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Authors: Molly Cochran

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BOOK: Poison
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The point was, she was from a very old witch family, and being outed by Muffies in high school was, for Verity, pretty much on a par with being ravaged by wild dogs. She went all pale and started shaking so hard that Cheswick had to hold her up. Her eyes filled with tears. Her nose ran. Her fingertips turned blue.

“She needs something to drink,” Cheswick said. He was looking at me, but Summer answered:

“What would she like? Bat’s blood?”

“Shut up, Summer,” I said.

“You going to make me, or are you just going to turn me into a frog?”

“I’d turn you into a jerk, except someone must have beat me to it,” I said. Peter poked me in the arm. He thought I asked for trouble. Not true. I never had confrontations with
horrible people if I could help it. Peter was just more of a “go with the flow” kind of person than I was.

Tiffany almost laughed at my little comeback, but she checked herself. Summer had no sense of humor, especially about herself. A.J. and Suzy just stared, as bored and clueless as ever.

“Let’s get out of here,” Peter said.

“Yeah,” Cheswick agreed, slamming Verity’s locker with a little more force than necessary.

“Oh, yeah. Go with your cool boyfriend,” Summer said. A.J. and Suzy smiled. Cheswick, who looked like a dandelion puff and was the all-school champion in
Lord of the Rings
trivia, was not considered cool, even by the geeks.

I think this, more than Summer’s offending Verity, was what set him off. Before any of us knew what was happening, Cheswick hurled Verity at Peter like he was passing a football, and threw five fingers at Summer.

The Muffies laughed at that, which showed how dumb they really were. When witches did that—flicked their fingers at someone—it was like aiming a wand at them. And when the witch was as pissed off as Cheswick was, the result usually wasn’t good.

“Cheswick!” I whispered, but it was too late to stop him. All I could do at that point was try to weaken his spell by throwing out one of my own to cross his.

“Stink!” I shouted. Don’t ask me why I chose that one. It was probably at the core of what I felt about Summer and the skank girls. Anyway, at that moment A. J. Nakamura, Japanese-American princess that she was, let loose with this tremendous salami-scented belch. Tiffany sniffed at her armpits, and
then gagged. Suzy Dusset grabbed her belly and headed for the bathroom, sounding like a Formula One race car the whole way.

“What the hell do you think—” Summer began, then stopped to sniff the air she had just fouled with her breath. The rest of us shrank backward. Verity started to retch. Summer narrowed her eyes at me. “You’ll be sorry,” she said. Then she smiled at Peter and made the
Call me
gesture with her fingers. That was how crusty she was.

“Er . . . you wouldn’t happen to have some air freshener in your locker, would you?” I asked Verity.

Cheswick led her away. Figuring that Verity didn’t need a repeat of what had just gone on, I opened the locker and took out the doll.

“I don’t think you should be touching that,” Peter said.

“Hey, somebody has to get rid of it.”

He sighed. “Okay, but why does that person always have to be you?”

“It’s just better if we avoid complications,” I said. “Look, I’m not doing anything wrong, okay?”

“Exactly what
are
you doing, Katy?” a pleasant voice behind me asked. It was Miss P, the assistant principal.

“Oh, no,” Peter muttered.

“Move along, Peter,” Miss P said, her eyes never leaving mine. “Is that your locker?”

Quickly I stashed the doll behind my back. “Miss P, I can explain.”

“I don’t think so,” she said in a tone she might have used to discuss the weather. “I saw you using special ability on those girls.” “Special ability” was code for “witchcraft.”

“Then you know I didn’t—” I thrust out my arms, having forgotten about the doll, whose head bobbed in mute accusation.

“I’ll take that, please.”

Abashed, I handed it to her as I watched Peter recede into the distance, shaking his head.

“Do you have a minute?” Miss P said cheerfully. That was code for “Bend over and kiss your butt good-bye.”

