Winter stood in the hallway looking through the burned-out hole where Aida’s apartment door once stood. Nothing was salvageable: clothes and luggage, charred; hiding place for her savings, nothing but ashes; and the locket, now melted into her bedside table.
“That was kind of you to arrange repairs,” Velma said at his side as she looked on.
How they’d ever get rid of the acrid burnt stench was beyond him. “Both Aida and Bo are fond of the owners. Can you do anything?”
Velma surveyed the damage for a long moment, the picture of poise in an elegant chartreuse coat. The brim of her matching hat hid her eyes from him. “What did you have in mind?”
“Some sort of tracking spell?”
“To lead you to the men who did this?” She shook her head. “I’m not sure I’m that good. You’d have a better chance finding them by chasing leads.”
“The witnesses saw a truck and two men. One of them said the men were Chinese, the other said they were white. Neither could identify the truck model.”
“So no leads, is what you’re saying.”
“No leads, and I already talked to the police. They’ve got nothing, either. There’s nothing you can try?”
Velma tugged the cuffs of her cream-colored gloves, tightening the fit. “I don’t know a spell that can track them and return logical information concerning their whereabouts. I can, however, light a fuse from this point that will burn until it finds them.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means I can work a curse on them. Punish them. But before you agree, hear me out. This is nothing to play around with. A curse deals out the same amount of punishment as the wrong they did. Eye for an eye. And once I set it in motion, there’s no stopping it. I might end up killing these two men, and frankly, that’s not something I want on my conscience.”
“Well, my conscience is happy to take responsibility.”
“Not that simple,” the conjurer said, squinting up at him with sharp eyes. “Curses have a way of causing new rifts. If this is connected to the secret tong you’re talking about, and they have a powerful sorcerer on their side, it might make some waves. You might be setting something in motion that won’t stop until someone else gets hurt—or killed. So if I do this, either you or Aida have to bear the blood-debt. Anything I send out will come back to one of you, not me. Do you understand?”
He didn’t, exactly. But if cursing them sparked a war, then at least all this bullshit would be out in the open. He was tired of shadowboxing. “I take full responsibility—not Aida. She’s a bystander. All the blame should fall on my shoulders.”
Velma nodded. “So be it. I’ll need to collect some ashes.”
Between shuffling in and out of clothes for the better part of the day, Aida unabashedly gobbled down a mid-afternoon breakfast of toast triangles piled with soft, buttery scrambled eggs, dill, and smoked salmon—Magnusson fish, Astrid proudly clarified. Fresh orange juice and strong coffee washed it all down.
And when all her new belongings had been sorted into piles—keep, return, alter—she settled on a raisin-colored casual dress to wear. Astrid took her on a tour of the house, traipsing through dozens of rooms brimming with objets d’art collected from exotic places—including a sitting area dubbed the Sheik Room, outfitted to look like something out of Arabian Nights.
She met Winter’s mostly Swedish staff: a cook; three maids; a woman whose entire job was handling the laundry,who she later found out was Benita’s mother; a handyman; the driver she’d seen before, Jonte; and keeping watch over all of them was Greta. They eyed Aida with great curiosity. Some spoke little English, and Aida listened in amazement as Astrid vacillated between English and Swedish with ease.
Under Greta’s supervision, Astrid also showed Aida how to operate the elevator and the intercom system installed on each floor. Led her through the kitchen, formal dining room, and downstairs library. Walked her out to see Winter’s cars, where Greta asked her to write down her work schedule for Jonte, who assured her he’d be ready to chauffeur her back and forth from Gris-Gris.
Astrid talked a mile a minute to Greta as the three of them stood in the driveway next to a cream two-seater Packard coupe with its convertible canvas top down. A beautiful car. Far more feminine than Winter’s hell-colored Pierce-Arrow. Aida gazed at her reflection in one of the car’s side mirrors and tuned out Astrid’s chattering.
Aida was bone-weary. Her foot ached. She wanted comfort. Wanted Winter. It was strange to be peeking behind the scenes of his home without him there. Over the past couple of weeks she’d gotten too used to him . . . the way he smelled, the way he laughed. How the mattress sank when he crawled into bed. How he sounded when he came inside her.
