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Authors: Jenn Bennett

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BOOK: Bitter Spirits
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EPILOGUE

E
ARLY
J
ANUARY
, 1928—C
HINATOWN
, S
AN
F
RANCISCO

AIDA ACCEPTED THE BOX OF ALMOND COOKIES WITH A WEAK
protest. “I think you're trying to fatten me up like a Christmas goose, Mrs. Lin.”

Her former landlady clucked her tongue. “A little fat is good, that's what my mother always believed.”

“Well, I appreciate them. Mr. Magnusson ate the entire last batch you brought, so maybe I'll hide this from him.” She set the box on the mahogany desk that separated the front of the narrow room from the cozy sitting area in the back, where settees and wingback chairs were gathered around a fireplace. She'd already banked the once-cheery fire that had been burning there earlier in the day, in preparation for leaving sharply at three
P.M.

Mrs. Lin glanced down at Aida's desk. A leather appointment book sat open, her last channeling checked off half an hour ago.

“If you need to speak to your mother urgently, I can do a quick channeling,” Aida said. “But if it can wait until tomorrow, I'd be happy to stop by Golden Lotus. It's just that—”

Mrs. Lin shook her head. “Once a month is enough. No, I was looking at the sign, here.”

The printer had dropped it by earlier. Just something Aida could affix to the inside of the glass door. It announced that she was temporarily open by appointment only, and provided the telephone number to call.

“You're closing the shop?” Mrs. Lin asked.

“Just for a little while. I was going to let you know—Winter and I just made the decision yesterday.”

“But why? I thought this was very fulfilling for you. A big success.”

“It is.” Too successful. She adored her small storefront. It was located between a tourist-friendly tea shop and a dry goods store on the opposite end of Grant from where Golden Lotus sat. She was only a few blocks from Union Square, but still within the invisible Chinatown border—and staunchly in Ju's territory.

Gold and black lettering painted on the front window announced her services:

AIDA MAGNUSSON

TRANCE SPIRIT MEDIUM

CHANNELING—SÉANCES—EXORCISMS —SPIRITUALISM ADVICE

She'd been performing in-home séances every weekend since the wedding, and was solidly booked with private sessions at the shop on weekdays. Admittedly, a few of them were pro bono, as she'd somehow ended up taking on half of Ju's prostitutes as clients. First it was only Sook-Yin, with whom Aida had come to share a friendly, if not odd, relationship, then came others. They paid collaboratively in custom dresses. Not a bad deal, actually.

But between them and all the customers Mrs. Lin sent her way from Golden Lotus, and the ones Velma sent her way from Gris-Gris, Aida stayed busy. Exhaustion was taking its toll. She'd retired the lancet after that horrible night on Doctor Yip's docked ship, which was a relief. Yet funnily enough, getting a business up and running was turning out to be more stressful at times than performing onstage.

Concerned about recent changes in her health, Winter finally put his foot down.

“The holidays were stressful,” she told Mrs. Lin, “and I have a lot of things to manage at home until the spring.” It wasn't entirely untrue.

“Spring? Why so long?”

She would actually be on hiatus until summer, but she wasn't ready to give Mrs. Lin the details yet. “Mr. Magnusson's brother is coming back from Egypt today, and—”

“Oh, the archaeologist, very exciting. You will meet him for the first time.”

“Yes. I'm a little nervous about that.”

Mrs. Lin gave a dismissive wave of her hand. “He should be nervous to meet
you
. But I understand”—she narrowed her eyes suspiciously—“I
think
.”

“You have the phone number at the house and pier. Call me anytime you need me. And if Winter gives you any grief, tell him it's an emergency.”

Mrs. Lin laughed. “All right. And you tell Bo Yeung the girls at the restaurant are missing his charming smile.”

“And his big tips, I'm sure.” Bo hadn't spent much time at the apartment he kept in Chinatown since the fire in her room; lately, Winter had been keeping him busy at the pier. “I'll tell him when I get home.”

