The Fifth Petal

The Fifth Petal

by Brunonia Barry
The Fifth Petal

The Fifth Petal

by Brunonia Barry

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Overview

Could a witch hunt happen again in Salem?

New York Times bestselling author of The Lace Reader Brunonia Barry returns to Salem with this spellbinding new thriller, a complex brew of suspense, seduction and murder.


When a teenage boy dies suspiciously on Halloween night, Salem's chief of police, John Rafferty, wonders if there is a connection between his death and Salem’s most notorious cold case, a triple homicide dubbed "The Goddess Murders," in which three young women, all descended from accused Salem witches, were slashed on Halloween night in 1989. He finds unexpected help in Callie Cahill, the daughter of one of the victims newly returned to town. Neither believes that the main suspect, Rose Whelan, respected local historian, is guilty of murder or witchcraft.

But exonerating Rose might mean crossing paths with a dangerous force. Were the women victims of an all-too-human vengeance, or was the devil raised in Salem that night? And if they cannot discover what truly happened, will evil rise again?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781101905616
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 01/24/2017
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 464
Sales rank: 584,534
File size: 10 MB

About the Author

About The Author
Brunonia Barry is the New York Times and international best selling author of The Lace Reader, The Map of True Places, and her latest book: The Fifth Petal. Her work has been translated into more than thirty languages. She was the first American author to win the International Women’s Fiction Festival’s Baccante Award and was a past recipient of Ragdale Artists’ Colony’s Strnad Invitational Fellowship as well as the winner of New England Book Festival’s award for Best Fiction. Her reviews and articles on writing have appeared in the London Times and the Washington Post, and the Huffington Post. Brunonia co-chairs the Salem Athenaeum’s Writers’ Committee. She lives in Salem with her husband Gary Ward and their dog, Angel. Gary and Bru are the organizers of the Salem Literary Festival.

Read an Excerpt

9781101905609|excerpt

Barry / THE FIFTH PETAL

Chapter One

October 31, 2014

Salem

There were no witches in Salem in 1692, but they thrive here in great numbers now.

—­Rose Whelan, The Witches of Salem

Rafferty had never seen so many trick-­or-­treaters on Chestnut Street. Nor had he ever been charged with escorting such a large Witches’ March up to Gallows Hill. There were at least 150 of them this year—­Wiccans, Druids, Celts, nature mama hippies with psychic tendencies, pantheists and polytheists all—­walking slowly behind his 1980 Crown Vic cruiser, the one he’d rescued from the junk pile. For safety reasons, several streets had been blocked off. Traffic was already backed up onto Highland Avenue as visitors streamed into town for the festivities.

He’d been living in Salem for almost twenty years now. Back in the nineties only summer and early fall were filled with tourists; by midsummer you couldn’t find a parking space anywhere downtown, which was a pain in the ass. But come November 1, you could park anywhere you wanted. Not so anymore. This was no longer a forgotten seaport. No longer an aging industrial city. Salem had been discovered, and not just as a tourist destination but as the new hot place to live. These days, you were lucky to get a parking space in town at any time of year, which is why Rafferty always drove the cruiser, even on his day off. As chief of police, he could double-­park anywhere. More often than not, a tourist would ask him to pose next to the cruiser so they could capture its Witch City logo: a police badge emblazoned with a flying witch on a broomstick wearing a pointed hat.

But all that was nothing compared to what happened here in October. The city had been dubbed the Halloween Capital of the World. That was no big surprise. But no one had expected it could turn into a monthlong celebration. Lately, it was even more than a month, which was great for the merchants: The population grew by at least 300,000 each October. Every year Salem imported extra police from Boston and Lynn and as far away as Connecticut, and each year they were still shorthanded.

The crowds tonight were something. Even here, in this residential neighborhood, the trick-­or-­treaters were waiting in long lines for their candy at the Federal mansions that were decorated for the occasion.

Rafferty drove the wrong way up Chestnut Street to the corner of Flint.

“Hey, Rafferty,” yelled a man dressed as a pirate and known locally as Worms, “write yourself a ticket. This is a one-­way street!”

Each year the pirate reenactors gathered at the Phillips House museum, the only historic home open to the public on Chestnut Street, to sing to the children, and maybe scare them a little, too.

“Scallywag!” his companion, Mickey Doherty, growled.

