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"No," he told Manny. "I think I did."
Doctor Yip's car sped out of North Beach. But instead of heading to Chinatown, as Aida expected, they took side streets through Telegraph Hill and turned south on the Embarcadero.
She was trying to stay levelheaded about the fact that she was being kidnapped, and that the man who'd held her hostage and put his hand on her breast was now pressed against her side and sporting a hard-on. He was also still in possession of the noxious cloth. Though it had been put away inside an old shaving tin, he held it like a threat, and if it weren't for the window being cracked, she might pa.s.s out from the fumes.
And on her other side was the man who was haunting Winter, who'd killed the fortune-teller, set her apartment on fire . . .
"Where are you taking me?" she asked for the third time as they motored up the coast. They'd pa.s.sed Winter's pier and the China Basin almost half an hour back, and had since crossed three sets of railroad tracks. All she could see now were warehouses on one side of the road and freight slips on the other, and the signs she glimpsed hinted they might be driving through a meatpacking district. Best she could tell, they were heading out of the city, somewhere along the coast. Definitely unfamiliar territory.
Doctor Yip finally answered her, speaking for the first time since she'd gotten inside the car. "We are going somewhere Mr. Magnusson will never find you. You might call it my little nest." He smiled.
"You are the Beekeeper?"
"Some call me that."
"That afternoon we came to your shop-"
"Oh yes. That was quite a surprise. For a moment, I thought you'd uncovered my ident.i.ty. Very surreal to see Mr. Magnusson standing in front of me. Providence, as you say here in the States, was smiling down on me that day."
"These two were working for you?"
"Not when they came into my shop that afternoon." The herbalist crossed his legs, pus.h.i.+ng himself closer as he settled an arm on the back of the seat like they were old friends. "But Ju-Ray Wong is a weak boss who is uninterested in expanding his territory. After he banished the boys from his tong, I convinced him to work for me."
"Because you are going to take over Chinatown by controlling the liquor supply?"
"I was chosen by celestial deities to lead a quiet rebellion. My shen spirits brought me across the ocean from Hong Kong to save my people from the Gwai-lo. The Chinese have been treated like slaves in this country, captured like pigs, forced to build your railroads. After the Great Fire, the city tried to move Chinatown and seize our land, and when we resisted, you kept us in cages on Angel Island, separating our families for years."
"I didn't. And you were in Hong Kong."
"But my brother was not. He was detained on Angel Island for almost a decade before he died. He was jailed for no crime, but they treated him like a criminal."
Aida certainly could empathize with grief for a lost sibling, but she didn't lash out and kill people for revenge when Sam died.
Yip rocked his foot. "I am here now, ready to avenge my brother's life and lead my people to reclaim what is theirs. But I will do it my way, by my own creed. My mission is a peaceful one, because the shen spirits have given me a prophecy: I will help my people gain control of the city without spilling one single drop of blood."
It took several moments for this to sink in. Winter's hauntings, the "voice of G.o.d" telling the bootlegger to turn himself in, the tipoff for the raid, all the unrest in Chinatown . . . her fire. And the way Yip had gotten upset when these two thugs had broken into his shop-he'd shouted at them not to spill blood, claiming his shop was holy.
"I'm a peaceful man, a healer-not a killer," the herbalist said. "I have no blood debt on my hands. I am clean."
"Just because you didn't pull the trigger doesn't mean you're not guilty."
He gave her a patient smile. "Death is part of war, Miss Palmer. That is hard to hear when you are on the losing side."
"And on whose side are the tong leaders in Chinatown? Haven't you halted their business?"
He rocked one bee slipper near her s.h.i.+ns. "They were given a chance to be on the winning side, but they all chose money over honor. And regarding guilt, every soldier knows that there are both good and bad ways to kill. I am taking the higher path by avoiding death if possible. And if death is necessary, I arrange for the killing to be done by the victim's own hands."
"Like the fortune-teller?"
"Suicide was the only honorable option. Mr. Wu violated an oath of silence and betrayed his own people to the enemy."
"And what about me, huh? That fire nearly killed me. How is that not on your hands?"
He sighed. "The fire was to scare you away from Mr. Magnusson. I only found out about the laudanum after the fact. They took it upon themselves to stray outside the guidelines of my orders and took things too far. Ah, look-we are almost home."
The car slowed as they headed past a sign for Hunter's Point, then another for a dry dock, where several ma.s.sive s.h.i.+ps sat inside channels, moored on land by networks of planks and stilts. "What is this?"
"Where unseaworthy s.h.i.+ps are repaired. The rusting hulk in front of us is the s.h.i.+p that brought me over from Hong Kong. Unfortunately for the Royal Trans.p.a.cific Steams.h.i.+p Company, the Jade Princess would not be able to make the return trip to China, because a strange and terrible fever struck her crew several days before entering port, and during that time her boiler went defective. The repair expenses were too high for the owners to manage, and permit problems seemed to plague them. Luckily I was there to pay the dry-docking costs, so she was signed over to me."
