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Girl in Disguise




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  Copyright © 2017 by Greer Macallister

  Cover and internal design © 2017 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover design by Leo Nickols

  Cover images © Miguel Sobreira/Arcangel Images, Stephen Mulcahey/Arcangel Images

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Apart from well-known historical figures, any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Published by Sourcebooks Landmark, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

  (630) 961-3900

  Fax: (630) 961-2168

  www.sourcebooks.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Macallister, Greer, author.

  Title: Girl in disguise / Greer Macallister.

  Description: Naperville, Illinois : Sourcebooks Landmark, [2017]

  Identifiers: LCCN 2016007221 | (hardcover : alk. paper)

  Subjects: LCSH: Warne, Kate, -1868--Fiction. | Pinkerton's National Detective Agency--Fiction. | Women detectives--Illinois--Chicago--Fiction. | GSAFD: Mystery fiction. | Biographical fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3613.A235 G57 2017 | DDC 813/.6--dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016007221

  Contents

  Front Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Author’s Note

  Reading Group Guide

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Back Cover

  Chapter One

  The First Disguise

  August 1856

  Like any Chicago tavern in deep summer, Joe Mulligan’s stank. It stank of cigars smoked the week before, months before, years before. Tonight’s smoke pooled against the basement ceiling in a noxious cloud. I acted like I smelled only roses. The woman I was pretending to be would have done the same.

  I was also pretending the sharp tang of men’s sweat surrounding me didn’t terrify me. These were not good men. But I wasn’t a good woman, not tonight. My mission was to ignore the smoke and the sweat, blind a bad man with a wicked smile, and wring out his secrets. There would be no second chance.

  So I breathed as shallowly as I could and made my way through the crowd to the bar. Men’s bodies brushed mine, hips and hands and God only knows what, lingering on my shoulder and everywhere below. My nerves frayed, and I stumbled. With anything less at stake, I would have fled Joe Mulligan’s as if it were on fire. But I needed the money. The money would save me.

  “Drink?” snapped the barkeep.

  I squared my shoulders and answered him as the woman I was pretending to be.

  “Well, I sure am thirsty,” I said, lowering my head as if sharing a confidence, “but I’m waiting on a friend.”

  Empty glass in hand, he looked me over. The low-sweeping neckline of my claret silk gown and the pale expanse of décolletage it artfully framed. The intricately curled hair piled atop my head, shot through with ribbons. The coy smile, all lips, no teeth. I saw recognition flash in his eyes.

  “Do your business, but don’t make no trouble,” he said and moved on down the bar to a knot of raucous, rowdy men. The first gate, passed. Now, I was just waiting.

  And waiting.

  At least thirty long minutes crawled by, and with each one, my relief drained away. The same disguise that had fooled the bartender fooled the patrons. Man after man took turns perching on the red leather stool next to me. They bent close. Their mouths offered drinks and conversation, but their eyes made it clear what they really wanted.

  I hadn’t expected to be the only woman in the place. This late at night, the slatterns of Chicago did a brisk business in establishments like Joe Mulligan’s, which is why I’d chosen this place and time. I’d known how it would look and what they would think. But the practice was turning out to be much harder than the theory. Every man had to be skillfully parried away. A single slip would waste the night. The effort exhausted me.

  “Oh, sir,” I was saying to the latest one, fluttering my fingers at him, “you do me a kindness. But I really must insist you leave that seat free for my companion.”

  He leaned closer, breathing almost into my mouth, and slurred, “I’ll be your companion, sugar.”

  I swallowed my disgust and kept my voice steady. Be pleasant, I told myself. Cheerful. Bland. “He’ll be here any minute, I’m certain of it,” I said and gazed over his shoulder hopefully. As if in answer, the door to the outside creaked open.

  Rumbles of laughter sounded as half a dozen men guffawed their way down the stairs into the tavern. I recognized my target immediately. He wasn’t the tallest of them, nor the most handsome, but it was clear he was in charge. His smirk showed he was the one who’d told the joke everyone was laughing at.

  Henry Venable, better known as Heck, was a sallow man with deep-set, hooded eyes. He wore a hat worn soft with age. The rest of his clothes were so new they practically gleamed. If I were closer, I’d be able to see my reflection in his shoes. He looked, unmistakably, like he’d recently come into money. Which the Pinkerton Detective Agency and the First Eagle Savings Bank believed he had, several weeks before, with the help of three accomplices and four shotguns. Eyewitnesses had given a description that matched Heck’s, but it wasn’t enough. The best way to prove he’d done it was to find the money. He’d spent some of it, clearly, but rare was the man who could spend five thousand dollars in less than a month without leaving some kind of trail. The rest had to be hidden somewhere.

