had they said to each other last time they were together?
She couldn't remember, she realized with rising panic. "Patience," she whispered. "I can't remember the last time I told my father I loved him."
"He knew, honey," Patience said. "Don't you worry about that. He just knew."
Lucy wanted to throw herself upon him, to weep out her heartbreak, but a curious calm took hold of her. Resolution settled like a rock in her chest. She would not cry. The Colonel had taught her never to weep for something that couldn't be changed. No tears, then, to dishonor his teachings.
"Good night, Colonel," she whispered, pressing a kiss to his cold hand. He still smelled of gunpowder.
Her mother sat devastated by shock, rocking in her chair. "What shall I do?" she said. "Whatever shall I do without him?" "We'll manage," Lucy heard herself say. "We'll find a way."
"I shall die without him," her mother said as if she hadn't heard. "I shall simply lie down and die."
"Now, don't you take on like that, Miss Viola," Willa Jean said. She had a deep voice, compelling as a song. But it was a small, bleating whimper from the baby that caught Viola's attention.
Lucy's mother stopped rocking and stared at the bundle in Lucy's arms. "What on earth— Who is that?" she asked.
Lucy turned so she could see. "It's a baby, Mama. A little lost girl. I rescued her from the fire."
"Heavenly days, so it is. Oh, Hiram," she said, addressing her dead husband while still staring at the child, who stared back. "Oh, Hiram, look. Our Lucy has brought us a baby."
Part Three
A woman's ability to earn money is better protection against the tyranny and brutality of men than her ability to vote.
—Victoria Claflin Woodhull
Chapter Six
Chicago May 1876
Where do babies come from, Mama? Really."
Lucy looked across the breakfast table at her daughter and smiled at the little face that greeted her each morning. Having breakfast together was part of their daily routine in the small apartment over the shop. Usually she read the Chicago Tribune while Maggie looked at a picture book, sounding out the words. But her daughter's question was much more intriguing than the daily report from the Board of Trade.
"I know where you came from," Lucy said. "You fell from the sky, right into my arms. Just like an angel from heaven." It was Maggie's favorite story, one she never tired of hearing—or repeating for anyone who would listen.
The little girl stirred her graham gems and frowned. She was stubbornly left-handed, a trait that often reminded Lucy of the mystery surrounding her. "Sally Saltonstall says that's an old wives' tale."
"I'm not an old wife." Lucy gave a bemused chuckle. "I'm not even a young wife. I'm not anyone's wife."
"Sally says you can't be my mama if you're not nobody's wife." "Anybody's wife. And Sally is full of duck fluff for telling you that."
Maggie passed Lucy the stereoscope she'd received for her birthday last fall. They didn't know her exact birthday, of course, so they had chosen October 8, the date of the Great Fire that had changed so many lives. Each year, Lucy gave a party for Margaret Sterling Hathaway, commemorating the night they had found each other.
"Look at the picture in there," Maggie said. "It shows a family, and the mama has a husband called the papa."
Lucy obliged her daughter by peering into the two lenses of the stereoscope. The shadowy, three-dimensional image depicted an idealized family—the mother in her demure dress, the upright, proper, bewhiskered father in boiled collar and cuffs and two perfectly groomed children, a boy and a girl.
' "These are just strangers dressed up to look like a family," she said, ignoring a nameless chill that swept through her. "We are a proper family. I'm your mother, you are my daughter, forever and ever. Isn't that what a family is?"
"But the papa's missing." Maggie thoughtfully wiggled her top front tooth, which was very loose now and about to come out. "Could Willa Jean be the
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