In the moonlight reflecting from the dark bay water in the distance, the beached pa.s.senger s.h.i.+p looked like a great derelict beast. Faint lights flickered inside a couple of the port windows; someone was inside.
Ju's former employees hauled her out of the car and shoved her toward a locked wooden fence that guarded entry to the dry dock. A foghorn wailed in the distance.
"We are quite invisible out here," Doctor Yip said as he unlocked the gate, the planks of which were covered in Chinese characters and strange symbols. "You and I have similar talents, Miss Palmer. Rather infuriating for me, as you ruined my hard work. But now that I have you contained, my efforts with Mr. Magnusson will be more successful. And I have something very special in store for him. Would you like to see what a necromancer can do?"
TWENTY-NINE.
WINTER STOOD IN THE MIDDLE OF DOCTOR YIP'S SHOP, GLa.s.s crunching below his shoes from where he'd busted the door open. His stomach was knotted, his chest tight with a dull, pulsing terror.
The shop was deserted.
Not a d.a.m.n piece of paper with another address or phone number. No paperwork whatsoever: the desk in the back office was completely empty. The shop itself looked as it did when Aida and he first came-minus the broken door.
And the row of gla.s.s jars behind the counter, which Winter had smashed with the register.
He now stared at the dark spot on the counter where the register had been. A twenty-dollar bill sat there, both sides painted with red symbols.
"See if Bo's done checking the alley, would you?" Winter said to Jonte. The driver stepped outside the shop and came back with his a.s.sistant, who'd met them there with a crew of men after Winter had called him from Gris-Gris.
"You know what any of this Chinese means?" Winter asked.
Bo strode to the counter and laid his gun down to examine it. "Black magic."
"I know that much." He couldn't help but wonder if this was the same bill he'd given Yip that afternoon. How many twenties would an herbalist get? Not many.
Then again, Yip was no herbalist.
Winter flipped open a matchbook, struck a match, and lit the bill on fire.
The rest of his men met them out front after canva.s.sing the neighbors, which included an opium den, a locked warehouse, and one small well of apartments. No one knew where the herbalist lived. One lady said a black car dropped him off and picked him up every day.
He forced himself to stay calm. He would not think of the fire in her apartment, or how she'd been drugged. He would not think of what atrocities a kidnapped woman could be forced to suffer in the hands of a man who was trying to liberate Chinatown.
He only thought of what he'd do to that man when he got his hands on him.
Focusing on that, he had Jonte drive back home to keep an eye on Astrid while Bo drove him to Golden Lotus with his crew of men following. But after waking the Lins at an unG.o.dly hour and scaring them half to death, all he discovered was that Mrs. Lin had never asked the herbalist where he lived.
"Is Miss Palmer in trouble?" she asked, gripping her robe closed as she stood in the apartment stairwell next to the restaurant, Mr. Lin standing over her shoulder.
"I think Yip is the one who had the fire set in her room and now he's taken her."
"Oh no. This is my fault," she said in a pained voice. "He seemed like such a nice man, but I should have never sent her to see him."
"Don't blame yourself. He's after me, not her."
His fault, but he would fix it. He would not lose her. Not if he had to destroy half the city finding her.
He could spare a man to watch Golden Lotus, make sure they wouldn't be left vulnerable. Mrs. Lin said she'd start calling her friends and find out if anyone knew anything about Doctor Yip. Doubtful, but Winter wasn't going to discount anything at this point.
He asked the Lins to call his house and leave a message for him there if they heard anything, then walked out into the chilly night air with Bo to rejoin the rest of his men.
"We should go to Ju," Bo said. "If the men who attacked you at Yip's shop were patrolling Ju's territory, then their replacements might be working the same area. They might've seen something."
"If so, that's great, but I'm not going to sit around waiting for information while Yip does G.o.d only knows what to Aida. We'll drive to Ju's, but he's not going to be happy, because I'm going to ask him to call all the tong leaders together for a meeting. If they want to take back control of their booze, they're going to have to help me find Aida." He stopped in front of the car. "Doctor Yip seems to want a war. He's got one."
Aida entered the s.h.i.+p on a wide gangplank. The deck was una.s.suming and quiet, the picture of disuse. The inside was another story. The first-cla.s.s entrance, a large two-story open room with a staircase, was filled with wooden crates of alcohol-row after row of teetering stacks, some stamped with recognizable brands, others simply marked GIN. Half of them were painted with Chinese characters.
A small fortune in seized booze.
Aida couldn't quite determine the breadth of the haul, because the s.h.i.+p had no electricity. She could, however, spot the occasional guard meandering in the distance. Maybe ten or twenty men. Probably more she couldn't see. A path of portable lanterns led them through the maze of crates to the staircase at the far end of the room. Tables had been pulled together here to create a small work area, where more armed men sorted through stacks of paperwork and labels. Nearby, several crates stood open, br.i.m.m.i.n.g with bottles nestled inside piles of wood shavings.
When they pa.s.sed, all workers looked up at Yip, hailing him by some Cantonese name Aida didn't catch, and bowing their heads.