C
HAPTER


THREE

Actually, it wasn’t so bad. Miss P was pretty decent most of the time. She rounded up everyone who had been near the locker and heard us all out. Of course, no one said anything. Peter said he hadn’t seen anything, Cheswick wouldn’t admit to throwing out five fingers, Summer didn’t confess to putting the doll in Verity’s locker, and naturally, the Muffy posse would die before they’d say they smelled bad.

In the end everyone was dismissed except for me.

“I needn’t remind you about your responsibilities as a member of this community,” Miss P said. That was all code. Translation: “Do that again, and you’ll not only get kicked out of school, but you won’t be welcome in Whitfield anymore either.”

Witches were strict. If you didn’t fit in—that is, if you weren’t magical enough, or if you broke one of the million unwritten rules that had been passed down through the centuries, most of which had to do with not drawing attention to yourself—then
the whole town stopped talking to you, and you had to go live among cowen if you wanted any kind of life at all.

Fortunately, that didn’t happen often. Peter had been afraid it might happen to him last year because he wasn’t very proficient in witchcraft (sorry, guys, but it was one area in which females seemed to have a slight edge), but his friends helped him through that. Besides, it was better to have too little magic than too much. No one was kinder, smarter, or more loyal than Peter Shaw. Or better-looking, if truth be told. To be honest, if he got kicked out of Whitfield, I wouldn’t want to stay there either.

But Peter wasn’t the problem this time. I was.

“I understand,” I said. I tried to sound reasonably contrite, but I knew that causing four nasty girls to have BO wasn’t going to put me on the FBI’s Most Wanted list, especially since the Muffies hadn’t even complained about it.

“I’m aware that the infraction wasn’t severe,” Miss P said. “It’s that it happened at all. This is an open school.”

I nodded. Ainsworth needed the Muffies, because most of them came from rich families. Without them (and their sizable tuition checks) a lot of us would have to go to Liberty High, the area’s twelve-hundred-student public school, where we’d stick out like sore thumbs and probably end up being beaten into jelly.

“You really should try not to involve your friends in your misadventures,” she said crisply.

That hurt. “Involve . . . They involved
me
!” I protested.

Miss P sat back in her chair. “Really?” she asked quietly. “How did Peter Shaw involve you in this?”

I swallowed. “Well, not him, maybe,” I said, reddening. I
didn’t want to drag Peter into anything. He had enough problems of his own.

“I understand you’re considering applying for early admission to Harvard next year.”

“Uh, yeah,” I answered warily.

“So is your friend Peter,” she said. “However, despite his excellent academic record, he lacks some of your advantages.”

Meaning, I suppose, my father, who had been lobbying to get me into Harvard since the day I was born. An academic himself, he planned to pull every string he could get his hands on to guarantee my early acceptance and a hefty scholarship.

Peter wasn’t so lucky. The poorest relation of the richest family in town, he’d been disowned by his relatives and regarded as an outcast by the Shaws after his parents had died.

Miss P leaned forward and looked earnestly into my eyes. “I want to help Peter get the education he deserves,” she said. “I’m sure you do too.”

“Of course,” I said. She knew that Peter Shaw meant more to me than anything else in the world.

“So you must know how important it is that Peter’s record not be marred by disciplinary issues.” Her eyes bored into mine.

“Oh.” She’d struck a nerve. If my stupidity caused anything bad to rebound onto Peter, I’d never forgive myself. “I get it,” I said quietly. “There won’t be any more . . . issues.”

“Good.” She smiled at me as she got up and held open her office door for me.

•  •  •

Peter was waiting by my locker when the final bell rang. “Hey,” he said softly, touching my hair.

“Hey,” I answered. I wrapped my arms around his waist and leaned my head against his chest. Just hearing his heart beat, as deep and steady as Peter himself, made me feel as if I’d gone into a safe place.

“Are you okay?”

I nodded silently, afraid that my voice would betray me.

“No, you’re not,” he said, and lifted my chin. He was smiling, his gray eyes twinkling beneath his thick honey-colored hair. “Listen, if you’re going to break all the rules, you’d better get used to being yelled at.”

