Read The Dead Drop Online

Authors: Jennifer Allison

The Dead Drop (9 page)

Lincoln pointed to a gun sitting on the writer’s desk—the lipstick gun the museum had acquired. The gun, in turn, seemed to point toward an object hanging on the wall. The shadowy man in the top hat extended a long arm, pointing in the same direction.
There, displayed on the wall next to the antique desk was the Jefferson cipher wheel—a wooden cylinder covered with small, carved letters.
Gilda watched as the letters rearranged themselves into a single word:
OAKHILL
“What does it mean?” Gilda turned back to Lincoln’s ghost, thinking he might be able to explain the significance of the word. But when she turned around, she found herself staring into the barrel of a gun—the lipstick gun. The face behind the gun was featureless—a dark shadow.
10
The Message in the Cipher
Gilda awoke with a feeling of panic and sorrow, as if she had just learned that a friend had been fatally wounded. Her skin felt clammy. She grabbed the notebook she kept next to her bed so she could record her dream before it slipped back into her unconscious mind. She wrote the first word that popped into her mind—a word with a cryptic meaning:
OAKHILL
Why is that important? What does it mean?
TO: Gilda Joyce
FROM: Gilda Joyce
RE: PSYCHIC DREAM REPORT--POSSIBLE GHOST CONTACT
 
 
3:00 A.M.: I just woke from a dream that may contain a psychic message! I was in the Spy Museum, and I spoke to the ghost of Abraham Lincoln! He didn’t say much, but he told me that something “hurts.”
What does the ghost of President Lincoln have to do with the Spy Museum and a lipstick gun?
Gilda sat back in her chair and rested her chin on her knee. Had the dream merely been her brain processing little pieces of information—a collage of images and thoughts from the past few days? Or did the dream contain a genuine message?
Gilda pulled her
Master Psychic’s Handbook
from a side pocket in her suitcase. The book, written by Gilda’s idol—famed psychic Balthazar Frobenius—was battered from years of being carried in Gilda’s backpack, stuffed in the back of her school locker, wedged into suitcases, and basically accompanying Gilda just about everywhere. Even though she had read the book more times than she could count, she always found a new nugget of wisdom when she searched the book for insight into a problem. She turned to a chapter on dreams and read:
ON PSYCHIC DREAMS
Some people receive psychic messages best through dreams—when the mind is completely relaxed. Even people who do not aspire to psychic skills often perceive information during sleep that is normally concealed during their waking hours. This may be because relaxing the mind clears away the sensory clutter that ordinarily blocks one’s deepest mental abilities—abilities including psychic perception of messages from spirits, information about the future, and the ability to read the thoughts of others.
With ongoing practice, aspiring psychics can learn the technique of “wakeful dreaming,” which allows part of the mind to remain conscious during the dream state, thereby controlling this access to unconscious and even psychic information. The truly advanced practitioner may gain the ability to utilize dream states to project the mind through time and space—potentially gaining access to distant places and possibly even distant times.
Gilda thought for a moment, then turned back to her psychic-dream report:
Whatever psychic abilities I have often seem to come through dreams--and sometimes the combination of dreams and writing. It’s hard to explain exactly what it is that makes the dreams with messages different than ordinary dreams, but they often have a heightened feeling of reality.
I feel certain that my dream contained a message since Abraham Lincoln actually pointed toward the cipher wheel hanging on the wall.
Gilda suddenly had a sinking feeling as she recalled the final image of her dream.
I was staring into the barrel of a gun.
Am I in danger? What if THAT’s the message??
Wanting to call Wendy, Gilda picked up her cell phone and hesitated. She knew Wendy would be grumpy if she were wakened in the middle of the night.
But I owe Wendy a phone call,
Gilda reasoned. And isn’t that what best friends are for—someone to call at 3:00 A.M. if you’re scared and really need to talk? Gilda decided to go ahead and dial Wendy’s number.
Far away, in a neat bedroom in Ferndale, Michigan, Wendy Choy cursed and lurched out of bed at the sound of her cell phone, which was at the bottom of her backpack. She found the phone just in time to pick up Gilda’s call.
“Lo,” she said in a hoarse voice, peering at the clock on her bedside table.
“What are you doing?”
“Oh, I was just sitting here hoping someone would call.”
“I was afraid I’d wake you up.”
“Seriously, Gilda. I have to get up in the morning for math camp.”
“How’s that going, by the way? My brother’s in that same program this summer, you know.”
“I know. And it’s good. I don’t know. Why don’t you ever call me at a normal hour to have a conversation? I’ve been wondering how you’re doing in D.C., and I don’t hear anything, and then you wake me up in the middle of the night.”
“I’ve written you a bunch of letters; I just haven’t mailed them yet.”
“I have e-mail and a cell phone, Gilda. Why not just send a text message like a normal person?”
“With text messages there’s nothing for posterity. Years from now when we’re old and the technology is outdated, all those letters I write you will still be sitting there in your attic. See, if I only send you text messages—”
“Gilda, what do you want?”
“Something weird just happened.”
“Every time you go somewhere something weird happens.”
“Wendy, I don’t even have to go anywhere and weird things happen.”
“So what happened this time?”
Gilda told Wendy about the dream and how it seemed to contain a message of some kind. “And at the end, there was a gun pointing at me.”
“Oh.” Wendy grew quiet for a moment. She was well acquainted with ominous nightmares; during a trip to England, she had experienced some very disturbing dreams that made her feel certain that her life was in danger. She suddenly felt more sympathetic toward Gilda. “It was probably just an anxiety dream. You know; you’re on your own in the big city and everything.”
“But everything else about the dream seemed so significant.”
“Or maybe the gun was just there because you were dreaming about President Lincoln. You know, he got assassinated, so that’s not far-fetched.”
“But it felt like he had something to
tell
me. Why me?”
“You’re a psychic investigator, aren’t you? Maybe Lincoln’s ghost just wants to get to know you.”
“I guess. . . .” Gilda’s voice trailed off. She caught her breath because a light suddenly flashed in her room. She put the telephone down and watched as it happened again—and then again—a repetitive series of flashes:
on, off, on, off.
“Gilda? Are you there?”
“Something’s going on here, Wendy,” Gilda whispered.
“What’s happening?”
“I need to check this out. I’ll call you later.”
“But—”
Gilda hung up the phone and realized that the light was coming from outside her window. She opened the blinds and looked across the courtyard into rows of apartments that were dark—except for one fifth-floor window where lights were flashing:
on, off, on, off.
Gilda watched for a minute, transfixed.
What was going on in that apartment?
Gilda remembered how the mousy woman had stared through that same apartment window. Her face had been plain. Maybe she wore glasses. There was nothing striking about her at all, but the simple fact of seeing her staring with such intensity through the window had filled Gilda with trepidation.
TO: GILDA JOYCE
FROM: GILDA JOYCE
RE: ADDENDUM TO PSYCHIC REPORT--MYSTERIOUS ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY IN CATHEDRAL TOWERS APARTMENTS
 