“Argh!” Rafferty shouted back at them.

“Them’s fighting words, John,” Mickey said, taking it as an invitation to approach the cruiser.

“Argh is only one word, Mickey,” Rafferty said. Mickey Doherty was more entrepreneurial than almost anyone in town. He owned two haunted houses on Derby Street and the pirate shop on the wharf, where he sold a bit of weed on the side. Since possession was a mis­demeanor these days, and Mickey didn’t sell to kids, Rafferty looked the other way. “And if you don’t know that, you should lay off the Dark ’n Stormies. Isn’t this a kids’ party?”

Mickey laughed and pounded the cruiser with his fist. “This kind of fortification’s the only way I can stand the little demons!”

Rafferty shook his head.

“Hey, what’re the streets like?” Mickey wanted to know. “I spoke to Ann earlier, and she warned me. There’s a weird energy tonight.”

Ann Chase. Salem’s most famous present-­day witch. “Well, if anyone should know . . .” Rafferty said, and Mickey laughed. “Actually, it seems pretty tame to me,” Rafferty said. It was true.

Fall had come late this year, but now the air was chilling, and the darkness felt pervasive. He nodded to Mickey, turned on his siren, and pulled out, blocking incoming cars on Essex Street, so the parade could cross the road. As the candlelight vigil moved on, a driver blasted his horn, and others joined in chorus to protest the delay. The witches walked in formation, as slowly as brides.

Once the last witch had crossed the road on the way up to Gallows Hill Park, Rafferty’s escort duties were over. He circled the city, checking on the rental cops and mounted police. A weird energy. He noticed that the Choate memorial statue at the corner of Essex and Boston Streets sported toilet paper streamers—­nothing new or particularly weird there. Costumed children roamed more freely here, mostly without their parents: the little ones sugared up and bouncing, the older kids just looking for trouble. He spotted a few teens hanging out in the parking lot of an auto body shop on Boston Street. They scattered when they saw him coming—­probably a drug deal. There’d been a lot of that lately in this area. He hoped the new senior center they were going to build here would turn the neighborhood around. That lot had been vacant too long.

He U-­turned into the parking lot of the Dairy Witch and came back around when he got the call that there was some kind of disturbance in the Walgreens parking lot a few doors down. “I’ve got it,” he said, thinking it was probably the same kids. But as he pulled into the lot, the kids were nowhere to be seen. He drove around back and spotted the hearse parked at the side of Proctor’s Ledge. Hearse tours were big business in Salem; featured venues included everything from haunted houses to the apartment building over on Lafayette Street where the Boston Strangler had killed his only North Shore victim back in the early sixties. Salem entrepreneurs would go to any length to frighten the tourists, especially on Halloween, though the ghostly Fright Tours logo hand-­painted on the side of the hearse looked far more like Casper than Jacob Marley.

Unless the neighbors had a legitimate complaint, the police did little to discourage the fright tours or anything that made a dollar for the people who relied on Halloween to make a living. But this wasn’t public property, it was private, and the manager of Walgreens as well as the neighbors up the hill resented the invasion of tourists. Especially lately, as the site of 1989’s still-­unsolved murders had become Salem’s most popular tour.

He could see the candles from here. He recognized the voice of a local talent, someone they’d nicknamed Actor Bob, who’d made enough money with a voice-­over commercial selling burials at sea to buy himself the old hearse and outfit it with cushy cutaway coffin seats lined with satin. Tonight, Actor Bob’s baritone was far less comforting than his oceanic funereal voice. Tonight his voice was raspy, haunted.

“And now we come to Proctor’s Ledge. Though some will tell you otherwise, many believe this place, not Gallows Hill, is where Salem executed nineteen accused witches back in 1692. This is also the place where, back on Halloween in 1989, three beautiful young women were brutally murdered: Olivia Cahill, Cheryl Cassella, and Susan Symms, whose ghostly white hair and skin were cut from her body to be used for some kind of Satanic ritual.”

The crowd murmured, shocked.

Rafferty had heard Actor Bob lead the tour on several occasions. He always played to the crowd, changing and embellishing the story for effect, but this last part had been added recently—­and embellished beyond belief.

“Remember their names. And remember the nickname the townspeople gave them. These young women were so beautiful and so bewitching, everyone called them the Goddesses.”

