HE POISONED OUR DINNER TO START A NEW LIFE

We dragged ourselves out the back door, stumbling through the dark yard to the neighbor’s house. I pounded on their door until my knuckles bled.

By the time the police sirens wailed, Vernon was still in the garage, prepping the trunk of the car. They caught him coming back into the kitchen with a roll of heavy-duty plastic sheeting. An hour later, I was sitting in the back of an ambulance, watching them shove my husband into a squad car.

A detective walked over to me, holding a clear evidence bag containing Vernon’s phone. “He wasn’t acting alone, Ma’am,” the detective said grimly. “He was texting an accomplice the whole time.

Discussing the payout. Discussing where to hide the bodies.” “Who?” I asked, my voice trembling. “Who would help him do this?” The detective unlocked the phone and held it up.

“The contact is saved as ‘My Soulmate’.” I looked at the screen. I expected to see a stranger. Maybe a young mistress. Maybe a coworker. But when I saw the face in the contact photo, the world stopped spinning and shattered completely. It wasn’t a stranger. It was my twin sister.

I blink hard, thinking the image must be wrong, some horrible mistake, but it isn’t. It’s her. It’s Jessica. Her wide smile, the dimple in her cheek. The gold necklace I gave her last Christmas glinting in the selfie she must’ve sent him. My stomach lurches, and not just from the poison.

“No,” I whisper, shaking my head as if I can shake away the truth. “She wouldn’tโ€”she couldnโ€™tโ€””

The detective kneels beside the gurney, his eyes steady. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. But it looks like sheโ€™s been in on it for a while. There are dozens of messages. Photos. Plans. This wasnโ€™t a spur-of-the-moment thing.โ€

The paramedics try to push him away, insisting I need to stay calm, need oxygen, fluids. But I shove the mask off my face and grab the phone from his hand. My fingers shake as I scroll through the messages. Itโ€™s worse than I imagined.

When is she eating it?

Is the kid going to finish the plate?

We need to be quick. You have the documents, right?

Once theyโ€™re gone, we start fresh. You and me. Somewhere warm. Somewhere we can be happy.

And Vernon responds:

Iโ€™ve waited long enough. I love you, Jess.

My vision goes red.

Cody is moaning beside me, and I reach over, brushing his sweat-soaked hair from his forehead. He’s going to be okay. We both are. But Jessicaโ€”my own sisterโ€”wanted him dead. Wanted me dead. So she could run away with my husband.

Thereโ€™s a searing pain in my chest, sharper than anything Vernonโ€™s poison could ever inflict. The betrayal doesnโ€™t just stingโ€”it burns. Every memory of sleepovers, birthday cakes, secrets whispered in the dark, now smeared with this grotesque truth.

โ€œWhere is she?โ€ I ask, my voice hardening.

The detective frowns. โ€œWe donโ€™t know yet. But weโ€™ve issued a BOLO. Sheโ€™s not answering her phone, but her carโ€™s missing. Itโ€™s only a matter of time.โ€

Time. I want her caught now. I want to look her in the eye and ask why. I want to scream at her until her carefully manicured face crumbles with guilt. But I know better. Jessica never crumbles.

The hospital keeps me overnight. Cody sleeps beside me in the same room, hooked up to monitors. The doctors say heโ€™ll recover fully. That we both will. They give me anti-toxins, fluids, a psychologist who wants to talk about โ€œthe trauma.โ€

But the only trauma I want to focus on is tracking Jessica down and ending this.

The moment they discharge us, I check myself into a hotel under a fake name, using a prepaid card. I leave Cody with my parentsโ€”away from prying eyes, away from the danger that still breathes somewhere out there. Then I start digging.

I know Jessica better than anyone. I know she keeps a backup of everything. Photos, files, even old love letters from high school crushes. She’s meticulous, methodical. And narcissistic enough to think she’s always a step ahead.

I log into the cloud account we shared when we were youngerโ€”an old email address we created for swapping college notes and resumes. She never deleted it. I never deleted it. And now, itโ€™s my doorway into her secrets.

Within ten minutes, I find a folder named โ€œFreedom Plan.โ€

Inside are scans of forged documents, fake IDs for her and Vernon, property photos of a beach house in Belize, wire transfer records with coded language, and a full itinerary set to begin today. They were supposed to vanish before the bodies were cold.