With a smile, Mrs. Lin patted her hand, then bid her good-bye as she left.

Not a minute later, right on time, a silver Packard pulled up by the curb. Aida watched two boys go out of their way to walk around the big man who exited the driver's door, and chuckled to herself as they looked over their shoulders to study him from a safe distance.

Winter strode to the door, pausing to tip his hat to the owner of a neighboring tea shop, where mah-jongg tiles clicked for hours every afternoon.

The bell above the door jingled when he stepped inside. Aida's stomach fluttered at the sight of his giant body. Wearing a new falcon gray suit with a claret tie and his best winter day coat, he glanced down at the shop's security protection as he wiped his feet on the doormat.

“How's my good boy?” He bent to scratch the glossy brindle coat of a mastiff that spent days in her shop and nights curled up in front of the fire in their bedroom. The great dog had shown up one night at the pier with an injured eye. Though he'd never admit it, this won the dog Winter's instant empathy, and after he nursed it back to health, he gave it to her with the promise that he'd dismiss the man he'd hired to watch the shop.

Not that she needed protection of any kind, really. After the brutal onslaught Winter led that night on Doctor Yip's ship, not a soul in the city from Chinatown to the Presidio would think about touching one hair on her head.

He stood and gave her a beautiful smile. “Hello, Mrs. Magnusson.”

“Hello, Mr. Magnusson.”

“I don't see your sign.” He nodded his head toward the door.

She held it up. “I need tape. I meant to walk up to Woolworths at lunch, but it became too hectic to get away.”

He sauntered around her desk, looking her up and down with an approving gaze. “How are you feeling?”

“A little tired, but good.”

His gloved hand spanned her ballooning stomach. Three months pregnant, she'd only barely started showing a week ago, and the black shift dress she wore covered the small bump, but it wouldn't for long.

“You look very handsome today,” she said. Enough to make her pulse speed, especially when he was standing so close.

“Mmm,” he replied, preoccupied. “Your breasts are getting bigger.”

She looked down. “They are not.”

“Cheetah, there are few things I know with absolute certainty,” he said, sliding his hand up to cup one breast in his palm. “And one of them is the exact size, weight, and feel of your breasts.” He gave the one he was holding a gentle squeeze.

“Stop that,” she chastised. “People can see us from the sidewalk.”

“My property, my wife. They can look all they like.”


My
property,” she corrected. The shop had been purchased with money from Emmett Lane's check, in fact. “And if you're going to tease me, don't be selfish. Hurry up and give the other one attention.”

He grinned down at her and fondled both breasts at once, sending a pleasant warmth through her. She shuddered appreciatively, then captured his hands and pulled them away as she stood on tiptoes to request a kiss. He chuckled against her mouth and obliged.

“Maybe we should shut the blinds and lock the door,” she said when he pulled away. “Take advantage of privacy while we have it. I'm not happy about your brother's room being right below ours. I hope he's a heavy sleeper.”

“That house is built like a rock. He won't hear anything.” He kissed her bangs and gave her a playful swat on her backside. “And as much as I'd like to take you up on that offer, we need to get going. The station called to say that the train's running early. It's scheduled to arrive in an hour, and we need to pick up Astrid from school on the way.” For the first time since his accident, Winter had been driving on occasion, and Astrid was no longer banned from learning how to drive. She claimed Winter shouted too much when she made mistakes, so she insisted that Bo do most of the teaching.

“All right. Grab those cookies Mrs. Lin left, would you?” She retrieved her handbag from a locked drawer in her desk and grabbed her coat and hat from the nearby coatrack, then turned off the lights.

Winter held the door open as she took down the leash hanging on the wall and whistled to the mastiff.

“Come on, Sam,” she told the dog. “It's time to meet the rest of the family.”

TURN THE PAGE FOR A PREVIEW OF JENN BENNETT'S NEXT ROARING TWENTIES NOVEL

GRIM SHADOWS

COMING SOON FROM BERKLEY SENSATION!

