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"You can't think like that."
"The man who tried to burn her alive in her bed-"
"I know," Bo said firmly. "But he also wouldn't do the deed with his own hands. He's a coward. We will find him."
No other choice existed.
Winter eyed the lights inside a large Chinese bakery and pointed it out to Bo. "Ask to use their telephone. Check in with the house and the pier. Then call up the police station and tell them we're coming in to talk to Inspector Manion."
As much money as Winter pumped into the police force, the inspector better d.a.m.n well be there to receive them. Manion headed up the vice squad in Chinatown. Winter normally would've hated like h.e.l.l to ask for a favor, but at that moment, he just didn't care. If Manion could help him find Aida, nothing else mattered.
Waving away an open car door offered by one of his men, Winter pulled his collar up and huddled against a wall outside the bakery while he waited for Bo. The adrenaline that had been pus.h.i.+ng him forward was fizzling away, leaving him with nothing but imagined glimpses of Aida in increasingly horrifying situations. She wasn't dead. Couldn't be. He would know-completely illogical, but he repeated it in his head until he believed it. She was alive, and he would find her.
And when he did, he would rip out every vertebra in Doctor Yip's spine.
Winter paced the sidewalk, watching Bo inside the bakery as he made the telephone calls; a few curious workers peered back out at him. Winter exhaled heavily and pulled down the brim of his hat. How the h.e.l.l was he going to find the herbalist? Bo had been scouting Chinatown for weeks and had barely found crumbs. Winter tried to rea.s.sure himself that Aida could hold her own, but it didn't help his mood. Even the strongest man could be pinned down when it was many against one.
Winter had never felt so impotent and useless. Scared out of his mind. Plagued with what-ifs. What if they were hurting her? Maybe using fire again, or something else just as sick. After all, this was the man who killed one of the biggest tong leaders in Chinatown with bees.
Maybe the worst of his fears was something he hadn't yet considered. What if he never found out what they were doing to her-what if he never found her? The crus.h.i.+ng darkness that had descended on him after the accident threatened to fall again. He pushed it away.
He watched Bo count off several bills to the bakery owner before marching out into the cold early-morning air. "The house?"
Bo b.u.t.toned up his coat. "Greta says Jonte's sitting in the foyer with a shotgun. The men outside haven't seen anything."
"Pier?"
"Same there. Called Gris-Gris again-Velma said no one's seen anything there, either, but she'll keep the telephone next to her bed, so we can call her on her home line."
Winter grunted in acknowledgment. He'd already begged Velma to help with magic, but she said there was nothing she could do.
"Talked to Dina down at the station," Bo said as he tugged his gloves on. "She said she'd call the inspector to meet us at the station, and she's putting the word out."
"Fine. It'll take us twenty minutes to get there."
Bo put a hand on his arm. "There's one more thing. Dina said you were already on the inspector's call list. Apparently they already called the Seymours."
Winter stilled. "Paulina's parents . . . why?"
"The good news is I think I know how Yip has been manipulating the ghosts haunting you. Remember I told you the original rumor about the secret tong-that the leader was a necromancer? Dina said there's been a lot of grave robberies over the last few months."
"Digging up graves?" Winter mumbled.
"Dina said most of the graves weren't notable. But early last night one particular grave was reported from Oakland, and I don't think it's a coincidence."
"Oh, Christ."
"Paulina's grave was disturbed. Her coffin's been stolen."
The lantern's fuel had long extinguished, but dusky tendrils of daylight from the port window outlined shapes within the cabin. For hours Aida had been listening to every thump, creak, and groan within the beached s.h.i.+p. She heard, at one point, the distinct sounds of a couple having s.e.x-maybe a few rooms away-and occasionally heard doors opening and shutting, but the door she heard now was louder, and it was accompanied by deep voices: one speaking, one answering.
And both voices coming closer.
Heart thumping, Aida silently hefted the lantern then herself into the top bunk and waited. The voices were speaking Cantonese. They stopped at her door.
As the key rasped in the lock, Aida crouched in the cramped s.p.a.ce with the lantern in hand. The door creaked open. She didn't wait to see who was on the other side.
Using all her strength, she swung the lantern from her perch and smashed it into someone's face. A man's voice cried out in pain.
She leapt off the bunk and rushed the doorway, shouldering aside the body that was hunched there. She didn't have a plan-didn't have time to make one. All she could hope was that the surprise of the lantern would put them off guard long enough for her to race down the hall.
She shoved at the second man, trying to get past him as light from his lantern scattered dancing shadows across the walls.
He grabbed her arm and spun her around.
Cauliflower-eared man.
