Bitter Spirits - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"I want to know why you tried to poison me with Gu."
k.n.o.bby fingers tightened around the pencil he was holding.
"Know who I am, now?" Winter asked. "Or do you poison so many people that you can't remember?"
"Magnusson," the man whispered.
They held each other's gaze as discordant sounds from the temple seeped under the heavy canvas of the tent. "You drank the Gu but are unaffected?" The old man was genuinely surprised.
"Another magic worker removed the curse."
Shadows clung to bags of loose skin beneath his eyes. "I should've never taken that job."
"You really shouldn't have." Winter moved his jacket aside and watched Wu's gaze settle on the gun strapped next to his ribs.
The old man gave him a dismissive wave. "I lost my wife ten years ago, and with her pa.s.sing, the will to live, so threatening me is futile. I am looking forward to the afterlife far too much to worry about dying. Save the violence for someone younger who is still under the illusion that there is happiness on this plane."
If anyone understood apathy born of grief, Winter did. And when he pictured harboring that kind of hopelessness for an entire decade, he almost pitied the old man. But not enough to excuse him. "Your problems are your own. I just want information."
"All you had to do was ask-I have no loyalties. What would you like to know?"
"Everything."
Wu leaned back in his seat. "I was hired to do a job, and was told that an anonymous party was interested in ensuring that you do not work anymore. That you have a family history of mental instability-that you had inherited your father's fragile mind. I was asked to make a potion that would draw ghosts to you and make you crazy."
He hadn't inherited his father's mental illness. The doctors said it could be genetic, but no one else in his family had showed any signs of it. His father had been ill since he was young man-Winter's mother knew about it when she married him. It just didn't get out of hand until a few years ago, when the frenzied episodes worsened.
"So you are telling me that someone paid you to mix up a poison that would draw ghosts to me because they believed this would drive me insane," Winter said. "And when the poison didn't work, you were hired to conduct additional spells to draw ghosts to me with coins and b.u.t.tons."
"I just found out from you that my Gu was unsuccessful. I was hired to make the poison, nothing more. That is my speciality."
"What about Parducci? You make any poison for him?"
He looked at Bo and began speaking rapid Cantonese.
"He doesn't know Parducci. Says he was hired by an old Chinese man in May," Bo interpreted. "He came to his tent, gave no name. Asked for the poison and paid him half up front, half when he came back to pick it up two weeks later."
"Talk to me, not him," Winter said to the old man, patience wearing thin.
"He mentioned your name specifically-no one else's," he replied in English. "The poison is custom-brewed for one individual. Can't be used on everyone."
If that was true, and Wu was a hired gun, then it stood to reason other magic workers were being hired for their specialties. Maybe whatever had been done to Parducci was a different kind of magic.
"In early June the man who hired me collected the Gu I made for you," Mr. Wu added. "Haven't seen him since."
"The man gave no name at all? Surely you must have some idea who he was. What did he look like?"
"Western clothes. Maybe fifty, sixty years old, maybe younger. Average height and weight. Nothing special about him. He had a forgettable face and he never gave a name. Apart from what you already know about the poison, he was insistent that the Gu not kill you directly. Some recipes for Gu are used for other purposes-sometimes to kill. He said I must be absolutely sure it wasn't deadly. It was only meant to cause a nervous breakdown."
This just didn't make sense. It was cowardly. Pa.s.sive.
"He claimed he was working for someone with a higher cause," Wu said.
"What kind of cause?" Aida asked, speaking for the first time since they'd arrived.
"One that would liberate Chinatown from the Gwai-lo."
Aida's brows knitted. "Who are the Gwai-lo?"
"White men," Bo said quietly.
Winter shook his head. "Nonsense. I have no business in Chinatown."
Wu spoke in a hushed voice. "I don't know for certain, but I think they mean to liberate Chinatown from the entire city. A quiet rebellion, the man told me. Take power not by force, but by controlling the money."
A quiet rebellion. And one of the easiest ways to control money these days was to control booze. Winter thought of all the booze problems in Chinatown . . . St. Laurent getting nabbed by the Feds in the raid. And now Parducci. Sweat bloomed over Winter's forehead. "Have you heard of a secret mystical tong?"
The man shook his head.
Winter pressed further. "One that's headed up by a purported necromancer?"
Wu's eyes narrowed. Bo rattled off a longer explanation in Cantonese.