J
ANUARY
1928

LOWE MAGNUSSON SCANNED THE DESOLATE UNION PACIFIC
station lobby. A young couple he recognized from the train was spending the brief early-evening stop flipping through magazines at the newsstand. A handful of other travelers loitered on benches. No sign of the two thugs, but it was only a matter of time. Easier to kill him in a dark corner of a rural station than in the middle of a crowded smoking car.

Satisfied he was temporarily safe, Lowe slid a bill through the ticket booth window. Not a large bill, but large enough to sway a hayseed Salt Lake City ticket agent. Surely.

“Look,” he said in a much calmer voice. “You and I both know you have first-class tickets left on the second train bound for San Francisco. It departs at eight. If we wait for your manager to return from his dinner break, I'll have missed it. It's not like I'm asking for a new ticket. I just want to be moved from one train to another.”

The young attendant exhaled heavily. “I'm sorry, sir. Like I said, I don't have authorization to exchange tickets. Why can't you just wait for your current train to depart? An hour really isn't that much of a difference in the long run. It might even leave sooner if they get the supplies loaded quickly, and aside from a couple of extra stops, they're both going to same place.”

Yes, but the other train didn't have thugs with guns on it.

When he first noticed the men shadowing him, he thought sleep deprivation was screwing with his mind. After all, he hadn't had a decent night's sleep since Cairo. Food poisoning made the usually tolerable Mediterranean crossing from Alexandria to Athens a waking nightmare. But just when he thought he was out of the woods, he spent the storm-cursed weeklong voyage from England to Baltimore hugging both the toilet and his pillow in turns, praying for death.

But God wasn't done punishing him, apparently. Now that he'd endured three nights of restless sleep on the worst train trip of his life and was less than a day's ride away from home, armed men were stalking him.

Where the hell had all his good luck gone?

Right now, all he wanted was to kiss solid ground in San Francisco, fall into his ridiculously luxurious featherbed—courtesy of his brother's ever-increasing bootlegging fortune—and sleep for a week. Some clam chowder would be nice. A two-hour hot bath. Maybe a small harem of nubile women to warm his sheets—dream big, he always said. But if he could manage to avoid getting shot and robbed during the last hours of this hellish trip home, he'd settle for ten hours of uninterrupted sleep and a home-cooked meal.

The attendant eyed Lowe's loosened necktie and three-day-old whiskers. “We wouldn't even have time to find your luggage and transfer it before departure, sir.”

“Just forward it to my San Francisco address.” Lowe begrudgingly placed another bill atop the first. Dammit. Only forty dollars left in his wallet. Ludicrous, really. A priceless artifact in the satchel hanging across his chest, guarded with his damned life for the last two months, and all he had was forty dollars to his name.

Not to mention the massive debt hanging over his head after the botched deal with Monk.

The attendant shook his head. “I'm not supposed to accept tips, sir.”

Lowe changed tactics, lowering his voice as he leaned on the counter. “Can I tell you something, just between you and me? I'm on a very important, very
secret
government assignment.” He wasn't. “League of Nations business. Health committee,” Lowe elaborated nonsensically.

“Health committee,” the attendant repeated dryly. He couldn't have cared less.

“I wasn't aware the U.S. had joined the League,” a voice called out.

Lowe looked up from the window to find the voice's owner, a woman, standing a few yards away. She was long and thin, wearing a black dress with a black coat draped over one arm. Black gloves. Black shoes. Black hair bobbed below her chin.
So much black.
A walking funeral home, blocking his view of the platform entrance.

And she was staring at him with the intensity of a one-person firing squad.

“I
did
say it was a secret assignment,” he called back. “In case you missed that part of my private conversation.”

“Yes, I heard,” she said in an upper-crust transatlantic accent, as if it were perfectly polite and normal for her to comment. No remorse whatsoever for butting into his business.

“Excuse me.”
And please leave me alone
, he thought as he turned back to the ticket window. Concocting a believable story on no sleep wasn't the easiest task.

But she wasn't done. “Can I have a word in private, Mr. Magnusson?”

