They came to her from out of the blue, smashing their saucer in her front yard, snatching children from the driveway as hazardous waste barrels burst open and grew a dozen eyes. The alien containment chamber shattered, releasing an unseen terror on Troy in Fluvanna County.
Meanwhile, aliens stalked her yard while the military organized a response and rushed to the scene.
Welcome to the mind and front yard of University of Virginia researcher Garnett Mingledorff.
“That’s a scary place to be,” Mingledorff laughed, standing next to the saucer hovering over the driveway, where an abducted child was hanging by a mean, green tractor beam. “We choose a new theme every year, and this happened to be one of the themes that we hadn’t done yet.”
By day, Mingledorff is a mild-mannered researcher in the biology laboratory of George Bloom, a UVA professor studying Alzheimer’s disease. But when evening falls and Halloween approaches, she becomes a diabolical designer.
“I love that the neighbors’ kids and the neighbors are excited about it. They’re asking, ‘What are you doing this year? What are you doing next year?’” she said as neighbor kids rode by on bikes and shouted approval.
Mingledorff and her husband Jason have been decorating their home on Indigo Lane in Troy for years, but not with a skeleton here or a werewolf there. There’s always a visual story being told.