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For all the kids who snuck out of tower bedrooms
Found their true families
Chose their own names
And learned to conquer giants
PART 1 The Truth According to Belladonna
Killing her would’ve been easy. That spring we made flower garlands. That spring petals were strewn across her kitchen table, where she drank her tea. If we dropped a petal of belladonna, a petal of poppy, and a petal of lily into that cup, we’d never really know which one of us killed her.
We’d never know which one of us was guilty.
The police wouldn’t know either. We were, after all, three scrawny little creatures, no older than fourteen. What damage could we do intentionally? The death of Raven’s stepmother would be ruled an accident, and we’d be reprimanded, sure, but none of us would be locked behind bars.
Only the monster would suffer. The woman who made Raven so sick and so scared, he was absent from school more than he was present. He’d been fine before she moved into his house. Bright and shining, like a prince from a fairy tale. Someone to live for. Fight for. Die for.
And that spring I would’ve killed for him. I convinced the others to go along with it. I picked out a date. I did everything short of picking the flowers, because we each had to bring our own blossoms. One petal of belladonna. One petal of poppy. One petal of lily.
One petal, for each of our names.
But the night before the murder, one of us got cold feet and ruined everything. We all had to poison her together. That’s what I thought, the spring we made flower garlands. The spring we spread them out on the table, where she drank her tea.
But three years later, on the eve of Raven’s seventeenth birthday, his stepmother was found sprawled out on the kitchen floor. A shattered teacup beside her. It took a little time for the police to gather their evidence, and then they presented their findings to Raven’s father. Apparently, someone had taken a cluster of poisonous flowers and stuffed them into his wife’s teakettle.
No poppy. No lily. Just belladonna.
Two hours later, they came for me.
1
Belladonna Killed Her
Belladonna Drake was entangled in her true love’s arms when a knock came at the door. Slowly, quietly, she inched out of bed. “Don’t say anything,” she whispered, creeping toward the window.
Red and blue lights flashed below.
“Go out the back door,” she instructed without turning around. “I’ll stall them long enough for you to get away.”
“Belle—”
“You were never here,” Belle broke in, pulling a pair of socks from the floor. “You haven’t set foot in my bedroom in years. All right?”
A nod in the darkness. Then a rustling of clothing as the two of them got dressed. Belle pulled on a soft, fluffy robe. With her hair tousled and her eyeliner smudged, it really would look like she’d woken from a dream. She wasn’t hosting company. Everyone was exactly where they were supposed to be.
Taking a shaky breath, she hurried to the first floor. Opened the front door. Blinked up at the officer and said, “Hello? Is everything okay?”
“Belladonna Drake?”
“Ye-yes,” she said, managing to stumble over one word. Great. That didn’t bode well for the rest of the conversation. But she could lie about who’d been tangled in her arms that night. She’d gotten very good at keeping secrets. Just… not from the cops.
“You’re under arrest for the murder of Evelyn Holloway. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used—”
“Wait, what?” Belle’s vision blurred and the officer’s mouth stopped making noise, even though it was moving. “Raven’s stepmother is dead? I thought you were here for—”
The man jerked her arms behind her back, sliding handcuffs over her wrists. “You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you.”
“But I didn’t… I couldn’t have—”
“Then let’s hope you have an alibi,” he said, gesturing to the gaggle of officers standing by the door. They were going to wake her father, but he couldn’t account for her. He’d been snoring in his bedroom for hours. There was only one person in the world who could account for Belle’s whereabouts that night, and that person was long gone by now.
“Watch your head,” the officer said, guiding her into the police car. Belle ducked, sliding into the darkness. Through the window, she could see her adoptive father storming out of the house, spittle flying from his mouth as he raged at the officers. Typical Edwin, she thought with a huff. At least some things could be counted on even in your darkest moments.
Some people.
“I need to make a call,” Belle said, as the engine turned over. “I get to do that, right?”
“Who you gonna call?” the man asked, in this jovial tone that made her think he was going to start humming the Ghostbusters theme song. Everything about this was absurd. Belle wanted to tell herself it was a dream, because none of this could be happening, except… the rest of the night had been incredibly vivid. Those lips, trailing across her skin. Those hands, warm and familiar. Bright eyes. Mischievous smile. They’d hardly touched over the past few years, and yet everything was exactly the way it had been the first time they’d held hands.
Like coming home.
Now her actual home was disappearing in the rearview, and the officer was saying, “Look, you don’t need to call an attorney. I’m guessing your rich daddy can arrange…” A pause as his gaze flicked to the estate in the mirror. The elegant Tudor rose up in the distance, surrounded by a perfectly manicured lawn. The only thing unruly about the estate was the garden, huge and overflowing with dahlias. Bougainvillea. Jasmine. And tucked in the back, in a corner:
Belladonna.
