked.

Javier looked at Thanatos, and both of them nodded. "We must," the Lord of the

Dead intoned gravely.

"Hey, where's Max?" Tish said, looking around and realizing he'd just vanished.

*BRAAAOWWWWRRRRRRRR-VRUGGA-VRUGGA-VRUGGA*!!!!!

As the unholy noise ripped through the air, the unlikely group of living, dead

and partially-undead all ran to the side door and found it already open. Max was

standing there in the backyard, paws clutching an idling chainsaw with a wicked

gleam in his eyes.

"I'm way ahead of you! Go grab some shit from the toolshed and let's kill

ourselves some dead people!"

*VVVVVRRAWOWWWWWNN*!!!!!

"I should get overtime pay for this," Thanatos mused bitterly.

The End

for now...

***

Author's endnote;

Not much to say, only that I had a ton of fun writing this, and for about three

seconds I seriously considered titling it, "He Ain't Dead, He's My Brother". ;P

(Oh, and I'm sorry if any of the accented characters didn't show up correctly. I

couldn't figure out how to make them stay the same thing through all the

formatting and whatnot.)

SUGGESTED SOUNDTRACK:

Move Your Dead Bones - Dr. Reanimator

Living Dead Girl - Rob Zombie (Tish's theme)

Tubthumping - Chumbawamba (Max's theme)

Down With The Sickness - Disturbed

Bodies - Drowning Pool

Dead Man's Party - Oingo Boingo

No One Lives Forever - Oingo Boingo

Malaguena Salerosa - Chingon

Take Me Out - Franz Ferdinand

original music composed by Danny Elfman (natch, who else?)

"Summer Vacation Of The Living Dead"

Started: July 10th, 2005 Finished: October 7th, 2005 Editing Completed: December 5th, 2005