"I've never heard of such a thing," Wu said. A lie. Winter had seen something in the old man's eyes when Bo was talking. "I'm sorry. I've already told you more than I should have." Before Winter could protest, the man was scribbling something on the back of one his fortune cards. He slid it across the table. It read: the Hive.
Winter's mind was jolted back to something Bo had told him back when all of this started. He'd said that a tong leader who dealt in booze had died locked in a room filled with bees. A chill raced down Winter's spine. "Where can I find them?"
Wu shook his head, a look of defeat, maybe even commiseration behind his eyes. "I truly do not know. This temple isn't under tong protection, and my work is the only thing that holds my interest. I am uninterested in politics and would prefer to be left alone. I only helped the man who requested the Gu because I needed the money."
Winter stared at him for a long moment. The man finally held out his hands and made an appeal to Bo in Cantonese.
"He says that's everything he knows," Bo translated.
Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't, but Winter suspected he wouldn't get anything more out of the man by threatening him. He'd have the old man monitored night and day, find out who he visited, who visited him. And in the meantime, they now had the name of the secret tong. Something small, to be sure, but hope is often kindled by small things.
Winter leaned closer. "If anyone else comes to you asking for any more of these kinds of favors, I'd appreciate if you'd get word to me at Pier 26 before accepting the work. Whatever they pay, I'll pay more. I can be a good friend for a temple like this. I can even ensure that you are left alone to live out the rest of your hopeless, depressing life in peace and quiet."
The man laughed. "Now that's something. Much more motivating than a bullet."
"Then we have an understanding?"
"Yes, Mr. Magnusson. I believe we do."
"One more thing," Aida said, surprising Winter. "Can you really see the future?"
Mr. Wu gave her a tight smile. "If I could, I very much doubt I'd be wasting my talents in a place like this."
TWENTY-THREE.
WINTER CLAIMED HE WAS TOO BUSY TO SEE HER THE FOLLOWING day, chasing down this Hive tong, and talking to the last remaining bootlegger in the Big Three. Even so, she suspected part of the reason for his busy schedule had to do with punis.h.i.+ng her for the news about New Orleans. Maybe some time apart would help him come to his senses, so she didn't protest. Just went to work the next night, a little sad, a little anxious, and took the midnight streetcar home to an empty apartment.
After getting ready for bed, she opened her locket and thought of her brother. Before he'd left for training camp, Sam told her about something he'd once read: that people could fall in love with anyone, given the right circ.u.mstances. This meant that there was no such thing as soul mates or a One True Love for anyone, he said. Love was something people used to prop themselves up. It created dependency and distracted from learning and personal growth. It also inevitably led to loss. Therefore, one's goal in life should be to remain single, he theorized; avoid love, avoid a lifetime of pain and suffering. The world was falling apart anyway-why would anyone want to get married and, heaven forbid, bring another child into such a mess?
For once in her adult life, Aida heard Sam's words in her head and had doubt. This upset her on a couple of levels. It upended her world to even consider for a moment Sam might've been wrong. And yet, at the same time, it felt as though she was defacing his memory, wronging him from the beyond. Not for the first time, she wished she could discuss it with him. Ironic that she was a medium but couldn't channel him. Couldn't even find another medium to help her, because she had nothing of his to use for memento mori; the photograph she owned wasn't in his possession long enough to act as a magnet. He would probably say this proved something about the absurdity of life.
Setting the locket on her nightstand, she slipped beneath the bedcovers and tried to block out Sam's words. It took a long while to fall asleep, and when she did, she dreamed of Winter standing outside the incense-filled temple from the day before. Then the scene changed, and she was watching his hand slipping away from hers as she reached out the window of a departing train. When he was just a speck on the receding landscape, she sat down in an empty train car and unwrapped candy with a beehive printed on the wrapper. It tasted of honey, only far too sweet and bitter. She tried to spit it out when she saw a shadow moving across the window. Just as she turned to study it, the train burst into flames.
Even inside her sleeping mind, she distantly recognized the recurring dream. It was like an old enemy that she'd held at an arm's length for so long, they were almost friends by default. The earthquake. The Great Fire. Holding on to Sam while the city burned to smoldering ash. Her parents out of reach.
She tried to wake herself up, but the dream was so vivid.
So real.
She came awake with a start to find that it was real! She was not dreaming.
Yellow and orange flames leapt from her apartment door, quickly spreading across the floor and over the inner wall. Aida lurched from her bed and spied movement outside her window.
Someone was racing down the fire escape.
Billows of black smoke rose from the flames. She coughed and stumbled. Her vision wavered. She tried to walk, but her knees buckled.
