Alias Dragonfly (19 page)

Read Alias Dragonfly Online

Authors: Jane Singer

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Historical, #United States, #General, #Civil War Period (1850-1877), #Mysteries & Detective Stories

“You will be messaged as
Dragonfly
, your code name within the organization. Do you understand?”

Dragonfly. Wide winged. Able to soar away.

The wig was pinching my ear, and my mind was swarming with all I’d heard. Was I to be a sacrifice to the cause they so passionately believed in?

“May I see a looking glass, Mrs. Smith?” I asked, feeling around my head for stray hairs. They were all over the place.

“No. You have to be able to change in the dark, if need be.”

Mr. Pinkerton handed me a carpetbag. “The rest of your attire is within. It is fine mourning garb. Of course, you will dress that way for as long as you are there, in memory of your departed father.”

I shuddered. I wore black for Mama not that long ago.

“You’ll manage the dress for yourself,” Mrs. Smith interrupted my memory. “Before you leave here, secrete your weapon in the bottom of the bag, under the velvet material. The Greenhow woman might well have your person searched.”

Before he left, Mr. Pinkerton quizzed me again, feeding me more facts about Lucy. When he was satisfied that I had retained all he wished me to know, finally, he said, “Be at the flower stand at daybreak. Watch Mr. Riley. He’ll signal you. Two bouquets of violets mean the couriers have not been spotted. One bouquet? Leave immediately, return here and wait for instructions. Are you ready?” Mr. Pinkerton asked.

“I am ready.” I meant it. My nervousness was lifting. I imagined I saw myself—a lost little outsider with facts and names diving circles in her brain—the girl I used to be. She was applauding.

“Godspeed, Lucy,” Mr. Webster said.

“Watch your back, Miss Swinton,” Mrs. Smith added.

She led me to a small room. There was a cot, a blanket and a pillow. A piece of chicken and a bowl of soup sat on a table by the cot.

“Eat, rest here for a few hours, Lucy,” she said. “You’ll leave in the morning. Get used to lying down with the wig on.”

She closed the door.

I looked at the black mourning dress, and the bonnet that looked like a rotted flower. Death, two deaths, actually, of two complete strangers made the air heavy with its presence; filled the room with shadows upon shadows. I ate what I could and tried to fall asleep. As I drifted off, I pictured myself in my new identity. Seventeen-year-old Lucy Swinton of Virginia. I said her name over and over.

Twenty
 

I awoke early, or rather Lucy Swinton awoke early, this Southern orphan, and had a few last bites of leftover chicken. Then, holding a carpetbag of meager belongings, with my gun stored in a hidden compartment under a fold of leather and horsehair at the bottom, I straightened her dress and washed my face.

Before I left the empty photography studio, I paused for a moment at the door, adjusting her bonnet over the wig that had itched like the dickens during my sleep. I slumped a bit, my head bowed, as would have been Lucy Swinton’s demeanor in this time of grief. Then I walked into the new morning.

When I neared the Greenhow house, I saw Mr. Riley watching from across the way, busily arranging his flowers. When he spotted me, he held up the same bunch of violets, twice. I remembered that meant Mrs. Greenhow’s couriers were not about.

As I passed three Union soldiers standing guard at the foot of the stairs, I glanced at the front windows. The drapes were pulled shut, and no doll in petticoats sat in front of them. In case Mrs. Greenhow was watching me, I glared at one of the soldiers. He muttered something about a little Rebel and more. Well, let’s just say that he called me a really vulgar name. The others chuckled.

I climbed the stairs to Mrs. Greenhow’s door. I reached up and rang a large brass bell.

The door opened, and there Mrs. Rose Greenhow stood, straight-backed, tall and shimmering in teal-green, velvet- trimmed dress. She was full-figured, ivory skinned and beautiful, with deep-set stony black eyes.

“I’m here to see Mrs. Greenhow, ma’am,” I said, tingeing my voice with a bit of a Southern accent. Of course, I’d recognized her, but I wasn’t going to let on straightaway. She scrutinized me.

“And who might you be?” Her voice was low and musical. With her wide hoop skirt and narrow waist, she looked like a gilded bell.

“I’m Lucy Swinton, ma’am. I believe you were expecting me.” I curtsied—at least I did what passed as one—and handed her the letter.