“Thank you, Judge Shaw.”

“So what’d you get, detention?”

“Not even.” I got out my coat. “Miss P gave me a pass this time.”

“Well done,” Peter said with mock admiration. “Now if you can just avoid flying through the halls on your broom . . . ”

“Ha-ha,” I said humorlessly. I closed my locker and turned to leave—Peter and I were both due at work in half an hour—but I couldn’t get out of my mind what Miss P had said. “Peter, I’m so sorry,” I said, throwing my arms around his neck. “You know I’d do anything for you.”

“Oh?” He grinned, wiggling his eyebrows suggestively. “Want to prove it?”

I pulled away and thumped him on the arm.

“It was worth a try,” he said with a shrug.

“I was hoping you’d take me seriously,” I said hotly, heading for the exit.

“Come on, Katy.” He loped after me. “You know I was kidding.”

We walked through the doors into the crisp late-autumn air.
“I guess,” I said. There was a cold drizzle falling, which felt good after the superheated classrooms of the school’s ancient building.

“So tell me what’s up.” Casually Peter took my books and tucked them under his arm with his own.

I shook my head. “It’s just that Miss P said I was involving you in my . . . infractions or whatever, and that you were going to suffer for it.”

“Me? Suffer how?”

“By not getting into Harvard.”

He burst out laughing. “Because you gave Summer Hayworth BO?”

“Or something. Miss P was serious, though.”

“I doubt that. Besides, we’re not even allowed to apply to colleges until next year.”

I stopped in my tracks and turned toward him. “She
wants
you to go to Harvard, Peter. She’s going to help you. But everything we do from here on in is going to count. Don’t think it won’t.”

“Okay, I get it. No fraternizing with criminals. But I hardly think you fit into that category.” He put his arm around me as we walked into the Meadow.

Hattie’s Kitchen, where Peter and I worked after school, was on the far side of the grassy expanse that had stood in the middle of Whitfield since the town’s founding three hundred and fifty years ago. For cowen it was just a nice little park with a quaint old cemetery that had headstones dating from the sixteen hundreds, and a lot of twisting, narrow pathways leading into the woods that protected the town from the Atlantic winds blowing off Whitfield Bay. But to the witches whose families
had settled the area, the Meadow was the wellspring of their magic.

I’ve mentioned that on Wiccan holidays the Meadow filled with a supernatural fog so thick that only the descendants of those original settlers could enter it. But even on ordinary days the place exuded a sense of peace that always made me feel better.

I put my arm around Peter, matching his arm around me, and we walked together through the wet fallen leaves. “I love you,” I whispered.

“I love you, too.” He pressed me close to him and kissed the top of my head. “Even if you are a bad influence.”

“I’m really sorry about what happened today,” I said. “The next time you see me doing something stupid, don’t bother trying to talk me out of it. Just run the other way.”

“I promise,” he said, crossing his heart. “Although I really had hoped to see you beyond next week.”

I scowled.

“Oh, come on.” He ruffled my hair. “You’re the smartest person in school. You can’t even
do
anything stupid.”

Right. Which is why I had been almost burned at the stake last year. If it hadn’t been for Peter—and a few helpful ghosts—I’d have finished out the summer as an ember, thanks to one of my bright ideas.

“So I’m officially asking the smartest person in school to Winter Frolic.”

I looked up at him. “The dance? Really?” I tried to look enthusiastic, but actually I hated events like Winter Frolic. People looked forward to it so much, and then when it finally came around, everyone was too nervous to have a good time.
So they would just hang out pretending that they were having fun. Plus there was always somebody who cried in the bathroom all evening, somebody who acted like a jerk, somebody whose dress ripped, and somebody who got reamed out by a teacher in front of everyone.
Please.

“You don’t want to go?” Peter asked, knowing full well how I felt about Winter Fwow-up. “Zounds.”

BOOK: Poison
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