What was wrong with her?
"Help!" she shouted, again and again.
It was her absolute worst nightmare. The fire was consuming the small apartment. Already, the door to her bathroom was blocked by flames. The only way out was the window.
Dizzy and confused, she glanced around and despaired. She was going to lose everything.
This couldn't be happening.
She crawled to the open closet and pulled herself up by the door handle. Her handbag was here on the back of the door, thank G.o.d, along with the the fox coat. Tearing it from its hanger, she coughed against her forearm and waved away smoke, desperately looking for Ju's dress, but it was impossible. She couldn't see her bed anymore, the smoke was so thick.
She shoved her arms into the coat's sleeves and sloppily ducked onto the fire escape. The iron creaked and groaned as she zigzagged down the steps, back and forth, one story at a time, until she reached the bottom, one story above the sidewalk.
She pushed a bare heel against the drop-down ladder. It was rusted. Not budging.
A blaring bell nearly startled her off the fire escape. Someone had pulled the alarm. The girls on her floor would hear it. Mr. and Mrs. Lin-dear G.o.d! The whole building might be lost if the fire department didn't get here quickly.
She kicked at the ladder again, surveying the streets for people. It had been after midnight when she'd fallen asleep, and she had no idea what time it was now. Two A.M.? Three? Not late enough for the milkman.
In the distance, a group of late-night revelers sauntered down Grant. She screamed for them at the top of her lungs. Had they heard her? It was too dark to tell. Yellow light pooled at the bases of the dragon lampposts dotting the sidewalk. The lights swayed as a wave of dizziness rolled over her.
"Hey!"
The people had seen her-they were rus.h.i.+ng up the incline. More onlookers emerged from the apartment building next door. She called out to them, trying to get someone to knock on Golden Lotus's door to wake up the Lins. The other girls living in the apartments were in danger; just because she'd gotten out didn't mean they'd be so lucky.
The stairs creaked. She glanced up and saw flames pouring from her window. Then the iron railing made a horrible sound. Rusted bolts ripped away from the brick building.
The world fell away beneath her feet.
She blindly gripped the railing as the bottom flight of the metal stairs collapsed and crashed to the sidewalk with an explosive Boom! that rattled her bones.
Flung from the fire escape, she sailed sideways. Her back smashed against the building, knocking the wind from her lungs. Pain ripped through her body. Her vision went blinding white for several moments, then slowly pulsed back to reality.
Not dead.
A rusted iron dragon skeleton groaned in front of her as a cloud of dust swirled from its fallen carca.s.s.
She inspected herself. The pain receded, which was odd. She should be really hurting, but all she felt was numb, physically and emotionally. Her tongue darted out and swept the side of her mouth, tasting blood and sweetness and that awful honeyed bitterness from her dream.
Strange hands lifted Aida to her feet, then steadied her wobbling. Her foot was bleeding.
Cantonese and English erupted around her as a crowd gathered. She a.s.sured people that she was okay, which might not have been entirely true. She was so dreadfully sleepy and dizzy. It was all she could do to stand without aid.
"Miss Palmer, Miss Palmer!"
Aida turned to see Mrs. Lin's tiny figure racing toward her in a housecoat and slippers, her tightly wound hair now tumbling loose to her waist.
"Are you badly hurt?"
"I'm fine." Aida's handbag still dangled around her wrist. A small miracle.
"What happened?"
"Someone came up the fire escape and set fire to my room."
"Oh, no, no, no-this is terrible."
"I broke the fire escape on the way down. I'm sorry for that and the fire."
Mrs. Lin shook her head dismissively. "All the girls are out. We have insurance. I'm the one who should be apologizing to you-I should have done something about the fire escape."
"You couldn't have known."
"Oh, but I did," she said, distressed. "My mother warned me to repair the fire escape last time you channeled her for me. I should've listened."
Wailing sirens announced two fire trucks. Everyone craned their necks to watch the men setting up wooden ladders to reach what was left of the fire escape so they could drag a hose up to the window. Across the street, Aida leaned against a brick wall, half dazed, watching the fog-capped neighborhood fill with cars and gawkers.
Police arrived. Mrs. Lin dragged an officer to Aida, who took down her story with the nub of a worn pencil: no, she didn't see a face, nor did she know how the fire was started or why. Someone else chimed in, saying he'd spied two men jumping from the fire escape into the bed of a truck that idled at the curb, but it took off before he could make out the model.