Bitter Spirits (Roaring Twenties #1)(33)
Most of his left shoulder was mottled black and purple. She’d never seen an uglier bruise.
He tucked his chin to peer at his shoulder. “It’s not as bad as it looks.”
Yip came out of the back room rolling a metal cart. He stopped to inspect Winter. “Oh! Very nasty. It’s okay, though. I’ll help you. Sit.”
An array of slender silver needles lay fanned upon a white cloth on the herbalist’s cart. “The newest type of needle, stainless steel,” Yip said. “Sharp and clean.”
Winter eyed them warily. “It’s the sharp part I don’t like.”
“You will. Dull needles are painful. Sit still.” Very delicately, Yip inspected the injury, prodding the skin around it and asking Winter questions about his range of movement. He rotated Winter’s arm until he grunted in pain. Yip seemed to be happy about this. “Ligaments injured. The bruise is bad, but superficial. I will help you. Relax.”
Winter looked ill. Legs spread, he hunched over, bracing his good arm on his knee while the herbalist used a small metal tube to hold a needle at the top of his shoulder. He tapped it with one finger. Winter closed his eyes. Aida cringed. The needle wobbled, standing proud on Winter’s shoulder like an errant dart.
“That’s it?”
“That’s it,” Yip confirmed.
Winter grinned at Aida. “It doesn’t hurt.”
Half a minute later, five more needles porcupined his arm. Winter moaned.
“Feeling drowsy?”
“You didn’t tip these needles in poison, did you?”
Yip laughed. “What you’re feeling is your qi flowing. Natural energy. When it is blocked, you have pain. I’ve opened up a channel for your energy to flow. Just relax and enjoy it for a few minutes.”
A telephone rang. The doctor excused himself and went behind the counter up front to answer it, speaking in quick Cantonese.
Sandalwood smoke wafted from a dozen joss sticks standing in the brass bowl near Aida. “That looks like your arm right now,” she said, pointing to the incense stand.
“I feel . . . drunk,” he said, closing his eyes.
“In a good way?”
“In a very good way.”
Bells jingled again near the entrance. “Don’t pass out. I don’t think I could carry you to a taxi.”
“Mmm.” He took several breaths through his nose, and then murmured, “Do you think it’s really our guy? Black Star?”
“I hope so. Though, I was thinking, if he’s such a popular fortune-teller, I wonder why Bo hasn’t been able to turn up his name? Seems to me—”
“Aida.”
“—that if he’s working at one of the temples—”
“Aida,” he said sharply.
“Yes?”
“Come stand behind me.” Winter’s voice was strained, his gaze fixed behind her. “Now.”
She started to ask why, started to turn around to see what he was looking at, but an arm wrapped around her shoulders and yanked her backward. Winter’s clothes spilled out of her lap as her body lifted into the air. Her ankles knocked against the rungs of the chair. A man’s foot kicked it out from under her, and her back slammed against someone’s chest.
It happened so fast.
Winter charged, a snarl on his face, but another approaching voice gave him a rough command as a gun and a second man appeared at her side. “Sit back down.”
Winter held up his hands in surrender and sat. Doctor Yip stumbled past her with his hands up, as well.
She struggled to get away, clawing at the arm around her shoulders. His grip tightened painfully. She gasped for air and dug her nails into her assailant’s arm. He shoved her head to the side. Low Cantonese grated against her ear. His arm was beefy. Not as tall as Winter, judging from the way he felt against her, but solid enough. Her initial shock and confusion trickled into a deeper panic.
Winter addressed the man standing next to her in a barely restrained rumble. “You just made the biggest mistake of your life.”
“No, you did, Magnusson. This is Ju’s territory.”
“Did Ju send you here?”
“Ju hears Bo Yeung poking around, asking questions. Now you show up? He won’t be happy to hear we found you here. Not at all. Maybe you think now that your daddy is gone, you’ll get your hands on tong business.” The man took a step toward Winter. His black suit was creased. A bowler was perched crookedly atop his head. His ear was cauliflowered—bulbous and protruding around the upper shell. An old injury. “Why are you in Ju’s territory?”
“None of your goddamn business.”
“Why is Bo sniffing around?”
“Call off your dog and let her go. Then we can talk.”
The man said something in Cantonese that made her captor laugh. Fat fingers clamped over a breast and squeezed. Aida struggled to pull away. “Get your hands off of me.”
Winter lurched to his feet. “You dirty f*cking pig—”
The cauliflower-eared man shoved the muzzle of the gun against Winter’s forehead as he grabbed one of his acupuncture needles and jammed it farther into Winter’s shoulder. He shouted incoherent blasphemies as his eyes watered.
“Do not spill blood!” Doctor Yip cried out. “This is a holy place.”
Jenn Bennett's Books
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- Leashing the Tempest (Arcadia Bell #2.5)
- Summoning the Night (Arcadia Bell #2)
- Kindling the Moon (Arcadia Bell #1)