Bitter Spirits
Page 93
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Dear lord. Winter wasn’t crazy, but Yip was. A very rationalized, polite insanity, but crazy nonetheless. Aida stared at him, both horrified and feeling pity for the man.
Yip gestured toward the coffin. “Now that you’ve seen my power, what is your decision?”
“If I declined your offer?”
“Do you know how to swim?”
Aida started to shake her head in answer until realization sunk in.
“That is the best way. Your spirit will travel fast—very little chance of it staying here as a ghost if you’ve drowned in the Bay. And no one will grieve you, which is a small blessing. I will simply send word to your future employer in New Orleans that you’ve changed your mind, and no one will even know you’re gone.” He smiled at her as if he were a kindly old lawyer, breaking tough news about a judge’s decision.
A loud noise coming from somewhere on the ship made her jump.
Then again. A sharp bang!
The report of a gun.
Doctor Yip blanched. His men carried no guns.
Aida knew someone who did.
More shots were fired in quick succession, and suddenly gunfire reverberated inside the belly of the ship. It sounded like a battlefield lay beyond the walls of the dining room. Not single shots anymore, but the distinct rat-a-tat-tat of machine guns. Muffled shouting followed. The teardrop crystals in the chandelier clinked; the boards beneath her feet vibrated.
“Tai! Get out there and see what’s going on!” Yip yelled at the big man as he rushed to close the casket top.
While he pulled it down, Tai swung both doors open. A shot exploded. The big man stumbled backward. Movement in the dim doorway took the shape of an even bigger man whose arm lashed out to shove Tai. His teetering form crashed to the floor. He did not get up.
The gunman who’d shot Tai stormed into the ship’s dining room holding someone else in front of him like a shield, a handgun pressed to the side of his head. When he walked the hostage into the light of the first lantern, Aida, with a start, recognized the man being held at gunpoint.
Ju’s thug. The man she’d burned with incense.
The gun fired. Flesh and bone exploded. Ju’s thug dropped to the floor.
The gunman kicked him away and stepped into the light.
Splattered in blood, Winter strode into the room like a furious titan.
Aida cried out in relief, but a strong arm wrapped around her shoulders and yanked her sideways. Yip crushed her back to his chest and pinned her there. “Mr. Magnusson,” his voice called near her ear as he shoved her forward. “I had plans to visit you at your house later tonight. I have men there watching your sister.”
“I know. They’re all dead.”
“Ah.” Yip’s grip tightened. “And I see I miscalculated the depth of your allegiance to the spirit medium. Is it really worth damning your soul further to take more innocent lives on this ship?”
“Winter—” Aida started.
Yip slapped his bare hand on her mouth. Ghostly breath, now stoppered there, shifted paths and streamed from her nostrils in quick pants.
“I couldn’t care less about her,” Winter said.
Aida’s chest tightened. Surely he was bluffing.
“Your actions betray you,” Yip said.
“She’s leaving the city tomorrow. It was a fling. She was giving it up for free—just a skirt, nothing more.”
Aida’s throat constricted. Anger and hurt welled up in equal parts.
“Then why have you come for her?” the herbalist asked.
“I didn’t even know she was here.”
It couldn’t be true—no! Why did he send the lancet? She struggled to throw Yip off, but he only held her tighter. After huffing several strained breaths near her ear, he snapped at Winter. “You mean to tell me that you brought death into my house—that you’re killing my workers—because of a few ghosts I sent your way? I don’t believe that.”
Winter’s face was stone. Lantern light cast shadows over his eyes, making his scar stand out in sharp relief. His mouth was the same immovable grim line he’d worn when she first met him, as if he’d never learned how to smile. “I’m here to look out for my business and take back what you’ve stolen from my associates.”
Aida’s pulse pounded in her temples as panic shot through her limbs. Did he mean it? Her heart didn’t believe it, but her mind pulled at the loose thread of their fight. The way he’d shouted at her. The way he’d ignored her for days before the fight. Maybe he’d only sent the lancet as a token—maybe it was his way of telling her she was on her own.
She searched his face for some sign of hope but found none. Her confidence unraveled.
“I wasn’t aware you had any associates,” Yip said.
“You’d be surprised how quickly the dollar will make friends of rivals.”
“If you are that intent on saving your business, then go ahead and shoot the girl.”
“I’d rather shoot you. Let her go and face me like a man.” Winter took another step. His nostrils flared. A brief flash of repulsion crossed his face. He smelled the corpse. His eyes finally flicked to the coffin. Hesitation chinked his steely exterior—Aida could see it. Yip saw it, too.
“Before you shoot anyone, why don’t we see if another woman might change your mind?”