They thought they were smart. But she forgot something.

She forgot me.

I bring the folder to the police. The Belize flight was canceled after Vernonโ€™s arrest, but Jessica didnโ€™t return home. Sheโ€™s somewhere nearby, maybe looking for a way out, maybe planning a backup escape. But time is running out for her.

Detective Malley agrees to keep me informed. He doesnโ€™t like vigilantes, but he also doesnโ€™t tell me to stay out of it. I think he sees something in my eyes that says I wonโ€™t rest until this is finished.

And I donโ€™t.

I retrace her steps. I visit her apartment under police protection. Itโ€™s been cleaned outโ€”closet empty, drawers gutted, passport gone. But her perfume still lingers in the hallway, sweet and venomous. The neighbors say they havenโ€™t seen her in days.

Then, a break.

A hotel clerk across town reports a woman matching Jessicaโ€™s description checking in under the name Claire Ashfordโ€”the name on the forged passport. But when officers arrive, the room is already cleared. Surveillance shows her leaving with a duffel bag and a pair of sunglasses pulled low.

Still, theyโ€™re closing in.

And I have an idea where she might go.

Thereโ€™s one place she always went when she needed to โ€œbreathe.โ€ A cabin, barely more than a shack, in the woods about two hours north. Our uncle used to own it before he passed. No phone, no internet, just trees and silence.

Itโ€™s the kind of place someone might go to disappear. Or to wait.

I donโ€™t tell the police Iโ€™m going.

I drive up the mountain road alone, heart pounding, mind sharp. I keep Vernonโ€™s old hunting knife in the glove compartment, just in case. I donโ€™t want to use it. But if itโ€™s me or her, there wonโ€™t be a question.

The sun dips low by the time I spot the cabin. A light flickers through the boarded-up window.

I park far down the road and approach on foot, every branch crunching beneath me like a gunshot. I keep to the shadows, circling the cabin, looking for movement. Then I see herโ€”sitting at the table, eating from a can of beans like this is some twisted camping trip.

I donโ€™t hesitate.

I kick the door open.

She jumps to her feet, eyes wide, mouth dropping open. โ€œWhat theโ€”โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t,โ€ I growl, pointing the knife. โ€œDonโ€™t even say my name.โ€

Jessica freezes. Her lips tremble, but not with guiltโ€”no, sheโ€™s calculating. Thinking. Planning.

โ€œI can explainโ€”โ€

โ€œNo, you canโ€™t,โ€ I spit. โ€œYou drugged your own nephew. You tried to kill me. You were going to run away with my husband, you sickโ€”โ€

โ€œHe loved me,โ€ she snaps suddenly, voice rising. โ€œHe never loved you, not really. He told me everything. You were cold. Boring. Always tired. I gave him life again.โ€

I stare at her, barely believing the words.

โ€œYou gave him murder.โ€

We stand there, both of us breathing hard, years of sisterhood burning in the air between us like smoke. Then, sirens slice through the forest.

Jessicaโ€™s eyes dart to the window. โ€œYou brought them?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I say. โ€œBut they always catch up to people like you.โ€

She lunges for the back door.

I move faster.

We tumble to the floor in a tangle of limbs and screams. She claws at my face, and I strike her arm with the butt of the knife handle. She yelps, rolling away, but the fight is over.

By the time the police burst in, Iโ€™m sitting on her chest, pinning her wrists to the ground.

The trial makes headlines. โ€œSister Betrayal of the Century,โ€ one paper calls it. Jessica and Vernon are charged with attempted murder, conspiracy, and fraud. The prosecutor doesnโ€™t hold back.

Vernon pleads guilty. Crumbles under pressure like wet paper. He tries to pin it all on Jessica, but the digital trail seals their fate.

Jessica, ever the actress, tries to cry on the stand. The jury doesnโ€™t buy it.

They find her guilty in less than three hours.

Months later, Cody and I move into a new house. Smaller, quieter, but safe. He has nightmares sometimes. So do I. But we have each other. Weโ€™re healing.

Sometimes, I still ask myself why. Why my sister hated me so much. Why she wanted what I had. But I never get an answer.

What I do have is a second chance.

And every night, when I tuck Cody into bed and see his sleepy eyes look up at me, I remember what she forgot:

You can poison a meal.

You can poison a man.

But you canโ€™t poison a motherโ€™s love.