More murmurs from the crowd.

“Neighbors on Boston Street and along the North River could hear their screams that night, but no one called for help until the next morning. It was as if a spell had been cast across the entire city of Salem, and no one could break it. For what the girls were doing that Halloween had been forbidden, way back in 1692. They were trying to consecrate the mass grave of their ancestors, five of the women who had been executed during that dark time—­for signing the devil’s book.”

Bob paused again.

“The ritual the Goddesses were performing that Halloween night in 1989 had been against Puritan law in 1692. To consecrate the ground where one of the Salem witches was buried was once an offense punishable by death. Which, ironically, is exactly what happened to those beautiful young women in 1989. Someone, or something, decided to punish them.

“Strangely, the bodies of all those executed in 1692 had disappeared shortly after the hangings, never to be found again. This is one of Salem’s greatest mysteries. But the bodies of the Goddesses were left for all to see. Their throats were slashed, their corpses pushed into the same mass grave where their ancestors had once been buried.”

Another lie, Rafferty thought. The bodies of the Goddesses had never been put on display. Where did Bob come up with this nonsense?

“There were only two survivors that night in 1989, a middle-­aged woman and a young girl. The woman was found in Broad Street Cemetery, covered with the blood of the victims, ranting about the unearthly creature who, she claimed, had killed the girls. Most think the woman was the guilty one. A once-­respected historian and scholar, she lost her mind that night and has never recovered. To this day, you can see her wandering the streets of Salem, predicting the death of everyone she meets. She has never been charged. No one could ever prove who the guilty party really was. Some think it was the crazy woman. Others believe the killer is a far more sinister creature, a screaming spirit of ancient powers who returns every Halloween to claim new victims.”

On cue, a high-­pitched scream pierced the air just behind Rafferty.

The group gasped.

Rafferty spun around in time to see Actor Bob’s accomplice run from the woods. “You’d better run,” Rafferty said under his breath. He pushed through the brambles, swearing as a branch snapped back, slapping him on the side of his face.

“What about the little girl?” one of the tourists asked. “What happened to her?”

“No one knows,” Bob replied, pausing once more for effect. “The little girl disappeared shortly after the murders. No one has seen or heard from her since.”

At the sound of Rafferty’s uncontrolled groan, the now terrified tourists reeled around. Even Actor Bob held his breath until he spotted Rafferty coming through the brambles.

“Are we just about done?” Rafferty asked. “Or is there more to this ridiculous story you’re trying to sell these poor people? Bob, you know you’re not allowed to do this here.”

Rafferty hated that the still-­unsolved case had become fodder for fright tours and tourist dollars, taking on mythical and paranormal proportions and embellished with exaggerated details that simply weren’t true. The murders had taken place years before he arrived in Salem, but, to Rafferty’s mind, the lack of closure was a stain on the police department that he now ran.

Rafferty escorted the tourists back to the hearse, then led the car out of the parking lot and onto Boston Street, turning left at the intersection and continuing downtown to the far end of Essex Street, which was party central.

As always, the pedestrian-­only walkway was full of revelers: pirates, sexy witches, monsters, and zombies. Lots of zombies. The undead outnumbered the pirates and witches about ten to one. From the middle of the crowd, he could hear the amplified voices of the evangelists preaching fire and brimstone to the revelers, damning their souls to Hell unless they repented and stopped partying. They had added drums this year and cymbals that clanged each time a preacher mentioned Hell. The partiers were laughing and applauding. It didn’t seem like there would be any confrontations between the groups tonight.

At a gathering on the corner, Rafferty saw a family wearing homemade costumes that featured bloody stumps where their limbs should have been. They were pulling a little red wagon full of body parts. He watched another man who stood on the sidelines dressed as an oven, complete with burners that turned off and on. A very convincing set of duct-­taped Siamese twin dogs ran in front of his cruiser, nipping at each other’s faces, frustrated by their unnatural confinement. The usuals were present and accounted for, too, the Frankensteins and the mummies posing for photos at their regular posts by the Peabody Essex Museum, out-­of-­touch vampires still sporting sparkling glitter in homage to Twilight. They’ll be zombies next year, Rafferty thought. Vampires had been passé in Salem for quite a while now.