  I had to find out where.

  Easy, easy, I told myself. I couldn’t shove my way over to him right off the bat. I had to get him to come to me. Somehow.

  Still laughing and jostling one another, the six men took their seats at a booth
in the corner, much farther away than I would’ve liked. I was too far off to catch his eye, and it would look odd if I changed my seat for no reason. Given that, I sidled down the bar and forced myself to slide onto an empty stool next to a stoop-shouldered man. I sat much closer to him than I needed to and dangled one foot close to his.

  “Evening,” I said.

  He glared at me through bleary eyes, clearly three sheets to the wind already, maybe four. Well, that wasn’t all bad. He couldn’t cause me trouble if he slipped out of consciousness. I hoped.

  “Evening,” he slurred, barely able to manage even the two required syllables.

  “What’re you drinking? Looks delicious. I sure could use a drink myself,” I said and gestured to the empty bar in front of me.

  He managed to raise two fingers to the bartender, who came right away—clearly, this was a regular—and said, “’Nother round, Jim.”

  “Coming right up.”

  I edged even closer to him and peeked over my shoulder as discreetly as I could toward Heck and his men. All seated, and some looked restless. Good. There were still possibilities.

  My ever-drunker neighbor half raised his glass of bourbon to me. I took a sip and nearly choked. It took all my concentration not to gasp at the burning, searing sensation. I’d have to get better at that. Any man in possession of his faculties could easily see I wasn’t used to strong drink. Tonight, this one’s faculties were thoroughly drowned, but that was luck on my part, not skill. If I made it through this night, I’d put it on my list of things to learn.

  Finally, one of Heck’s men eased out of the booth. As I’d hoped, he came toward the bar, into the larger-than-usual space on my far side. He flagged down the bartender and rattled off a complicated order. As soon as he was done and his elbow was resting on the bar next to me, I ignored my marinated neighbor, as I’d planned, and leaned over toward him, my décolletage almost spilling out onto his arm.

  “Evening,” I said.

  He nodded back silently. He was a striking man, with blue eyes like ice under his thick black brows, but there was something cruel about his face. Something cold. Locked away.

  I’d have to generate enough warmth for both of us. “Say,” I nearly purred, inclining my head toward the booth, “would you mind introducing me to your friends there?”

  “Yes, I’d mind very much,” he said, turned square toward the bar, and then ignored me as if someone were paying him a goodly sum to do so.

  Damn it. The wrong target, I supposed, but what was I to do? I was beginning to panic in earnest. Heck was only ten feet away from me, but he might as well be ten miles if I couldn’t get myself into his orbit. I had it all planned out. Delicate fingers laid on his arm. Breathless, admiring questions. He was known as a boaster with an eye, and other parts, for the ladies. If I was in the right place at the right time—which I was so, so close to being—I could get him to boast to me. Then I’d have what Pinkerton wanted, and in turn, he’d give me what I wanted: a position as the first female operative of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, at full salary.

  But it all depended on Heck, and to get to him, I had to get through this man-shaped woodcut first. And all he was doing was staring at the barkeep, waiting.

  We stayed like that a few minutes. My brain worked madly, thoughts zooming and swooping around my skull, but I had no good ideas. It could all fall apart this easily. Damn it. Damn it. The drunk on my other side finally laid his head down on the bar; he’d be no help.

  At last, another man rose from the booth and joined Blue Eyes, standing close to both of us. His hair was drenched with brilliantine, and his small, sad mustache was little more than a pencil line above his lip. “Boss wants to know what’s taking so long.”

  “See for yourself,” said the taller one, inclining his head in the direction of the culprit, who was hard at work pouring coppery brown liquid out of a silver shaker into six matching coupes. “Ragman’s taking his sweet time.”

  The new arrival inclined his head toward me. “Looks to me like you’re caught up in conversation.”

  “Heavens no,” I said, pivoting my body toward his. “This clod couldn’t make conversation if I spotted him both ends of the sentence. Are you more of a…talker?”

  “I could be,” he said with a wolf’s leer.

  “Then perhaps I might join your party?” I smiled, but not too wide. Softly, sweetly. Let him think me a sheep.

  “Sounds good to me,” he said.

  “No,” said the first man.

  “You’re no fun,” said the second.

  “That may be,” said Blue Eyes. “But no need for the boss to get distracted. There’s business to be done.”

  “Aw, plenty of time for business when the sun rises,” Mustache replied. “Tonight, I think he’s more in the mood to celebrate, if you catch my drift.”

  “I like to celebrate,” I said.