The air whooshed out of her lungs when her back hit the wall.
He struggled with something in his pocket.
She pounded his arm with a fist. Kicked him in the s.h.i.+n. He growled and slapped a wet rag against her mouth.
The noxious cloth from the car.
She tried not to breathe, but her aching lungs betrayed her. And as she inhaled the wretched herbal fumes, she heard shouting down the hall-someone had heard them. She also caught sight of a young Chinese girl carrying a tray of food, and standing nearby, the person she'd thunked with the lantern, who was, serendipitously, the man she'd stabbed in the face with incense sticks.
Should've aimed for your b.a.l.l.s, she thought as darkness took her.
It was almost two in the afternoon when Winter stepped out of the runabout and onto his pier, having returned from Oakland. Another fruitless exercise. No one had witnessed the robbery of Paulina's grave; the night watchman had been drugged. He paid a couple of men to watch his parents' graves, which were untouched-small favors.
Leaving Bo to moor the runabout, he marched up the dock and headed into the bulkhead building that housed his s.h.i.+pping warehouse and offices. Several of his men greeted him. No, they hadn't heard anything. He nodded and made his way from the reception area, bright and warmed by the midday sun glinting through its Embarcadero-facing window, back to the dark cave of his private office.
He hung his hat on the coatrack and settled behind his father's big old desk, wanting badly to lay his head down. Lack of sleep was starting to wear on him. He'd send someone out for coffee; he'd rest when he found her.
Even though he'd just been informed no one had called, he was compelled to pick up the telephone and ask the operator for the same numbers he'd been calling every hour all night-home, Velma, Dina at the police station . . . As if all it took was persistence, and one of these times he'd get the news he wanted.
He picked up the telephone receiver but pressed the hook switch down when he heard commotion up front in reception.
"Magnusson!"
His pulse sped. He knew that voice. "Let him through," he shouted to his men as he hung up the receiver and rose from his chair.
Ju strode through the doorway. "I thought they were going to shoot me where I stood. You need to train your people better, my friend."
"Did the tong leaders talk?" Winter asked in a rush. "Do they know something?"
"Don't know about the tong leaders, but someone else has been talking." Ju smiled and signaled to the person behind him.
Sook-Yin stepped into view. He'd never seen her outside Ju's place. She was dressed like a respectable lady, wearing a dark coat over a black dress. She looked a little older in the dreary light of his office. "Nei hou, Winter."
"Sook-Yin." He canted his head and looked between them. "What's this about?"
Ju leaned against the doorway. "After the tong meeting at the Tea Rose, the girls started chatting. Sook-Yin knows another girl who works for the tong leader Joe Cheung. She's heard a rumor. Go on, Sook-Yin. Tell him what she told you."
"One of Joe's girls, my friend, has a sister. Sister is another gei who is not under tong protection."
"She's a prost.i.tute?" Winter asked.
Sook-Yin nodded. "She took a new job two days back. They pay big money and blindfold girls on drive from brothel to s.h.i.+p."
"s.h.i.+p?"
Sook-Yin nodded. "She says every day they pick up girls late afternoon, take them to s.h.i.+p. Early morning, take them back."
"Tell Mr. Magnusson what's on the s.h.i.+p," Ju said.
"Zau."
Winter stilled. "Booze."
"Crates piled up like skysc.r.a.pers, apparently," Ju said. "Tell him what else."
With a smile revealing the small gap between her front teeth, Sook-Yin gave him a very particular look he'd seen before. It was a sly sort of look that communicated she had something he wanted. And though he'd seen it under different circ.u.mstances, d.a.m.ned if she didn't have something he wanted more than anything she'd offered in the past. "My friend's sister say last night they brought a white woman." Sook-Yin repeatedly tapped a finger across her cheek. Freckles! "She's locked up in a room on s.h.i.+p."
Relief and agony flooded him in equal amounts. His knees nearly buckled. It took several moments for his brain to spin into action. "A s.h.i.+p. What s.h.i.+p?" There were dozens lining the coast. Big s.h.i.+ps, small s.h.i.+ps-miles and miles of them. Knowing that she was on a s.h.i.+p was only slightly better than knowing she was in a building. Maybe worse, if that s.h.i.+p was sailing before he could find it. "Does the girl know anything else that would hint where it was docked?"
Ju gave him a slow grin. "She knew one important thing. The s.h.i.+p isn't on water."
The dry docks. His mind spun in several directions at once. Part of him wanted to race over there now, gun blazing. But he might be putting her in even more danger if they saw him coming. An agonizing choice.
"It will take me a few hours to get all my men together." He glanced at Ju. "Will the other tong leaders help if it gets them their booze back?"