He felt sorry for some of the store owners, the ones who paid rent for shops no one could get to through these crowds. It happened every year. Dozens of fortune-­tellers set up their booths on Essex Street right in front of the year-­round shops that were vying for the same customers. The competition between the resident and visiting psychics had been a big problem a few years back. As a result, Salem now licensed its psychics before allowing them to set up their temporary booths in October.

“How the hell do you license a psychic?” Rafferty had asked when he’d heard about the plan. “I mean, do you have them do a reading and then just wait a few months to see if any of their predictions come true?”

“We’ll follow San Francisco’s lead,” the town clerk had told him. “We’re going to use their psychic licensing standards.”

“Of course we are.” Rafferty had laughed, relieved he didn’t have to figure out how to do something so ridiculous. It turned out that all they had to do was check criminal backgrounds before granting licenses. Anyone without a past could now read the future.

From Essex Street, Rafferty drove over to Pickering Wharf. Traffic was bumper to bumper. Some partiers were heading out of the city before the fireworks at the end of the evening, but many were still trying to get in. He was happy to see that the group down by the harbor was fairly docile. He rolled down his window to speak to a patrolman who’d come up from Jamaica Plain.

“Just stick around long enough for the traffic to die down, then either head home or over to the party at the Hawthorne. Best Halloween party in town.”

“Will do, thanks.”

The Hawthorne Hotel hosted the famous Witches Ball annually, a few nights before Halloween. Tonight would be their more traditional costume party, with prizes given for the best creations; a few years back, Rafferty and his wife, Towner, had been judges.

He parked his car by Bunghole Liquors and walked over to the wharf.

Ann Chase was locking up her Shop of Shadows early tonight.

Six feet tall with thick red hair free-­falling halfway down her back, and a “grey witch” by her own admission, Ann practiced neither white nor black magic but something in between. Tonight, she was wearing her traditional black witch’s robe. It moved with her stride like a flock of blackbirds, making her look even more magical than usual, if that was possible.

People claimed Ann had a magnetic charge that defied normal boundaries. Depending on your own polarity, you generally found yourself standing either too close to or too far away from Ann Chase. Rafferty intentionally placed himself into the latter category—­as much as he wished it weren’t true, their history meant he kept her at arm’s length whenever possible.

Ann had once explained to him why it was her choice to practice grey magic instead of the more common “white magic” that most Salem witches were into. A black magic witch—­the bad, menacing kind you saw on television or in The Wizard of Oz—­was an unnuanced caricature no self-­respecting Salem witch would embrace. Besides, any witch worth her salt knew that every “black” spell you performed came back to you threefold.

“So why don’t you stick with the love potions and lottery ticket enhancers that most witches sell around here?” he’d asked.

“The world is too messed up to be a bliss ninny, Rafferty. Sometimes you need to fight back. You of all people should know that.”

Ann normally played the good witch, selling everything from herbal remedies to lace. But sometimes, when she got bored with the tourists, she liked to scare them. Especially on Halloween.

“Had enough of the tourists, have you?” Rafferty laughed.

“That’s an understatement.”

“Mickey tells me you started a rumor that there’s some weird energy out there tonight.” His tone was dismissive. He looked at the wharf again. Nothing seemed amiss. People were now watching the fireworks exploding over the harbor, illuminating the docked replica of the Friendship. Looking at the great sailing ship, he imagined himself—­for an instant—­back in the early 1800s, when hundreds of the huge vessels still sailed from Salem, once the richest port in the New World.

“You doubt me, do you?” Ann’s expression was one of amusement.

“Wouldn’t dare.” He laughed again, in spite of himself.

“It’s the blood moon,” she insisted, “and the eclipses.” She gestured to the sky. The clouds had lifted, and now the waxing quarter-­moon shone with no remaining trace of red. The lunar eclipse a few weeks ago had occurred during the day and wasn’t visible from the East Coast, but that night, the full “blood moon” had been the color of rust.

Rafferty knew the lore. His Irish American grandmother had called it a hunter’s moon, but the Pagans had coined this more ominous phrase. It was simply October’s full moon. “The blood moon rose a couple of weeks ago,” Rafferty said. “So I doubt that’s the culprit.”

“It’s the tetrad, Rafferty.” Ann sighed as if explaining to a child. “Four lunar eclipses. This weird energy you don’t believe in isn’t going to end until September of next year.”