She stood in the entryway like a queen guarding a castle. When she finished reading, she put her hand out. “I am Rose Greenhow.” Her smile was forced. But why shouldn’t it be? Her house was guarded by Union soldiers and watched by Mr. Pinkerton’s force. At any moment she could be arrested.

Did that make me feel for her? A little. From what I’d been told, she was zealously committed to the Confederate cause, almost like it had become a religion. I hoped these thoughts had not changed my demeanor, or made her see through me. I couldn’t let my feelings show. But I had not lost my resolve. Not on my first mission. Not with what I’d been entrusted to do.

She took my hand. Was she ever going to ask me to come inside?

“I’ve not met Mr. Willard Duvall,” she said, “though I surely knew his wife before she died of that dreadful lung affliction.” She spoke quickly.

She’s testing me. Don’t let her see I’m struggling to remember.

“No, Mrs. Duvall passed of yellow fever, ma’am. It took her after only a few days.”

I’d been told that by Mr. Pinkerton.

I waited.

Finally—

“Of course, she did. So many diseases, with no remedies, one becomes sadly confused.” Mrs. Greenhow sighed. Her face relaxed. I was doing all right—so far. “Does Mr. Duvall have relations here in the city?” Her eyes held mine again.

Think. If you don’t know, say so. Breathe.

“I’m sure I don’t know, ma’am, but I am mighty grateful to him, hearing of my plight and all.”

Will one of the agents pull me out? Now?

Mrs. Greenhow smiled. The breath I was holding whooshed out of me. I covered it with a cough.

“Of course, dear, we’ve been waiting for you. My ‘little birds’ told me so.” She looked over my shoulder and sneered at the two soldiers who stood behind me.

For good measure, so did I. This time they didn’t jeer or laugh. They clasped their rifles and looked daggers at us.

Mrs. Greenhow whisked me into the entryway. At last, I was inside!

I noticed a young girl-child crouching behind a tall, wide-leafed fern. She was the spot-on image of her mother, right down to her tiny chignon and wide-hooped dress.

“Mama!” she cried. “Has she come to take you away?”

“It’s all right, Little Rose,” Mrs. Greenhow said. “This young lady is a friend.”

I smiled at the child. She was whimpering. She must have been truly afraid.

“I’ll take your cloak and bag, my dear,” Mrs. Greenhow said before I could reach for the carpetbag. “Mourning clothes are a somber sight, and heavy,” she said, running her hands over the cloak as if making sure it was not concealing anything. “We’ll take your things to the room you’ll share with my angel here.”

“Mother!” the child cried out. “Don’t open the door again!”

Mrs. Greenhow whispered to me, “Little Rose has become so fearful that they’re going to take me to prison, or worse. ‘Mama’s hangmen,’ she calls the dreadful people who skulk about our home day and night.”

“How awful for you,” I whispered back. And part of me meant it. No matter where her loyalties lay, she was a mother who loved her child. While I was getting sentimental about her, I ducked just in time to dodge a wooden whirligig toy Little Rose had thrown straight at my head.

I walked over and took the monster-tyke firmly by the hand. “Save that weapon for the Yankees,” I said. “Oh, I call them dirty, blue-bellied cowards myself.” I was getting into my character all right.

Little Rose ran to the window, yanked it open and shouted my improvised slur straight at the soldiers.

Her mother smiled approvingly at me. With her arm firmly in mine, she led me into a front room filled with dark shining wood cabinets and finely carved marble-topped tables. A grand piano stood in the middle of the room. The child ran to it and began banging on the keys.

Mrs. Greenhow smiled. “You’ll mind my little girl well, I pray, Miss Swinton. What with all the tensions of late, she is quite in a muddle, as you can see.” The banging grew louder.

“Oh yes, I’ve been in a terrible muddle myself, ma’am,” I said. “As you know, I lost my dear papa at Manassas.” I sniffled, hoping I looked properly sad. “I’m not sure if you knew that my mother has passed on as well.”

“I did not,” Mrs. Greenhow said. “Communication is . . . difficult these days.”

That comment almost knocked me over. It seemed she was communicating, and then some. I kept talking.

“I’ve no way to move in the world now, orphaned as I am, ma’am, but I am well versed in mathematics, and literature. I will surely teach your lovely child here many, many things.”