All of Yip’s muscles seized. He barked out a rough command. Aida struggled against him, trying to get away. His grip changed from firm to bruising. Pain sliced down her arm as his fingernails jabbed hard enough to break skin.
Yip gestured toward the coffin. “Now that you’ve seen my power, what is your decision?”
“If I declined your offer?”
“Do you know how to swim?”
Aida started to shake her head in answer until realization sunk in.
“That is the best way. Your spirit will travel fast—very little chance of it staying here as a ghost if you’ve drowned in the Bay. And no one will grieve you, which is a small blessing. I will simply send word to your future employer in New Orleans that you’ve changed your mind, and no one will even know you’re gone.” He smiled at her as if he were a kindly old lawyer, breaking tough news about a judge’s decision.
A loud noise coming from somewhere on the ship made her jump.
Then again. A sharp bang!
The report of a gun.
Doctor Yip blanched. His men carried no guns.
Aida knew someone who did.
More shots were fired in quick succession, and suddenly gunfire reverberated inside the belly of the ship. It sounded like a battlefield lay beyond the walls of the dining room. Not single shots anymore, but the distinct rat-a-tat-tat of machine guns. Muffled shouting followed. The teardrop crystals in the chandelier clinked; the boards beneath her feet vibrated.
“Tai! Get out there and see what’s going on!” Yip yelled at the big man as he rushed to close the casket top.
While he pulled it down, Tai swung both doors open. A shot exploded. The big man stumbled backward. Movement in the dim doorway took the shape of an even bigger man whose arm lashed out to shove Tai. His teetering form crashed to the floor. He did not get up.
The gunman who’d shot Tai stormed into the ship’s dining room holding someone else in front of him like a shield, a handgun pressed to the side of his head. When he walked the hostage into the light of the first lantern, Aida, with a start, recognized the man being held at gunpoint.
Ju’s thug. The man she’d burned with incense.
The gun fired. Flesh and bone exploded. Ju’s thug dropped to the floor.
The gunman kicked him away and stepped into the light.
Splattered in blood, Winter strode into the room like a furious titan.
Aida cried out in relief, but a strong arm wrapped around her shoulders and yanked her sideways. Yip crushed her back to his chest and pinned her there. “Mr. Magnusson,” his voice called near her ear as he shoved her forward. “I had plans to visit you at your house later tonight. I have men there watching your sister.”
“I know. They’re all dead.”
“Ah.” Yip’s grip tightened. “And I see I miscalculated the depth of your allegiance to the spirit medium. Is it really worth damning your soul further to take more innocent lives on this ship?”
“Winter—” Aida started.
Yip slapped his bare hand on her mouth. Ghostly breath, now stoppered there, shifted paths and streamed from her nostrils in quick pants.
“I couldn’t care less about her,” Winter said.
Aida’s chest tightened. Surely he was bluffing.
“Your actions betray you,” Yip said.
“She’s leaving the city tomorrow. It was a fling. She was giving it up for free—just a skirt, nothing more.”
Aida’s throat constricted. Anger and hurt welled up in equal parts.
“Then why have you come for her?” the herbalist asked.
“I didn’t even know she was here.”
It couldn’t be true—no! Why did he send the lancet? She struggled to throw Yip off, but he only held her tighter. After huffing several strained breaths near her ear, he snapped at Winter. “You mean to tell me that you brought death into my house—that you’re killing my workers—because of a few ghosts I sent your way? I don’t believe that.”
Winter’s face was stone. Lantern light cast shadows over his eyes, making his scar stand out in sharp relief. His mouth was the same immovable grim line he’d worn when she first met him, as if he’d never learned how to smile. “I’m here to look out for my business and take back what you’ve stolen from my associates.”
Aida’s pulse pounded in her temples as panic shot through her limbs. Did he mean it? Her heart didn’t believe it, but her mind pulled at the loose thread of their fight. The way he’d shouted at her. The way he’d ignored her for days before the fight. Maybe he’d only sent the lancet as a token—maybe it was his way of telling her she was on her own.
She searched his face for some sign of hope but found none. Her confidence unraveled.
“I wasn’t aware you had any associates,” Yip said.
“You’d be surprised how quickly the dollar will make friends of rivals.”
“If you are that intent on saving your business, then go ahead and shoot the girl.”
“I’d rather shoot you. Let her go and face me like a man.” Winter took another step. His nostrils flared. A brief flash of repulsion crossed his face. He smelled the corpse. His eyes finally flicked to the coffin. Hesitation chinked his steely exterior—Aida could see it. Yip saw it, too.
“Before you shoot anyone, why don’t we see if another woman might change your mind?”
All of Yip’s muscles seized. He barked out a rough command. Aida struggled against him, trying to get away. His grip changed from firm to bruising. Pain sliced down her arm as his fingernails jabbed hard enough to break skin.