  “I bet you do,” both men said in unison, with very different inflections.

  With much clattering and fanfare, the bartender finally poured the sixth drink and pushed the glasses across the bar. Mustache immediately grabbed one in each hand. The elegant stems looked especially fragile in his fists. He carried them over to the table, where his arrival was greeted with appreciative hoots.

  I assumed Blue Eyes would follow, but instead, he grabbed my elbow sharply and growled in my ear, “What are you playing at?”

  “What?”

  “Walk away,” he said. “Right now. Walk away.”

  “No,” I hissed, but my heart pounded.

  “All right, then. Come with me.”

  “I’ll scream,” I said.

  “You do that,” he said, cool as the far side of the pillow.

  He was right. A scream would call attention my way, but what for? What man among these would rush to my side? I scanned their faces. Heck Venable and his crew were hardly the only wrongdoers here, and some were doubtless worse than mere robbers. First Eagle had been knocked over with no fatalities. There were things far worse than money to steal. I was likely better off taking my chances with Blue Eyes, as poor a prospect as that seemed.

  Mustache returned for the rest of the drinks. “You helping?” he asked, clearly confused.

  “Naw, you take ’em. I’ll be back in two shakes,” said the taller man, shifting his grip on my elbow around to the inside, so it looked less overtly threatening. His long, rough fingers moved over the delicate skin on my inner arm, and I couldn’t suppress a shiver.

  “Oh, I see,” leered Mustache.

  Annoyance crossed his face, but Blue Eyes said, “Don’t drink mine. I won’t be long.”

  “Sure.”

  I wished I could think of something to say to Mustache that would result in him getting me away from Blue Eyes, but my mind was a blank. I never should have taken such a risk. Never should have come here. I didn’t even protest as the taller man hauled me to my feet.

  “This way,” he said, steering me up the stairs. I dragged my feet as much as I dared, and a new wave of terror swept over me. Upstairs was the hotel. That was a key reason Joe Mulligan’s was particularly popular with the whores of Chicago: convenience.

  His hand was locked around my arm like an iron cuff. He didn’t relax his grip at all, even while using his other hand to unlock the door of a room that I assumed to be his. My throat was dry, and my head swam. Damn it, damn it. I’d disguised myself as a prostitute to crack the case, believing it the best, if not the only, way to achieve my aim. Now, unless a miracle happened, I’d have to choose between certain exposure and an unthinkable act. Blue Eyes was clearly expecting me to follow through on my disguise. Unless I wanted to give up all hope of ever gaining the confidence of Heck Venable and prying loose his secrets, I’d have to deliver on my unspoken promise and do what prostitutes do.

  With one more tug, he pulled me inside the room
and shut the door.

  Chapter Two

  Someone Has to Be First

  Only three days before, I’d knocked on the front door of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency offices on Washington Street and, hearing no answer, swung the door open to step inside. I could feel the perspiration collecting like rainwater between my shoulder blades, trapped under the charcoal shirtwaist I’d selected to convey seriousness. I knew he wouldn’t consider me if I looked frivolous. He might not consider me anyway.

  It was a muggy, sun-soaked day outside, but in here, it was dim. A neat, white arrow painted on the wall pointed me up a set of stairs. No wonder no one had heard my knock. The stairs were narrow and rickety, and they carried me up into the unknown.

  Three floors above the steaming Chicago pavement, I took a moment to wipe my brow before I knocked on the inner door. An indeterminate reply—was it go ahead or go away?—came through the door in a muffled bass. I heard the answer I wanted and went inside.

  Nearly the entire room was taken up with a heavy oaken desk the size of a draft horse, dwarfing the man who sat there. I knew him in an instant. Allan Pinkerton. Twenty years my senior, with thinning reddish hair and a full beard, looking very much like the portraits I’d seen in the newspaper, alongside stories of daring exploits that brought dangerous criminals swiftly to justice.

  A decade before, as a cooper harvesting wood for barrels from the dense forests outside Chicago, he’d stumbled onto a counterfeiting operation hidden among the trees. He reported it to the authorities and won himself a position in the city’s police department. In his version of the story, the work suited him but the politics didn’t, and after a handful of years, he opened his own private detective agency. He’d been publicizing his many successes ever since. If he had failures too, neither the Tribune nor the Daily Journal was quick to say.

  I waited for a moment to catch his attention, but he was scribbling furiously in a ledger. Too busy to waste his time on me? Fully unaware of my presence? It couldn’t be the latter, and I wouldn’t accept the former. At last, I cleared my throat.

  When he saw I was a woman, he stood. We took each other’s measure in a long moment.