 
Following recording of potentially psychic dream and conversation with Wendy Choy, lights are seen flashing in a 5th-floor apartment where a suspicious-looking woman lives.
Is this a coincidence, or is there a connection between the dream about Lincoln and the lights? Could the lights be a signal of some kind--or possible evidence of a poltergeist?
Now feeling even more bewildered and intrigued than when she had first awoken from the dream about Abraham Lincoln, Gilda pulled a book entitled
Haunted Government: The Famous Ghosts of Washington, D.C.
from her suitcase and turned to a passage about Lincoln’s ghost.
LINCOLN—OUR “GUARDIAN GHOST”?
Abraham Lincoln’s ghost has appeared to many visitors at the White House. Some have claimed to see his somber silhouette standing at the window of the Oval Office, gazing out at the nation with an attitude of concern.
Lincoln experienced personal tragedy and profound grief during his term in office, and the weighty emotions associated with his life may be one reason his spirit continues to linger after death. Adding to Lincoln’s deep concern over the plight of the nation during the bloody battles of the Civil War was the trauma of the death of his beloved son Willie, who passed away from an illness during Lincoln’s presidency. Lincoln’s wife held séances in the Green Room of the White House, some of which Lincoln was reported to have attended.
President Lincoln was also known to sit for hours by his young son’s tomb, weeping openly and even asking that the crypt be opened so he could view the boy’s lifeless body once more.
While the moments of anguish associated with Lincoln’s family are sufficient explanation for his ghost’s moody presence around the White House, a perhaps more intriguing theory put forth by some psychics is the notion that Lincoln remains a “guardian spirit” of the nation, appearing at times of danger. Whether his ghost’s message is perceived depends on the emotional and psychic sensitivity of the officials in the White House at any given time.
 
If Lincoln’s ghost is a “guardian spirit” of the nation, is it possible that he has a message for me, is it possible that this word “Oakhill” and those flashing lights are pointing to some type of spy activity I’m supposed to investigate?
11
The Museum Ghost
Surrounded by an assortment of antique toiletries including “Southern Rose” hair oil, “Dri-Dew” deodorant, perfume bottles, and a silver hairbrush and mirror, the Spy Museum’s manager of exhibit production stared at the lipstick pistol and secret-camera brooch he had just installed in the Sisterhood of Spies room. His name was Roger Selak, and although he resembled a young college student dressed in a baseball cap and blue jeans, he was actually a new father who had been up for exactly half the night pacing through his apartment with a colicky newborn. The other half of the night had been spent dozing on the couch and having whispered arguments with his wife about the possible cause of their baby’s sleeplessness and which of the two of them was more tired than the other. Roger assumed it was sleep deprivation that caused him to feel light-headed and dizzy as he considered the lipstick gun and spy-camera brooch in their case—objects he had originally intended to place among secret weapons of the Cold War. On the other hand, maybe the problem was the sneaky, vintage femininity of the exhibit, which was designed to resemble a dressing room of a Southern belle who was also a spy. The display contained dolls with hollow china heads, tiny Bibles containing secret handwritten notes, and a fake beard and mustache—the various tools of female spies who smuggled communications behind enemy lines during the Civil War.
Behind Roger, a film about female spies was projected from an ornate three-way mirror. Black-and-white photographs of women’s faces emerged from the mirror, growing larger, then fading as the soft-voiced narrator told of the lives and deaths of spies including Mata Hari, Harriet Tubman, Sarah Edmonds, and Edith Cavell, the last of whom was executed by a firing squad.

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