“I’m not a child, and I don’t need a teacher!” Little Rose yelled, running over and pinching me on the leg.

“I’ll see to her, Mrs. Greenhow,” I said, giving the little mite a sharp nudge with my foot.

The doll I’d noticed in the window a few days earlier sat by the door. “Oh, ma’am,” I said, “this lovely doll here, why, I had one exactly like that, when I was just her age. Oh, I did love that doll so,” I said, picking it up to see the many layers of colored petticoats.

“My mother made all my dolly’s clothes,” I said. “My dearest mother.” Tears welled in my eyes, real tears for the first time that day, as my mama’s face flashed in my mind, and the pain of losing her stuck in my heart like a burr.

“We’re all a bit lost, then,” Mrs. Greenhow said. “But not for long. Victory is at hand. Mark my words.”

“I pray it will be so,” I said fervently.

I did mark her words. Oh, I did indeed. And as we walked, I memorized the layout of her house. She led me up an ornate wooden staircase studded with fat grinning cherub heads. She opened the door to a small room with two cots, two chairs, a blackboard and a small writing desk. There were tiny iron soldiers lined up facing each other on the floor. Some were lying on their sides.

“See how the Yanks have fallen at Manassas!” Little Rose said with glee. She knelt and grabbed up a miniature mounted horseman and pranced around the room. “Dead and gone!” she shrieked, “Dead and gone!” She tugged at my skirts. “Wanna play? You be the dirty Yank, and I’ll plug you one.” She thrust the soldier at me. “I stabbed you!”

Thankfully, her mother pulled the child to a chair. “None of that, Little Rose, Miss Swinton is here to be a companion, and, of course, she will help you with your lessons.”

“Why do we have to sleep in my lesson room, Mother?” Little Rose stamped her foot and yelled.

“So you won’t have nightmares, darling. You don’t mind do you, Miss Swinton? The bedrooms are downstairs, and Little Rose swears she sees monsters outside the window. In fact, she probably does.”

“Like this!” Little Rose made a hideous face. She grabbed the corners of her mouth and stretched the skin wide. Her eyes bulged out. Then, she screamed and dove under a cot.

“She’ll come out eventually, I assure you, Miss Swinton.” She gazed at her daughter wearily. “This is the only room without a true window, you see?”

Yes, I saw. There was only a small glass porthole window much too high for anyone to look through. And harder to signal from, I thought.

“I’ll leave you two now. Oh, and if you need anything, ring this bell, and I’ll hear it downstairs. My serving woman has run off and left me.” She whispered, “She claimed the soldiers peering at us day and night gave her a fright so bad that she fainted on the hour. I don’t believe that. It was the abolitionists that spirited her away.”

“I’m sorry, that must be hard for you,” I said. I thought,
of course it is hard depending on servants to do your work, carry your slops buckets, and the like. Couldn’t these types do anything for themselves?

“Everything is a trial for me now.” Mrs. Greenhow’s shoulders dropped. All the brightness and poise was gone. “I don’t know what will become of us.” She left the room, closing the door behind her. “You will please remain with Little Rose, at all times, Miss Swinton?” she called from the hallway. “I can’t have my child falling into their hands, now can I?”

“Yes, ma’am,” I answered, locking eyes with Little Rose, who’d crawled out from under the cot and was about to empty her cup of milk on my shoe. “Don’t even try,” I told her after I was sure her mother had gone.

Little Rose backed away.

For a solid day, Mrs. Greenhow’s daughter tormented me. She claimed not to know her multiplication tables and repeatedly scratched at her desk with a hatpin. At least she didn’t throw anything more at me.

The house cat, a gray tabby with a solemn, suffering gaze, became a “Yankee soldier,” and was repeatedly imprisoned in a linen trunk until it yowled for mercy.

But when Little Rose had fallen asleep after hiding a wad of sticky taffy in my boot, I looked carefully around the sparse room. I opened the trunk that had imprisoned the poor cat. It was completely bare except for a few balls of cat fur. I remembered this was a sort of schoolroom, not a sleeping place.

My eyes lit on a high shelf. On it stood a candy jar stuffed with colored papers inside. On tiptoe, I was able to grasp it. I rummaged through the peppermint candies until I found a single white wrapper with no sweet inside. Something was scrawled on it in pencil. The outside of the wrapper was marked
copied and sent
.

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