As beautiful as it was fatal. Belle had cultivated that little patch of flowers, telling herself stories about freeing Raven from his wicked stepmother. She’d come up with a plan. Now, three years later, she told herself she wouldn’t really have gone through with it. She was protective of her ex-boyfriend, but she wasn’t a killer.
None of them was.
“How did Mrs. Holloway die?” she asked softly. Every word that came out of her mouth, she analyzed. Did she sound innocent just then? Did she sound guilty? She wasn’t guilty, she swore to herself over and over again, but it was hard to believe that with cuffs around her wrists. It was harder to believe when the police station came into view.
“You tell me,” the officer said from the front seat. “You had a whole cluster of it in your yard. It even looked like some had been pulled recently. We made sure to check before—”
“Pulled?” Belle almost choked on the word. “Which plant was pulled?”
“It had such a pretty name,” the man said, catching her eye in the mirror. “You have any guesses, Belladonna?”
The back of the car went silent. It was the middle of the night, so Belle expected it to be quiet, but in that moment, she heard nothing. It was as if she were floating in the recesses of space. Everything dark, everything quiet. “They used belladonna?” she said after a minute. “How did you know to look in my yard? Who told—” She really should keep quiet. She had the right to remain silent, after all. Anything she said c
ould and would be used against her in a court of law. Still, she couldn’t help but ask, “Did they use any other flowers? Poppies or…”
The man pulled up to the station, then climbed out of the car. Belle counted heartbeats as he strode to her door. Five. Ten. Fifteen. She managed to get to seventeen, the exact number of years she’d been on this earth, when the door swung open and the man reached for her. “Why would there be other flowers?” he asked, guiding her out of the darkness. “Belladonna killed her.”
Belle lost a bit of time after that. They were in the local police station, but they wouldn’t be holding her there for long. She was a minor, so she’d be sent to the detention center up on the hill. It was kind of funny, if she thought about it. Once upon a time, there had been four of them: Raven, Lily, Poppy, and Belle. But three years ago, Raven went away to boarding school on the other side of the country. Lily left soon after that. Poppy didn’t split town so much as totally betray her, leaving Belle to pick up the pieces of their shattered friendship.
Leaving her alone.
“I hope she has the same number,” Belle said when the officer finally let her make a call. “She doesn’t even have the same name.She used to go by Poppy but…” She doesn’t anymore, Belle thought, realizing she was rambling. After Raven moved away, Poppy had changed her name to Jack. She’d started dressing in clothes that were typically relegated to the boys’ section of department stores, but she still went by she, and the cop wouldn’t have understood that.
Probably, he wouldn’t have.
Within seconds she’d dialed Jack’s old cell number, and to her immense relief, the phone started ringing. She prayed Jack would answer. She prayed Jack wouldn’t slam down the phone the second she realized who was calling.
“Hello?” That familiar voice came on the line and Belle’s hands started to shake. Tears filled her eyes.
“It’s, um… it’s me,” she managed, dashing away the tears with her free hand. “Please don’t hang up.”
“Belle? Why are you calling me from the police station?”
“I…” How much should she say? These conversations were probably recorded. But even if they were, they couldn’t be used in a court of law without her permission. Right? You had to agree to be recorded or it was inadmissible. She knew this, because three years earlier, she’d studied her rights. She’d prepared to be arrested after she put her plan into action. But the night before the murder, someone had gotten cold feet.
Now that someone was listening on the other end of the phone. “Belladonna,” Jack said, her voice low and hard. “What happened? What did you—”
“Raven’s stepmother was murdered,” Belle blurted. “Someone used belladonna to kill her. Only belladonna,” she added in a whisper.
“No. That’s not possible, unless you—”
“I didn’t. I swear. But Edwin was passed out in his bedroom all night, and no one can account for me.”
“I can account for you.” Jack’s voice was steady. Calm. “I’m happy to be your alibi, Belle, because I was with you all night. It’s not like you’re asking me to lie.”
Belle counted to five. Ten. Seventeen. “Why are you helping me? You should hate me, after what I—”
“I do hate you sometimes,” Jack admitted. “But I love you too. That’s how it is with family.”
Belle smiled. She was still crying, but she wasn’t alone, and it made all the difference. Jack was her family. Raven, too, before he went away. For years the three of them had taken care of one another because the world had betrayed them. Their parents had betrayed them.
Together they’d been unstoppable.
“Listen, you don’t know how much this means to me,” Belle began as the officer stepped toward her. He wanted her to hang up the phone. But she needed to say this before she ended the call. “I thought I understood what happened three years ago, but I never asked you—”
“Don’t say anything,” Jack interrupted, her voice still calm. “I’m coming down to the station and I’m getting you out of there. Okay? By tomorrow this will all be over. Try to stay positive.”
“How can I stay positive?”
“Because,” Jack said, and a chill unfurled at the base of Belle’s spine, “even though you’re innocent, you got what you wanted. Raven can come home.”