Had she heard him giving his name to the agent, too? Ears of an owl, apparently.

“Sir?”

Lowe's attention snapped back to the agent. “Look, just get me the ticket before the train leaves. Have the porter deliver my steamer trunk to my address. I'll be back in a minute.”

He stepped away from the counter and strode toward the woman.

“Mr. Magnusson.”

“Yes,” he said irritably. “We've established you know who I am.”

Her brow tightened. “You were to meet me.” When he gave her a blank stare, she added, “My father cabled you when you arrived in New York.”

Shit.

In his haste to change trains, he'd forgotten about meeting up with Archibald Bacall's daughter: the oddball museum curator. Not that she was unappealing, now that he was seeing her up close. Not plain, either. To complement her owl-sharp hearing, she had an angular face that reminded him of a bird of prey. A lot of bones with long, sweeping lines. Long face, long arms, and nice, long legs. Tall for a woman; the top of her narrow-brimmed hat might fit under his chin, so he guessed her height to be five foot ten. But her boyish, slender body made her seem smaller.

And the all-black widow's weeds buttoned up to her throat didn't do her any favors.

“Hadley Bacall.” She stuck out a hand sheathed in a leather glove trimmed in black fur. More fur around the collar of the coat draped on her arm. The Bacalls had money. Old San Francisco money, from the Gold Rush days—her deceased mother's fortune, if he wasn't mistaken. The Bacalls also had significant influence in the art museum at Golden Gate Park. Her father ran the Egyptian Antiquities wing and sat on the board of trustees; he'd been a field archaeologist when he was younger.

Not that Lowe had ever hobnobbed with the man. Without the amulet carefully tucked in Lowe's satchel, Dr. Archibald Bacall and his daughter would not be extending high-class handshakes in Lowe's direction. Hell, they wouldn't even give him the time of day.

“Yes, of course,” he said. “Hadley, that's right.”

Her grip was surprisingly evasive for someone whose arm was propping up a thousand dollars' worth of fur and an aloof attitude to match. She tried to end the handshake as quickly as she'd offered it, but he held on. Just for a second. She glanced down at his hand, as if it were a misbehaving child. He reluctantly let go.

“You did get my father's telegram, did you not?” she asked.

“Sure.” He received a lot of telegrams from the man after the photograph of Lowe and his uncle standing in front of the Philae excavation site circulated in newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic—a photograph that had been reprinted a month later in
National Geographic
.

“Why were you lying to the ticket agent?” she asked.

He coughed into his fist. “Ah, well. It's a long story, and one I'm afraid I don't have time to share. I'm switching trains, you see. So I won't be able to meet with you after all.”

One slim brow arched. She was almost attractive when she was frustrated, very glacial and austere. The corners of her eyes tilted up in an appealing manner, and her gaze didn't waver. He liked that.

“You didn't come all the way out here just to meet me, I hope.”

She shook her head. “I was giving a seminar on Middle Kingdom animal mummification at the University of Utah.”

Fitting for a woman who specialized in funerary archaeology, he supposed. If he wasn't so goddamn tired, he might've been interested in hearing her theories, but his travel-weary gaze was wandering to her breasts. Nothing much to speak of, but that didn't stop him from looking.

“I'm on my way back to San Francisco,” she said, diverting his attention back to her eyes. “But when my father found out you'd be coming in on this train, he thought it might be wise for me to book a ticket so I could speak before you arrived. We aren't the only ones interested in your discovery. I'm not sure if you know what you're getting into by bringing the
djed
amulet here.”

Oh, he knew, all right. He barely got the damned thing out of Egypt. While his uncle battled the Egyptian Ministry of State, Lowe defended their dig site from looters. He'd been shot at, stoned, stabbed—twice—and had engaged in a fair number of fistfights.

And though he'd briefly considered the possibility that the hired thugs on the train tonight might be after him because of his debt to Monk Morales, if Monk wanted to kill him, he'd wait until Lowe got home. No, these thugs were definitely after the
djed
.

