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Bitter Spirits

Page 74

   


He strode to the bed and lifted her up. “What’s wrong, cheetah?”
“My locket,” she said, voice worn. “I thought I had it, but I took it off before bed.”
“I’m sorry.” He tried to pull her into his arms, to comfort her somehow, but he struggled with something to say. “It’s just an object, not your brother himself.”
Tear-stung eyes narrowed in anger. “Just an object?”
Wrong choice of words.
“Nothing is ‘just an object,’” she said. “Possessions aren’t meaningless—everything is connected. If it weren’t for these things, I couldn’t call spirits.”
“I spoke carelessly,” he said.
But she wasn’t listening. “And now all my possessions are gone. I had so little, and now I have nothing.” She shoved at the contents of her purse. “My only photograph of Sam—the last remaining piece of my family, and I lost him.”
TWENTY-FIVE
MIDDAY SUN WARMED THE TILE BENEATH AIDA’S FEET AS SHE looked around Winter’s big bathroom, mildly anxious. Her head throbbed and the injuries to her foot ached with each step. Someone had left her a robe. Kind, but it was a little on the small side, and she needed real clothes. She also needed to find out if anything in her apartment survived the fire.
And to find out where Winter was.
She remembered nodding off in his arms. He pulled the covers over her and left, and now his bedroom was empty. No indication of where he slept—if he slept.
Bending to drink from the tap, she rinsed last night’s lingering tastes from her mouth and hunted for a comb, feeling out of sorts in the strange home. When she finally discovered Winter’s toiletries inside a frosted glass cabinet, she stood in front of the sink and realized what was odd about the bathroom: no mirror—not a proper one, anyway. Just a small shaving mirror that extended from a scissored arm attached to the wall. No dressing mirror in the bedroom, either.
No mirrors, so he didn’t have to see his scarred face every day?
“Oh, Winter,” she murmured on a sigh.
Low voices in the distance derailed her attention.
On the wall opposite the bathroom stood another door that accessed an adjoining room. Aida followed the voices here and peeked inside. A guest room, perhaps. A four-poster bed at the far end of the room was stripped of linens and pillows, in disuse, and covered with mounds of clothes.
Her eyes darted around the room.
A dressing table was laden with new boxes of expensive cosmetics and shampoos, an electric curling iron and hair dryer—luxuries she couldn’t afford. Nearby, a large wooden steamer trunk stood open on its side, hangers slotted into place on one half, and six drawers lining the other. It looked like something a Hollywood star would own for traveling around the globe. Boxes of shoes were lined up next to it, brown and black leather peeking out from fluffs of tissue paper. Several evening gowns, glittering with beads and sequins, hung from the top of an open armoire door. Day coats, hats, handbags were spread across the bed, and sitting on a bureau, open boxes of jewelry sparkled under a slant of sunlight.
A pretty young servant stood with Astrid and her seamstress Benita, all three of them organizing the chaotic spread. It looked as if they might be planning to open a department store. Blond hair swung as Astrid turned and spotted her, eyes lighting up. “Oh, you’re up—excellent! How do you feel?”
“I’ve been better,” Aida admitted.
“Gee, I’m sorry about what happened. Bo said the wiring in those old apartments is always catching on fire.”
“Uh . . .”
“You’re lucky you got out. But on the bright side, you get all new things!” She spread her arms, showcasing her handiwork with a look of ecstasy on her face.
Aida choked. Astrid patted her on the back. “You okay, there? Need some water?” She rattled off several commands in Swedish to the maid, who scurried out of the room. “She’ll bring up some juice and breakfast. I bet you’re starving.”
“I—”
“Anyway, isn’t this all great? I’m so jealous. I told Bo I was going to set fire to my room so I could experience the thrill of a new wardrobe. But Winter said if I did, I’d be wearing a potato sack until I graduated. Anyway, come look at what we picked out. Some of it might not fit, but Benita will take care of that for you.”
“Astrid,” Aida complained, feeling mildly sick to her stomach. “I can’t possibly afford all this.”
“Don’t worry, Benita and I kept a tally,” Astrid said, scooping up a small ledger. “Winter said you insisted on paying everything back when you could. It’s all logged right here.”
Aida scanned the entries, pangs of worry accumulating with every subtotaled figure written in flowery feminine print at the bottom of each page, until she got to the latest running total: four hundred and fifty-eight dollars.
Her mouth fell open. “I could buy a car for this—my life savings was . . .” Half that. And it took her years of scrimping. “This is crazy. This is—”
Dimples appeared as Astrid grinned. “Guess that’ll teach you to take up with a Magnusson.”
“God middag.” Winter’s housekeeper breezed into the room wearing a dour day suit. “Here you go.”
Aida accepted a thick envelope. “What is this?”
“First-class tickets,” Greta said in her singsong voice. “Train leaves same day as your original ticket, late morning. Train company was sympathetic about your ticket being lost in fire. You only owe Winter the difference between ticket prices, and sleeping arrangements will be much more comfortable. Winter insisted.”