motherâs coffee cup clatters to the counter. âDid she confront someone while they vandalized her house?â âNo.â I cut my mom off before she can start imagining all the awful things that could have happened. âSomeone gave her cookies. She ate one and had an allergic reaction that killed her. Isnât that what happened, Officer Shepens?â I assume heâs heard. With an unreadable expression, he studies me over the rim of his cup. âAmanda Highland died this morning from anaphylaxis.â âThat poor family.â Mom sags against the countertop. âWhen I think about what they must be going through . . .â Itâs easy for us to imagine what itâs like to lose someone. To have that hole in the fabric of a family. We live with that every day, and without a donor we could lose one more. Amandaâs family must be in hell. âWait.â Mom shakes her head. âI donât understand why you called the police about this.â The sadness and concern in her face are replaced by an expression that makes everything inside me go still. âItâs terrible that a girl died, but I donât see how an allergic reaction could have anything to do with DJ and what happened here.â âKaylee must have seen or heard something that made her believe the two are connected. Right, Kaylee?â Officer Shepens says calmly. I rub the palms of my hands on my jeans and swallow down the hurt. I shouldnât care. I should be used it. But Iâm not. I hate that Iâm not. âThereâs this website.â âA website?â My mother sighs. âKaylee . . .â Officer Shepens holds up a hand. âTell me about the website, Kaylee.â I keep my eyes on Officer Shepens and say, âItâs new. The site is called NEED and itâs only for Nottawa High School students, but no one is supposed to say what their profile name is or post information that gives away their identity.â Officer Shepens frowns, and inside I cringe. Iâm explaining this wrong. So I try again. âThe website asks the users to tell it what they need. Once the request is accepted, the site gives you a task to perform in order to get what you asked for. And thereâs this message board where people can post links to things they want or post pictures and comment on them. One of the pictures was of the hole in our yard. And there was another with a bakery box sitting on Amandaâs front porch. Iââ âKaylee, let me make sure Iâm understanding you.â Officer Shepens rests his elbows on the table. âYouâre saying thereâs a website with photos of your front yard and of Amandaâs house?â âNot her house,â I answer him. âThe front stoop. There was a green and white bakery box sitting next to the front door. And the photo of our yard was taken before I ran outside. The box hadnât been put into the hole yet. Andââ âAnd you realize this is hard to believe.â Officer Shepensâs voice is kind, but his words turn me cold. âUnless you can show us what youâre talking about . . .â âI can.â I open the cover of my laptop as the doorbell rings. âI can prove that Iâm not making this up.â âHey. Is someone here?â DJâs voice calls from upstairs. Yes, but I donât care. I type in the password as my mother goes to see whoâs at the door. âHey, Mom. Whoâs here?â My desktop appears and I click on my Web browser. Footsteps pound on the stairs. âIs Kaylee around?â Nateâs voice calls from the front door. âI got a message from her and thought I should come over.â âHere,â I say as I click on the bookmark for NEED and turn the screen around to face Officer Shepens. âHey, Nate! Are we going to watch movies again today? That would be awesome. Wow