“I've already received offers from a few collectors.”

Her smile was tight. “My father is prepared to give you the best price. That's why I'm to speak with you now. I'd like to inspect the amulet. If it's truly the mythical Backbone of Osiris—”

“Christ, keep your voice down, would you?” Lowe quickly surveyed the lobby again. “I'm trying not to advertise, if you don't mind. Besides, all the artifacts from the excavation were shipped on another boat. They'll arrive next month. So I don't have it on me.”

A hurried porter walked past them, wheeling a luggage cart. She kept quiet until the man was out of earshot. “You're lying.”

“Excuse me?”

Her gaze dropped to his leather satchel. “From the way you're gripping that bag, I'd say it's inside. But whether it's there or in your jacket pocket, I can
feel
it.”

The bizarre accusation hung between them for a long moment. If he hadn't “felt” the cursed object himself, he might've laughed in her face. But truth be told, the amulet emitted some sort of unexplainable current. His uncle hadn't felt it, but some of their hired Egyptian workers did. A fair number of them deserted their camp the night he'd brought it up from the half-flooded sinkhole. The artifact scared the hell out of him, frankly. And the way she was looking at him, all matter-of-factly and unblinking, well, that scared him a little, too.

“Mr. Magnusson,” she said in a lower voice as her eyes darted toward something behind his right shoulder. “Are you traveling with bodyguards?”

He stilled. “No.”

“Don't turn around,” she warned.

“Are there two of them? Black coats. Built like brick shithouses, pardon my French.”

“No need to apologize. I prefer frank language. And if you are trying to ask if they are large men, then yes. They've been watching you for several minutes. One has slipped through a corridor behind the ticket windows and the other is approaching us.”

A clammy panic slipped across Lowe's skin. His hand went to the Arabian curved dagger strapped to his belt and hidden under his coat over his left hip: a
janbiya
. In Egypt, he'd become accustomed to using it for protection. But after he'd left, he'd continued to wear it for peace of mind, more or less. Just in case.

Looked like he might be needing it now.

“Don't stare at the man approaching us,” he instructed her. “Just pick up your luggage and follow me out to the platform. Quickly, but stay calm.”

She didn't panic or question him. And thanks to those long legs of hers, their strides fell into a smart, matching rhythm. He caught the crisp scent of lilies drifting from her clothes as they strode past the newsstand, where neat rows of
Good Housekeeping
and
Collier's Weekly
blurred in his peripheral vision.

“Listen to me,” he said as he placed an open palm at the small of her back. “Those men are armed with guns. They've been shadowing me on the train all day. I don't know for certain, but I've got a funny feeling they're after the amulet. It probably wasn't wise of you to talk to me, because now they'll think we're friendly, and that makes you a target, too.”

“What do you plan to do about it?” she said calmly. Even in the panic of the moment, he had to admire her grit.

“You have a ticket for the 127?”

“Yes.”

“Go ahead and board your train. Tell the porter suspicious men are following you.”

“A porter's not going to shield me from gunfire.”

“Lock yourself in your stateroom.”

“I'll do no such thing.”

Oh, she wouldn't, would she? He prodded her onto the shadowed train platform, where other travelers were waiting for their departure time to come, saying their good-byes to family members and loved ones. The chilly night air didn't stop a tickling bead of sweat from winding its way down his back.

“If they shoot you and take the amulet, I'll have failed my father,” she said logically, as if she were making a decision about dinner plans. “So I'm sticking with you.”

“Fine, see if I care if you get yourself killed. You're already dressed for a open-casket memorial service.”

“And you're dressed like a Barbary Coast drunkard!”

“Is that so? Well, I'll have you know, I'm—”

Startled cries bounced around the platform. Right in front of them, exiting a door marked
EMPLOYEES ONLY
, was the second thug—the one who'd disappeared behind the ticket windows. He barreled onto the platform with a polished revolver leveled at Lowe's chest.

BOOK: Bitter Spirits
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