Their routine at the Fairmont had been nothing short of bliss, and now it was over. Now she was back to her normal life, where every day was different and nothing could be counted on. Because now that she’d had the entire day to mourn the loss of her possessions—and the locket, in particular—she reasoned that maybe she’d been so devastated to lose them because before Winter came along, they had been her routine. Things. They’d been the only constant in her life. City to city, job to job, stranger to stranger, she could always count on the comfort that her dependable pink Westclox and Sam’s old photograph provided.
The locket had grounded her. But now it was gone, and there was nothing she could do to bring it back. She had to hold her shoulders high and keep going. Besides, Sam would’ve hated that he’d become her crutch, after he’d spent years encouraging her to live fearlessly.
She was good at being fearless. Damn good. That was something. And she wasn’t destitute like she’d been when Emmett Lane had shoved her into the orphanage. Her possessions had been replaced. She was surrounded by nice things and nice people. Lots to be thankful about.
If she only had Winter by her side, she might even be more than thankful—she might be happy. After all she’d been through over the last twenty-four hours, imagine that. If Winter could make her happy on a dismal day like this, how could he make her feel on a good day?
“Do you require anything else?” Greta asked, breaking into Aida’s thoughts.
“What’s that?”
“Anything else?”
After everything they’d already done for her? Aida couldn’t possibly have any other needs. If anything, she should be asking what she could do for them. Then inspiration came to her. A whim. “I would like someone to hang a mirror over Winter’s bathroom sink.”
Greta and Astrid stared at her. “Oh, he won’t like that,” Astrid finally said.
“I know. But I’d like to have a mirror in there for grooming, and Winter needs to stop feeling sorry for himself. Sometimes people require a little push.”
“I do not—” Greta started.
“Blame it on me,” Aida said firmly. “And while you’re at it, have someone bring the full-length dressing mirror into his bedroom. How he dresses without help is beyond me.”
“He had the dressing mirror in his closet lowered so that he only sees himself from the neck down,” Astrid volunteered.
“Astrid Margaret Magnusson!” Greta chastised.
“Well, he did. And Aida’s right. It’s time for some changes.”
Aida smiled. “Good, it’s settled then.”
“Anything else?” Greta said, her voice thick with annoyance.
Aida looked at Astrid. “You said you’ve never driven a car, not even once?”
She shook her head. “Winter won’t allow it.”
“And this coupe just sits here collecting dust? Shame, don’t you think?”
“It was my mother’s.”
“It’s lovely. Does it run?”
“All the cars run. Jonte takes them out around the block every Wednesday.”
Aida caressed the curve of the spare whitewalled wheel attached to the side of the car above the running board. “Someone taught me how to drive in Baltimore a few years ago. I think I still remember. Want to learn? My treat for everything you’ve done for me today.”
“Nej, nej!” Greta protested. “He will be very angry.”
“Just around the block,” Aida assured her. “You can stand here and watch us.”
“Really?” Astrid said, suddenly swept up in the idea of it. “Bo showed me how to shift gears once. I think I could do it.”
“Of course you can. Duck soup. Easy as pie.”
Greta mumbled a string of Swedish words under her breath.
“Greta!” Astrid said with a grin.
The housekeeper’s pink cheeks darkened. “I will not fetch the automobile key. If you are planning mutiny against your brother’s rules, you can ask Jonte to help you.”
After dropping Velma off at Gris-Gris, Winter spent the day in his Embarcadero office making calls. When dinnertime rolled around, he asked Bo to take him to Russian Hill. He hated driving by the house he’d shared with Paulina; though it had been sold more than a year ago, the sight of it still filled him with guilt and gloom. But what brought him here this time didn’t have anything to do with his past. It concerned Aida’s past, and it had taken him all day and a shameful amount of money in long-distance calls and lawyer fees to find it.
Worth every goddamn penny.
The address he was hunting ended up being down the street from his old house, two blocks from Lombard. Small world. Winter asked Bo to park the Pierce-Arrow right in front of a three-story Spanish Colonial attached home. Well kept. Cypress trees flanking the crooked steps. Shiny white Duesenberg behind an elaborate metal gate in the driveway.
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