As if to prove Ann right, a wind suddenly gusted around them, creating a screeching sound that would fit right in at the haunted houses on Derby Street. It stopped as quickly as it had started.

“You doing parlor tricks again?” Rafferty asked.

“Hey, I didn’t do that. That one came from the other side.”

More Pagan lore. Halloween and its Pagan predecessor, Samhain, were the time of year when the veil between the worlds of the living and the dead was supposed to be at its thinnest. The things Rafferty had learned since moving here! He didn’t buy any of it, of course. “You think it’s some kind of warning?”

“I think it’s more like a preamble.” She stared at him as she spoke. She was serious.

Despite his skepticism, Rafferty shivered.

;

The fireworks had ended, and the witches were gone. Rose Whelan settled her cart under the only oak left standing at the top of Gallows Hill, not far from the pavilion, with its caving roof and urine stench. The banshee music was in her ears tonight, and death was everywhere. Each fall, the leaves looked exhausted before they began to reveal the true colors that lay beneath their green masks. Every year, as they felt fall’s inescapable death pull, they turned the reds and oranges and yellows that drew tourists to New England. The maples, whose leaves were always the first to turn, were naked now, their webbed branches sweeping the dark sky like witches’ brooms. Only the oaks still held their scarlet flames.

Rose was exhausted, too. She greeted the tree as she sat down under it. Then she spoke to the pigeons; she was simply going to join them for the one night, she explained. Soon, she was drifting off, moving in and out of consciousness, dreaming a recurring nightmare from her stay at the state hospital. In it, the witches’ hanging tree was chopped down, and then its massive trunk was floated along the North River toward open ocean, like a Viking ship carrying the souls of the dead to Valhalla. The dream woke her up, as it did every time she had it. Though she’d been dozing for only a short while, it took her a moment to get her bearings. It was the cooing of the pigeons that reminded her: Gallows Hill, a misleadingly named park that had nothing to do with what really happened here.

“If it weren’t for me,” Rose told the birds, “historians would still claim Salem built a gallows to execute them. On this very spot.” She shook her head. “You wouldn’t be living here if they had. You wouldn’t build your nests where any such thing had happened, would you? Of course not.”

The hanging spot, on Proctor’s Ledge, sat unmarked, abandoned, and overgrown next to the Walgreens parking lot just below. The hanging tree, on which the condemned had been executed, had vanished long ago, and even the crevasse that had served as their mass grave was barely visible now, but Rose could still feel it there, unsanctified and cursing the whole area with bad luck. The Great Salem Fire had started right across the street in 1914, destroying hundreds of houses and leaving half the population homeless. To this day, there was crime, violence, and a darkness the neighborhood couldn’t shake. The only way to stop it was to finish the blessing they had started that night on Proctor’s Ledge, the night her girls were murdered.

Rose had been wrong that night, taking the girls up there. Not because the place didn’t need to be consecrated, but because the remains of the executed from 1692 were no longer there. Shortly after the hysteria ended, the bodies had begun to disappear from the crevasse into which they had been thrown. Two of the bodies had been taken by their families and buried properly, but the remains of the others executed that dark year had simply vanished. What in the world had happened to them?

“Find the hanging tree, and you will solve the mystery,” the oak trees had told Rose over and over, and she had come to believe them. “Find the tree and finish the blessing. For it is not just the wrongly executed who need God’s mercy, but the tree itself for the part it was forced to play.”

Rose had listened carefully when the trees began to speak. The oaks had saved her that horrible night in 1989, and she owed them a debt of gratitude. Finding the hanging tree had become Rose’s sole purpose in life.

The birds appeared unimpressed, and Rose closed her eyes again, sighing. “There was a hanging tree,” she mumbled, her speech slowing as she grew sleepier. “That is true. Down there.” She pointed toward Proctor’s Ledge. Rose hadn’t been back to the spot since that night. This was as close as she dared get.

“The hanging tree disappeared . . . everything disappeared. The tree, the remains of the nineteen people they executed as witches, and even the young women I used to know.” Rose began to doze. “You’ll disappear one day, too,” she murmured to the birds, her voice slowing even more. “You don’t know that, but it’s true. Everything disappears. The banshee takes them all . . .” Her head dropped to her chest, and she became silent.

