Penthouse- | Tropical Spice

But on the ninth night, she found the ledger.

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. Penthouse- Tropical Spice

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. But on the ninth night, she found the ledger

She wasn’t a curator. She was a test subject. She would live here, rent-free, in exchange for

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.

Leo smiled, gesturing to a rattan chair. “It’s a closed-loop biosphere. Humidity from the rooftop rainwater tank, soil microbiome imported from Sri Lanka, and a wind system that mimics a lowland breeze.” He poured her a cup of tea from a ceramic pot. It smelled of ginger and something deeper, smokier. “Try it. Black cardamom, from that vine over your head.”