"You've managed quite a collection here," Aida noted. "Is this where all the booze in Chinatown went?"
"Quite a bit outside of Chinatown, too," Doctor Yip said with a smile as he stopped to talk with someone at the tables. They spoke in hushed voices for several moments while Aida's gaze jumped around the room, looking for anything that might be helpful: an unguarded door, a weapon . . . an escape route. The man with the cauliflower ear tightened his grip around the back of her neck.
"Just try it," he whispered in her ear as pain shot down her shoulder. "I might not be able to hurt you in front of him, but wait until later."
His grip softened when Yip ended his conversation and rejoined the group. "All right, Miss Palmer, onward."
A few steps away, lanterns, fuel, and matches were lined up on a desk. Ju's former thugs both took lanterns. Yip took out a flashlight. They were going deeper into the beached whale.
They headed down a flight of steps to the first level below, pa.s.sing by more guards. The scents of gin and wood changed to something danker when they stepped into a long corridor. Yip turned on his flashlight and shone the beam in front of them.
"I hope you find your accommodations to your liking," Yip said as he led them past doors lining either side of the hallway. Pa.s.senger cabins. First-cla.s.s, from their location.
Only the best, Aida thought blackly. But this was no luxury liner built for rich European families to cruise the Mediterranean. This was an old steamer built for transporting large numbers of third-cla.s.s expatriates from Hong Kong.
Yip opened a locked door at the end of the corridor. "Here we are, my dear. Please enter." He held the narrow door open.
The cauliflower-eared man shoved her inside the tight quarters. Her knee banged against something hard. She yelped and tried to get her bearings in the dark. Yip carried one of the lanterns inside and hung it on one corner of the double-bunk berths lining one wall. One chair sat beneath the port window behind her, and a small sink sat at her left hip, on the wall opposite the berths. The room smelled of mold and must.
"It's a tight squeeze, but you'll make the most of it," Yip said. "No plumbing, so the sink's useless for anything other than a urinal. If you get desperate enough, you'll appreciate it more."
"How long are you keeping me here?"
"Not long, don't worry. I have something to show you tomorrow."
"Tomorrow?" She suddenly felt claustrophobic, trapped in the narrow s.p.a.ce, and tried to grab Yip's collar.
He lunged out of her range. "Now, now, Miss Palmer. Please show me the same courtesy I've shown you."
The man she'd stabbed in the face with burning incense shoved her backward into the chair as they exited.
"Make yourself at home," Yip called out from the dark hallway. She couldn't see his face anymore. "The fuel in the lantern should last you another hour or so. It will keep the rats and c.o.c.kroaches away."
The door shut. Aida rushed forward, throwing herself at it as the key turned in the lock. Twisting the doork.n.o.b was a waste of energy, but she did it nonetheless. "What do you want from me?" she shouted. No answer came. She pressed her ear to the door and listened to the sounds of retreating footfalls on the squeaking hallway boards.
When they were gone, she began thinking of anything she could use as a weapon. Her handbag was still tangled around her wrist, but her lancet was missing. She groaned, remembering how she spilled everything in the alley before Yip drove up. Had she lost it? Now of all times?
Disheartened, she explored the rest of the cabin. The door was solid and locked. The porthole didn't open, nor could she fit through it if she were to break the gla.s.s.
After she'd exhausted every corner, she plunked down in the chair in defeat and thought about Winter.
"Do you even know I'm gone?" she said, despondent. If tonight was like the last few, he'd be out working until morning. The thought of him just heading out to work after their fight hurt her feelings, but that he might be doing that right now, when she'd been kidnapped? Oh, that made her furious.
Angry was good. If she was mad, then she wouldn't worry about what Yip had planned. She wouldn't notice that the light from the lantern was beginning to dim as it ran low on fuel.
And she wouldn't have to regret that the last words she'd ever hear out of Winter's mouth might be when he told her to leave his house.
Indignant and annoyed, Winter strode out of the Tea Rose brothel with Bo at his side. Several of his men detached themselves from shadows and flanked them as they headed toward the car. It would be daybreak soon. Six hours since that b.a.s.t.a.r.d Yip had taken her.
And he still had nothing.
Four tong leaders sat inside the parlor of the wh.o.r.ehouse-five, including Ju. A small miracle that he'd been able to gather them together so quickly. Not every tong in Chinatown, but some of the big players. And all of them had sat in silence while Bo translated Winter's words. Not a single one of them knew about Doctor Yip or the Beekeeper or the Hive-rather, not one of them admitted to knowing.
They just stared at him with untrusting eyes. One of them looked at him as if he were crazy, organizing a hunt for one woman. A couple others looked at him in pity, maybe for the same reason. They knew his weakness now. A dangerous thing for someone in his position.
"All of that for nothing," Winter grumbled, anger trumping the dread and fear pulsing beneath his skin.
"Give the bosses time to talk," Bo encouraged. "Right now, they are intimidated that you summoned them. Once they loosen up, maybe someone will remember something."
"And by the time they do, Aida could be raped or dead."