scents of candle wax, cigarette smoke, and booze.
All this made Bo feel better, actually. Whatever bizarre activities the survivors had been up to, they werenât ghosts or monsters.
He revised that opinion when he swept the flashlightâs beam up the walls. Witchy symbols were drawn in bright blue paint. A large ritual circle was painted in the centerof the salon floor, around which a dozen or more candles had melted into the wooden floorboards.
âWhat in Godâs name were these cranks up to?â Bo murmured.
âTheyâre occultists,â Officer Barlow said. âDevil worshippers or something.â
âWhat language is this?â Astrid asked.
âNo idea,â Bo said.
The officer shrugged. âWho cares? They were probably all taking narcotics. A lot of heroinâs been coming into the city this year. Or maybe you knew that already . . .â
Bo did, but only from gossip. The Magnussons didnât have anything to do with narcotics. They only sold alcohol, and not bathtub gin, either. Top quality. And all of it smuggled by ship from Canada, some of which was originally imported from Europe. One of those European imports was a very
particular
brand of black-label champagneâone that no one else in San Francisco sold. Bo would recognize the bottles anywhere; after all, heâd inspected every shipment of it, checking for false labels, evaluating the bottle marks, and tasting the contents.
Several empty bottles of that very champagne lay on the floor of the salon.
He picked one up and sniffed. Definitely Magnusson stock. Only a few speakeasies around town that sold it, along with the occasional special order for a political fund-raiser or some socialiteâs wedding.
He didnât like finding it here.
âMust have been one hell of a party,â Barlow said. âHope it was worth it, because as soon as we can get them identified, theyâre all going to be locked up for stealing this boat.â
âIs that what happened?â Astrid asked. âThey stole it?â
Barlow shrugged. âWhat else would it be? You saw them. They were youngâyour age, and vagrants, Iâd guess. They took the boat for a joyride, got looped up on drugs, probably sailed up the coast and got lost.â
âFor a year?â Astrid said.
Bo shared her disbelief. He wasnât convinced that vagrants had such expensive taste in hothouse flowers and champagne. And other than the damage to the furnitureâwhich could have been caused by the stormâand the painted blue symbols, the room had been kept up. No piss in the corner. No signs of anyone holing up in here. Hell, there wasnât even dust on the bar. He lifted his fingers to his nose and smelled wood polish.
âThe chief mentioned a man whoâd claimed to have captained this boat when it went missing last year,â Bo said. âKnow anything about that?â
Barlow made a snorting sound. âSure, I heard about him. It was just some geezer with a few screws loose who ended up in a mental institution. Claimed that heâd been hired to pilot the yacht, but a storm threw him overboard and he swam ashore.â
âInteresting,â Bo said.
âNot really. The yachtâs owner had never laid eyes on him. We see that kind of stuff all the time. Lonely people with too much time on their hands read about cases in the newspapers and show up at the station, claiming they can help us. They never do.â
Astrid stepped over broken glass and stumbled into Bo.
âWhoa,â he said, putting a hand on her arm to steady her. For a moment, he wondered if she hadnât sobered up as much heâd originally thought, but then he realized he was wobbly, too. The storm outside was picking up speed. He leaned against the bar for support and held on to Astrid, relishing the excuse to do so, even for a few stolen seconds.
âAll right,â Officer Barlow complained when
Carmen Caine, Madison Adler