She shoved the ledger back into its hiding place, her heart a frantic drum against her ribs. Through the crack in the shed door, she watched him walk past the mangosteen tree, his shadow stretching long and predatory across the spice-laden air.
Her job, Leo explained, was to maintain the balance. The penthouse was his living artwork, a “vertical spice garden.” He traveled nine months of the year. She would live here, rent-free, in exchange for tending the plants—pruning the curry leaf tree, pollinating the nutmeg flowers by hand, watching for pests on the turmeric rhizomes.
It was hidden beneath a false bottom in the potting shed, bound in leather that smelled of patchouli and secrets. The pages were filled with Leo’s precise handwriting, but not about pruning schedules. It was a diary of sensations.
She wasn’t a curator. She was a test subject. Penthouse- Tropical Spice
Inside, she gasped.
Mia woke to sunbirds tapping at the glass, misted the ferns in her bathrobe, and cooked with ingredients she harvested ten feet from her bed. She learned the personalities of the plants: the dramatic chili orchid that drooped if its soil varied by a single degree, the stubborn clove tree that only fruited after a simulated thunderstorm (Leo had installed a sound system for that).
Mia spun. A man stood by an open-plan kitchen that looked like a laboratory for alchemists. Bottles of amber tinctures and jars of dried chili hung over a stove. He was older, with salt-and-pepper hair and eyes the color of star anise. Leo. The owner. She shoved the ledger back into its hiding
But on the ninth night, she found the ledger.
The city of Veridia, with its traffic and deadlines, vanished. She had walked into a jungle canopy suspended two hundred meters in the air. A curved glass wall offered a panoramic view of the skyline, but her eyes were fixed on the interior: a mature mangosteen tree heavy with purple fruit grew through a skylight, its branches brushing a mezzanine library. Vanilla orchids crawled up a living trellis made of polished driftwood. The air smelled of clove, cinnamon, and damp earth—the "Tropical Spice" of the listing.
“March 12: Subject inhaled nutmeg oil at 8 PM. Reported ‘floating dreams’ and a metallic taste. Pupils dilated. No memory of the following three hours.” The penthouse was his living artwork, a “vertical
“Mia?” Leo’s voice was cheerful, echoing off the limestone. “I brought fresh soursop. I thought we could try a new infusion tonight.”
It was a dream. And the first week was exactly that.
“April 3: Subject F. Given tea with double-strength long pepper and mace. Became intensely amorous toward a reflection. Woke confused, with scratches on her arms. Fascinating.”
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime, releasing a wave of humid, fragrant air that was utterly at odds with the steel-and-glass skyscraper behind Mia. She stepped out into the private vestibule of the penthouse, her sensible flats silent on the cooled limestone floor. The key, warm from her pocket, turned in the lock.
She sipped. The heat spread through her chest, clean and sharp. For the first time in months, her chronic anxiety loosened its grip.