“Hey, grandma, the witches all went home.”

Rose’s eyes snapped open. There were three boys standing too close in front of her. The one who’d spoken couldn’t be more than fifteen. Low-­riding baggy jeans and heavy boots made him look younger than the OG tattoo on his arm.

“I’m not a witch.”

He moved even closer, smirking, his blue eyes in stark contrast to the dark look he focused on Rose. “I know exactly who you are. And I know what you did.”

“Keep your distance from me,” Rose warned.

“Good idea,” he said, fanning his face. “You got a real stink there, grandma. When’s the last time you took a shower?”

“Go home,” the second kid said, shoving her.

“She doesn’t have a home, do you, grandma?” OG laughed.

“Keep your hands off me,” Rose said, pressing her back against the tree, hearing her pulse in her ears. “I’m not afraid of you.”

“You should be,” the second kid said, laughing.

“You’re the one who should be afraid,” Rose countered.

“Yeah? Why’s that?” the second kid taunted. “You planning to kill me the same way you killed the rest of them? By screaming?”

“Screaming?” OG started to laugh. “She didn’t kill them by screaming. That’s just what she told the cops. She slashed their throats.”

“I know,” the second kid said.

“I don’t want to kill anyone.” Rose hoped she wouldn’t have to. She thought of Olivia, Susan, and Cheryl.

“She’s crazy,” the third kid said. “Let’s go.”

Rose liked this one. His eyes were still soft. She spoke directly to him. “It’s her you have to be afraid of. Not me.”

“Who?” Soft Eyes asked, looking around.

She turned back to OG. “She could kill you right now and no one could stop her.”

“Did you hear that? She said she could kill me.” OG pulled a knife out of his pocket. “Seems like I’m the one holding the blade tonight. Be afraid, grandma. Be very afraid.” With a quick slash, he drew the dull side of the blade across her neck.

Rose scrambled to her feet.

“I didn’t say you could leave,” OG said.

“He did.” Soft Eyes turned to the second kid. “He told her to go.”

“Well, I didn’t,” OG said. “Sit back down.” He pushed hard, slamming her back against the tree, knocking the wind out of her.

“You’re the one who needs to sit down,” Rose choked. “If you don’t, you’re going to die.”

OG laughed. “How’s that?”

“You’re in mortal danger. From the banshee.”

“The What-­she? Bee-she?” Soft Eyes said.

“You know the story,” the second kid said. “She’s the one who killed all those girls. Said a banshee did it. By screaming.”

“That’s right,” Rose said. “She could kill you, too.”

“I told you she was crazy,” Soft Eyes said. “Come on, let’s get out of here.”

“No way,” OG said, grinning at Rose. “I want to hear this. Tell my friend here about the banshee. It’s Halloween, grandma. I want to hear a scary story.” He held the point of the blade against her cheek.

She could see his life. There had already been violence in it, a lot of it. A string of brutality stretched out before him. She didn’t see his death the way she could with most people. What she saw when she looked into his empty eyes was the death of everyone around him.

“Tell him, or I’ll kill you right here. And no one can stop me. Tell him the same story you told the cops. About the banshee,” OG insisted.

She turned back to the one with the soft eyes. This was the one who would need to understand one day. She swallowed hard.

“Tell him!” OG ordered. “Once upon a time . . .” he prompted, pressing the knife harder against her skin.

“All right,” Rose said, taking a breath.

“When I was growing up, my Irish grandmother told me there was a sacred oak back in the old country called the Banshee Tree. It was a wild wreck of a thing struck by lightning years earlier.”

Soft Eyes just stared at her.

“Some believed the Gaelic goddess of life and death was imprisoned inside that same tree for many centuries before the storm, tricked by the Christian priests who had come to Ireland to convert the Celtic tribes and would tolerate no gods but their own, and certainly no goddesses. Theirs was the one and only God, they said to justify her capture. Some say it was the Cailleach they imprisoned, but some called her by other names. You see, there were many goddesses who dealt with life and death. The imprisonment changed the nature of the goddess, diminishing her to the size of the fairies who dwelt in the mounds. It was a tragedy of great magnitude.

“But the tree loved the imprisoned goddess and took pity on her. Not yet loyal to the priests who had newly arrived, the tree hatched a plan: to free the captive goddess, the oak tree courted the strike.”