"I'm sure of it," Ju answered.
Winter turned to Sook-Yin. "One last thing. Do you think your girl can ask her sister to sneak something on the s.h.i.+p when she's picked up this afternoon?"
Aida sweated through a never-ending series of bizarre fever dreams in which she was on a boat at sea, pitching and rocking during an angry storm. She woke occasionally, unable to move her limbs. And during those brief waking periods, she was sometimes able to recognize she was still on the beached s.h.i.+p. Other times, she imagined she was in Winter's bed, and wondered why it was so cold.
But it was the jangle of keys on the other side of the door that woke her fully. She lay on the bottom bunk of the cabin. Her head ached, and her body was weak. She glanced down at herself. Clothes were in place, and aside from the headache and lethargy, she didn't appear to be harmed-miracle of miracles. But if Ju's thugs wanted to come back for her, she might not have any fight left.
It wasn't them, however.
The door swung open to lantern light. A new man stood in the corridor-a much bigger man who looked as if he could give Winter a fair fight in a boxing match. He held keys and a lantern, and ushered a young girl inside. Aida pushed herself up on one forearm. The girl walked through a crimson column of twilight beaming from the porthole. Good grief, had she been trapped in this h.e.l.lhole for an entire day?
The girl bent low, wielding a small wooden tray in front of her. It was the same girl from the hallway. She had food-a bottle of beer and something that smelled of dried fish. She murmured something in Cantonese.
"O-oh, no-I'm not touching that," Aida said in a rough voice, waving the tray away. "It's probably got poison in it. You tell Doctor Yip if he's going to kill me, he's going to have to do it properly. I'm not jumping out a window or being burned alive in my own room. And I'm ab-so-lute-ly not poisoning myself."
The girl shook her head. She quickly tapped a napkin on the tray as she whispered something in Cantonese while giving her a strange, intent look.
The man outside the door bellowed a gruff command at the girl. She set the tray down on the chair and backed out of the room, bowing. The man s.n.a.t.c.hed her by the neck and roughly shoved her down the hall, then shut the door and locked it.
Aida waited until their footsteps faded, then rolled off the bunk and crawled to the tray of food. She lifted the napkin and found the most beautiful sight she'd ever seen.
Her silver lancet.
THIRTY.
WHO SENT THE LANCET? VELMA? WINTER? WHOEVER IT WAS, someone knew where she was-or at the very least, knew how to send something to her.
Reeling with hope, she spent several minutes considering how to hide the lancet, and decided to wedge it under her garter, as it was less likely to be found and taken than it would be if it were palmed in her hand.
No one returned for her, so she began inspecting the food. The beer was capped. She smelled it, poured some out to inspect the color, then tasted it in incrementally larger amounts, until she was as certain as she could be under the circ.u.mstances that it was untainted. Once it was finished, out of sheer desperation, she relieved her aching bladder in the rusting sink. Not her finest moment, and she cursed Yip's name for treating her like an animal.
An hour after the food was delivered, the big man returned with a partner. He held up the tin with the noxious cloth as a warning before herding her out of the room. A terrible rush of anxiety rattled her nerves as she was led down the corridor. But instead of heading back to the booze storage, they took her to a room with double doors. The metal plate on the wall, stamped with both Chinese characters and English, read FIRST-CLa.s.s DINING ROOM. They entered.
"Ah, Tai," called a cheery voice in the distance. Yip. "Bring in Miss Palmer."
Her eyes darted around the expansive room. Like the rest of the s.h.i.+p, it lacked electricity, but lit lanterns had been set upon round tables. She could imagine those tables, when the s.h.i.+p had seen better days, covered in white linen and silver tableware; now, they were pushed to either side of the room to make an aisle, broken chairs piled near the walls. Two other sets of doors had been nailed shut with boards.
A large chandelier hung in the center of the room. Some of the bulbs were broken, and a few dripping candles had been stuck in their place. The candles cast a meager golden light on two tables below that had been shoved together. A long, dark box sat atop them, and behind stood Doctor Yip.
"Come, come," the herbalist said, waving her closer. "I hope you're well rested now, and you've eaten."
Aida didn't answer.
He gave a command in Cantonese to the big man, who dismissed his partner, and closed the doors. Yip spoke to her again. "Tai will mind the door while we talk, yes? Step closer, please. I have something marvelous to show you."
No need to panic, she told herself. She was armed, and by calling her forward, he was putting several yards between him and Tai. She'd be alone with him, and the lancet sat snug against her leg.
He should be the one frightened.
Steeling herself, she slowly approached the doctor, but didn't make it halfway before she halted.