2
Jack of Many Trades
Poppy Jacqueline McClain was known, to her closest friends and greatest enemies, as “Jack.” It was a fitting name. She was a jack-of-many-trades, a talented sword fighter, and a climber of tall trees. She knew how to bring a fully grown man to his knees. Still, of all her skills and talents, Jack had never claimed one particular ability:
Telling the truth.
She sat at the police station, stuffed into a plastic chair, waiting for Detective Frank Medina to return from the field. She’d been there since eight in the morning. When he finally strode through the doors, well after noon, he took one look at her and sighed. “Miss McClain.”
“Detective,” she replied drily, wrapping her arms around herself. “Call me Jack. Please.”
He pulled back his chair, studying her for a minute. He wasn’t wearing his mirrored glasses. That would’ve been overkill in the brightly lit station with the overhead light flickering. Unfortunately, without the glasses, there was nothing to protect her from his shrewd brown eyes.
“Let’s start at the beginning,” he said, sliding into his seat. He was wearing a blue blazer and jeans, but she could see his gun poking out beneath the blazer’s hem. “Where were you between the hours of eleven p.m. Saturday night and one a.m. this morning?”
“I was with Belladonna Drake,” Jack said immediately. “I waited for my mom to fall asleep, because she doesn’t like Belle very much. Then I snuck out of the house and rode my bike across town. Belle was expecting me, so she let me in through the back door and we spent the night together. So to speak.”
A snort from the man in the chair. He was sizing Jack up, taking in the ripped men’s Levi’s and faded band T-shirt. She was wearing an olive-green jacket that Raven had given her on her thirteenth birthday, a faux-suede number with equally fake fur cuffs. Back then the floor-length jacket had been two sizes too big, but now it fit perfectly.
“So you and Miss Drake are… what? Friends? Girlfriends?” the detective asked, and Jack looked down. She was pretty good at blushing on command, if she thought of a certain person in a certain way.
“Let’s just say my mother doesn’t like us hanging out together. And if Edwin thought someone was visiting Belle in the middle of the night, he’d probably padlock her bedroom door.” On top of everything else, Jack thought, but she kept that detail to herself.
“Edwin? Belladonna’s father?”
“Adoptive father, yeah. He’s really overprotective, which is why I snuck into the house after he fell asleep.”
Detective Medina sighed. “So no one saw you entering the Drake residence? No one can corroborate your story?”
“The neighbors might’ve noticed me sneaking out around two thirty.” She flashed a taunting smile. “If you’re good at what you do, I’m sure you can drum up some evidence.”
“I have plenty of evidence.”
“What? Some belladonna in Evelyn’s system? That’s circumstantial. You can’t prosecute—” Jack broke off as the detective opened a file on the table. She assumed it was her file. She’d been to this station before. But when he pushed the clear plastic baggie toward her, containing a familiar scrap of paper, that surety slipped away. Everything slipped away as Jack read the words scribbled in bleeding, faded ink:
Recipe for the Perfect Murder
One petal of belladonna
One petal of poppy
Drop into a teacup and stir three times.
“This was lying on the table in Evelyn’s kitchen,” the detective said, his voice quiet now. Tentative. He was trying to coax a confession out of her, but the confession wasn’t about her. “There are two names on it: Poppy and Be
lladonna. But I don’t think you’re responsi—”
“Someone’s setting Belle up,” Jack interrupted. She forced herself to take slow, deep breaths. “Look at the handwriting! It looks like it was written by a fourteen-year-old.”
“I’ve already found a match for the handwriting,” the detective said, glancing at the clock on the wall. It was 12:37. If he’d been up all night, he’d had more than eight hours to investigate the evidence found at the scene of the crime. “Some of your teachers were nice enough to let me borrow your school essays this morning, and it didn’t take long to figure out which one of you wrote this.” Resting his elbows on the table, he looked into her eyes. “Anything you want to tell me?”
She met his gaze, unflinching. “I didn’t do this.”
“I know you didn’t, Jack. But the girl who did was alone last night, wasn’t she? You’re just pretending you slept over at her house.”
“I’m not pretending.”
“You think you’re looking out for her, like you always looked out for Raven. Yeah, I remember you,” he added, his gaze softening. “Your hair was wilder three years ago, and you called yourself Poppy, but I remember your visit to the station. I remember every story you told.”
“I wasn’t telling stories,” Jack snapped, sinking farther into her jacket. “Everything I told you was true.”
“You told me Raven had a wicked stepmother. You told me she was hurting him. But when I brought Raven down to the station, we couldn’t find any evidence of abuse, and he swore his stepmother never touched him.”
“She didn’t have to touch him! She made him want to lie down in the dirt. She made him want to die.”
“How?”
“We didn’t figure that part out.” Jack’s heart pulsed against her ribs. She hated talking about Raven, and how sick he’d gotten after his stepmother had moved in. She hated thinking about it. “We just knew that she was scaring him. Making him want to hurt himself. A few weeks after she moved into that house, he started to hear his mom’s voice in the middle of the night.”
Lies Like Poison Page 1