The Last Government Girl. Ellen Herbert

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it wasn’t going to be easy giving the pin to Agent Jessup Lindsay.

      Could he march into the huge lobby, hand the pin to the man behind the desk, and tell him to give it to Jessup Lindsay?

      The troops rode those boats onto the beach and jumped out, knowing the Krauts were dug in, guns pointed. If they could do such a brave thing, why was he scared to go into the FBI building? It’s not like anyone was going to shoot him, but he might get arrested. He had stolen evidence from a murder and left Doris on the towpath. He might even be accused of killing her.

      But for his peace of mind, he had to give the pin to Agent Lindsay. Maybe he could mail it to him, but what if the pin got lost in the mail? No, he had to do this right. He had to put the pin into the man’s hand.

      He crossed Constitution and bought a peach from a street vendor set up in front of the National Gallery of Art.

      “Which side of that building is the entrance to the Bureau of Investigation?” he asked.

      “This side.” The swarthy man grinned showing a gold tooth. “Want to see a real G-Man?” He winked and pretended to shoot a Tommy gun.

      Vernon remained solemn. This was no laughing matter. He was here to dispel a ghost.

      He kept his vigil in front of the Justice Department, walking back and forth. A little after six o’clock, people poured out. Government girls emerged in twos and threes. In their pale summer dresses the color of flowers, they almost floated down the street toward the streetcar stops on Pennsylvania Avenue.

      He was about to give up when Alonso Crooms emerged from the building. Vernon recognized him because he was over six feet with skin about as light as a colored man’s could be. And he wore the gray fedora he had on in the newspaper photograph. He crossed to the vendor Vernon had bought from and filled a bag with peaches.

      Vernon followed him across the street and around the building to the streetcar stop. A block away, the streetcar clanged its arrival.

      “Al,” a man called from the crowd. The man was Jessup Lindsay. He was a little shorter than Alonso with wavy brown hair. Both men had the same notched chin and large wide-set eyes. Lindsay’s left arm was a shriveled pale thing that ended a little above his elbow. Vernon hadn’t expected a famous detective to have only one arm.

      Both were dressed in dark cotton trousers, white short-sleeve shirts, and dark ties, the same as most of the men coming out of the Justice Department.

      The streetcar approached clickety-clack, clickety-clack the steady ring of its bell a warning to government girls and messenger boys on swerving motorbikes to stop crossing its path.

      Alonso ran for it, so did Vernon, who got on behind him and stayed close.

      In Washington City, coloreds could ride anywhere they wanted on buses or streetcars, but once they crossed into Virginia, they had to move to the back. Vernon had learned about Jim Crow laws once he got here.

      Folks crammed on. Vernon held to the strap overhead, swaying with the crowd.

      When they passed the Bond Bread plant near Florida Avenue and the yeasty aroma of bread filled the air, Vernon closed his eyes and was transported home. He imagined biting into one of Bess’s fluffy biscuits.

      He loved his wife, yet today he’d sinned with another woman and didn’t feel bad about it. He had become a true sinner, who enjoyed his sin and hoped to repeat it soon.

      At the stop after Florida, Jessup and Alonso got off. The pair met beside the curb. Vernon got off, too, hanging back so they wouldn’t know he was following.

      He wasn’t sure how to give the pin to Agent Lindsay. He couldn’t just walk up to him on the street. He wished he’d brought pencil, paper, and an envelope so he could tell him when and where he found the pin. And slip it all into his mailbox.

      Alonso Crooms and Jessup Lindsay turned off Georgia onto V Street and went up an alley. Vernon watched from behind a smelly compost heap.

      The alley was lined with brick tenements where coloreds lived. Wealthy Negroes, doctors and lawyers, lived on what was called the Gold Coast, middle and upper 16th Street Northwest. Vernon had roofed one of their mansions. Bess couldn’t believe when he told her how these colored folks had colored servants of their own.

      Alonso and Jessup stopped beside a water pump between the shacks and washed some peaches. Alonso handed one to Jessup who took a big bite. Peach juice dribbled down his chin. With his handkerchief, Alonso wiped Jessup’s face. Most men wouldn’t appreciate another man wiping their face, but Jessup just nodded and continued to eat.

      Three barefoot colored boys stopped throwing a ball and ran to them. Alonso gave the boys peaches and made them wash the fruit before they ate.

      The men walked a little further down the alley and opened an iron gate that whined shut behind them. The boys went back to playing baseball, and Vernon crept from his hiding place to their gate. He was looking into the backyard with its huge garden when someone grabbed his arm and pulled it behind his back.

      “Why you following us?” a voice asked.

      The gate opened, and Vernon was pushed through. Jessup Lindsay opened a door beside the garage. Alonso Crooms forced Vernon up a narrow set of stairs, dark as night. “I’m right behind you, so don’t try anything.” Alonso let Vernon’s arm go. Vernon stumbled. Alonso helped him up. “Watch your step.”

      Vernon entered the room over the garage. A sweet odor filled the air, so sweet it made his stomach roil. The only light came from the small window facing the alley.

      “Don’t look around,” Alonso said.

      But Vernon already had. A huge photograph of Doris stared at him from the back wall. Her dead eyes bored into him. His knees gave way and he slumped to the floor.

      11

      Pausing on the stairs, Rachel turned back to Eddie. “I notice Captain Silver Spoon didn’t pick you up here, so don’t give my date the third degree, please.”

      “Silver Spoon’s too upper crusty to come to Georgia Avenue.” Eddie brought her index finger to the tip of her nose and pushed it up. “I met him and his Yale pals at a restaurant, where he acted more interested in his friends than in me.”

      Rachel rolled her eyes. “Mrs. Trundle even asked my date about his family in Mississippi.”

      Eddie flushed with fremdschamen, vicarious embarrassment. Aunt Viola acted as if their ancestors had come over on the Mayflower when they were really hardscrabble mountainfolk.

      “You said Bert knows this guy, right?” Eddie worried about Rachel going out with a man she met on the streetcar this afternoon. Of course, Eddie had met Silver Spoon on the train. Gone were the days when a woman and man needed a proper introduction.

      “Mr. Berman, Bert’s employer, is also Thad’s landlord.” Rachel held the parlor door for Eddie.

      A reedy young man with unruly sandy blond hair and black glasses got to his feet. “Hello, there.” His features swam into place, eyes dark as onyx, snub nose, easy smile, too easy. Thad Graham didn’t look unhappy trapped in Aunt Viola’s web, and Eddie found that odd.

      When

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