The second kid snorted. “What the fuck are you talking about?”

“Shut up and she’ll tell you,” OG said.

“The storm that killed that oak was the worst in memory; the scream of the wailing wind circled the town once, twice, and then a third time, terrifying everyone. The lightning bolt vaporized the water in the wood, exploding its limbs and—­some say—­freeing the captive goddess. But freeing the goddess was the worst thing the tree could have done, for her imprisonment had changed her very nature, turning her from a goddess to a banshee, not the ones you’ve heard about, who only predict death, but one who actually kills.”

“A killer banshee.” The second kid laughed. “Right.”

“I thought a banshee was some kind of ATV,” Soft Eyes said.

“The tree should have left the goddess imprisoned, for freeing it would have consequences far beyond anything the oak could have imagined. The turning had made the goddess hate. Her size was still diminished, and her powers were no longer strong enough to determine life and death. She needed a host. Life no longer interested her; it was only death she craved now. Her sustenance became hate and fear, and where these baser emotions dwelled, the banshee goddess would always find a willing host.

“It was the tree that, perhaps, suffered the most, for it was forced to bear witness to the carnage it had unleashed. After the lightning strike that freed the turned goddess and forevermore, the tree’s sap has run red, as if it were bleeding.”

“Bleeding trees?” the second kid sneered. “Goddesses turning . . .”

Rose shuddered to remember just how that goddess had turned. That night in 1989, Rose had lost them all to the creature the goddess had become: the banshee. Those young women the banshee killed had been like her own daughters. On that horrible night, after it happened, after the shrieking stopped, the world had quieted and then disappeared. Rose had found herself staring into an eternal emptiness that stretched in every direction and went on forever. When the keening began, Rose had believed that the sound was coming from her own lips. Then she’d seen the tree limbs and branches start to move with the breath of the sound itself, their last leaves burning in the black sky like crackling paper. Then the trees had begun to speak. Come away now, the trees had said. Come away. Their mournful keen had jumped from one tree to another, and Rose had followed. But something had been unleashed by their ritual. What had been meant to consecrate had instead released something else, something that had jumped into Rose.

“You’re out of your mind, old lady,” OG said, enjoying the flash of his knife in the moonlight as he played the blade across her cheek, this time drawing blood.

It was the last thing he saw before the unearthly screeching began.

Reading Group Guide

1. Contemporary Salem is a safe haven for neo-witches, greatly enhancing the city’s tourist trade, but there are many who want to “ditch the witch.” Could a modern day witch hunt happen in Salem again, and, if so, what might it look like? Are witch hunts happening in other parts of the world?

2. “You know who you are, you have always been other,” Rose says in her Book of Trees. In what way is each character in the book “other”? Rose later claims every culture, and every individual, harbors a prejudice against those they consider “other”. Do you agree?

3. Callie longs for home and family, and particularly for a mother figure, having lost her own mother at a young age. How does Callie fulfill that dream, and at what cost?

4. Is the banshee a goddess or a monster? Its power seems to reside in a woman’s raised voice. How does that power manifest in the hands of the different characters?

5. At one point in the story, Rose tells Callie not to “court the strike.” What does she mean, and why is this important to the story?

6. Social media is both a resource and a curse in the novel. The wealth of available information helps Rafferty with his case, but the opinions of anonymous posters also condemn Rose, mirroring Salem’s accusers of 1692. Discuss the positive and negative impacts of social media.

7. Brunonia Barry, who lives in Salem, is often surprised by the generational guilt the city still suffers for the 1692 witch hangings. In what ways does this manifest in the story?

8. Sound and vibration figure in The Fifth Petal, with a capacity to both hurt and heal. How does the banshee’s killer sound relate to vibration and music therapy? How does the music of the spheres that Callie hears during meditation relate to the ancient music heard in Matera?

9. Religion played a huge role in 1692 Salem, as did misogyny and fear of the unknown. Discuss Rose’s quote: “Tell me what you want, and I’ll tell you who you think you are. Tell me what you fear, and I’ll tell you who you really are.”

10. Trees symbolize both the interconnectedness of all life and the roots of humanity in this story. How does the sacred oak help Rose, and what is the significance of the Tree of Life? What does it mean to Callie in her translation of Rose’s Book of Trees?

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