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Authors: Stephen L. Carter

BOOK: Back Channel
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PROLOGUE
The Sacrifice

The President was in one of his moods. He stood at the bedroom window, tugging the lace curtain aside with a finger, peering down onto East Capitol Street. Outside, Washington was dark. He picked up his bourbon, took a long pull, and rubbed at his lower back. Margo sensed that he would rather be pacing, except that he was in too much pain just now; he never complained, but she had spent enough time around him these last few days to tell. All the same, she marveled at the man’s aplomb, given that he was quite possibly presiding over the end of the world.

“Long day, Miss Jensen,” he said finally.

“Yes, Mr. President.”

“I’ve got people telling me I have to invade.” His suit jacket was slung over the back of a chair. His tie was loose. The thick brown hair was mussy, and before he departed would be a good deal mussier. Margo wondered who owned this townhouse. The bedroom was plush to the point of decadence. Her grandmother, her beloved Nana, would have been appalled at the thought that Margo was in such a place with a man, even if he was the President of the United States.

“Invade Cuba,” Kennedy clarified. He reached for his glass but didn’t drink. “My people keep telling me it’s my only choice. They seem to forget we tried already, just last year. And I don’t mean Keating and all those armchair generals on the Hill. I mean my own people. I’ve
moved the troops to Georgia and Florida, just in case we decide to go in.” He let the curtain fall, turned half toward her, in profile tired but still dashingly young: the first President born in the twentieth century, as his supporters endlessly trumpeted.

Margo sat on the chaise longue, knees primly together in the evening dress. She had told her roommates that she was going to a party in Silver Spring, careful to sound nervous enough that they would guess she was lying. It was important that they suspect she was off on some other journey than the one she disclosed: important to the fiction that she was required to maintain.

As was tonight’s meeting: what historians in later years would suppose, wrongly, to have been an assignation.

The fiction. The vital fiction.

Margo Jensen was nineteen years old, as bright as morning, quick and curious and perhaps a bit fussy, more handsome than pretty, displaying a fleshiness that belonged to a more mature woman. From an oval face a shade or two shy of mahogany, curious eyes strove to find order in a world rushing toward chaos.

Kennedy moved to the gigantic bed, gave a small laugh; sat. “I say to them, ‘If we invade Cuba, take out those missiles, what does Khrushchev do?’ They can’t make up their minds.” Kennedy groaned. It occurred to her that in the midst of a crisis that could lead to nuclear war, the President had advisers galore, but nobody to whom he could simply vent without back talk; and so, given that the plan required him to see Margo daily in any case, he had chosen her as his foil.

It wasn’t as though she could tell anybody.

“LeMay says the Sovs are so scared of us, they won’t do a thing,” Kennedy continued. He was massaging the small of his back again, grimacing. Maybe he was hoping she would volunteer to help. “McNamara tells me they’ll have to respond, just to save face, but their response will be limited, probably in Berlin. Two or three others think they’ll press the button.”

Margo shut her eyes. She still could not quite grasp that any of this was happening. It was October 1962, and a month ago she had been nobody, a sophomore government major at Cornell University, chasing no larger goals than finishing college, going on to graduate school, and getting married. Now she was skulking around Washington, D.C.,
worried about being caught by someone who knew her—or, worse, by the people who would very much like her dead.

At odd moments, she asked God why she had been chosen for this role. She was no soldier and no spy; two years ago, she had been in high school. She was not equal to the tasks demanded of her. They should have picked someone else. She wanted more than anything not to be here. Her boyfriend, Tom, a physics major, liked to say that the universe was unpredictable but never absurd. Just now, however, “absurd” was the only word to describe the bizarre concatenation of circumstances that had led her to tonight’s secret meeting in this grand-luxe bedroom. But there was no escape. She was the only candidate: that was what they kept telling her. It was Margo or nobody.

“Those are my choices,” the President was saying. “Either live with nuclear missiles ninety miles off our shore—missiles that are capable of reaching two-thirds of the country—or risk thermonuclear war. Come over here.”

She tensed. “No, thank you.”

“It’s okay. Sit with me a minute.”

“I’m comfortable where I am, Mr. President.”

Kennedy seemed to understand. “We would spare you all of this if we could, Miss Jensen, believe me. We’re not the ones who chose you.” He drank. Drank again. “You do realize, don’t you, that there’s a good chance I’m going to be the last President of the United States?”

Margo swallowed. “I’m sure that’s not true, sir.”

Actually, she was lying. She believed exactly that. The likelihood that this was the end plagued her dreams.

Kennedy pinched the bridge of his nose. His exhaustion was palpable, a live creature in the room, and yet he tamed it and kept moving forward. “Some of my advisers have already sent their families out of the city. They want to know what provisions I’m making for Jackie and the kids. I tell them not to worry. There isn’t going to be a war. By keeping my family in Washington, I show them I mean what I say. Maybe that’s terrible of me. I don’t know.” He shook off the contemplative mood, stood up straight. “It’s time, Miss Jensen.”

Margo’s eyes snapped open. Now came the part of the evening she hated most. “Yes, sir,” she said, rising.

He was on his feet, turning back the comforter on the bed. She
went around to the other side and helped. They tossed the extra pillows into the corner. Kennedy went to the bucket and poured her a glass of champagne. Margo drank it right off, knowing she would get tipsy, which was the point: otherwise, her courage would fail.

Besides, it was important that the Secret Service agent who would drive her home later smell the alcohol on her breath: again, the fiction.

The President poured her another glass. The room swam. She sat on the bed, trembling. She kicked off her shoes, let one of the shoulder straps slide down her upper arm. Kennedy undid his tie, dropped it on the floor, and walked toward her, smiling that crooked smile.

“Now,” he said, “let’s get some of that beautiful lipstick on my collar.”

More fiction. He took her hand, lifted her to her feet. Margo stepped into his arms and, once more, shut her eyes.
You’re helping to save the country,
a voice in her head reminded her.
And the world.
But as she turned her face upward toward his, Margo found herself wondering again what Nana would think, and all at once none of it mattered—not Kennedy, not Khrushchev, not her role in trying to stop the nuclear war that was about to start—none of it mattered, and none of it would have happened, if only she could turn back the clock to the day they came up from Washington to tell Margo that it was her patriotic duty to go to Bulgaria to babysit a madman.

She should have said no.

PART I
Standoff Position

September 1962–October 1962

Ithaca, New York | Varna, Bulgaria | Washington, D.C.

ONE
Deductive Reasoning
I

“Suppose you’re a teller in a bank,” said the great Lorenz Niemeyer, his small round body rolling merrily across the stage at the front of the lecture hall. “A man walks in and hands over a note. The note says he has a grenade and will blow up himself and you and the other customers unless you give him five hundred dollars. How many of you would comply?”

A nervous moment, students sneaking glances at each other, trying to figure out whether Niemeyer was testing their fortitude. Finally, a few hands went up, then more, until nearly all two hundred and fifty were in the air. Margo’s was among the very early risers, for she possessed little capacity for self-delusion.

“Of course,” said Niemeyer, happily. The students stirred in relief. The vast room was stifling in the September heat, but the doors and windows were tightly shuttered, the hallways patrolled by the great man’s teaching assistants. His course on Conflict Theory was among the most popular on the Cornell campus, and he wanted nobody not enrolled to hear a word he said. “We’d all agree. We have seen before that threats have to be credible, but doubting the fool with the note does not seem a reasonable course of action. Blowing oneself up for five hundred dollars might seem incomprehensible. Still, you don’t want to take chances. So you hand over the cash. But now look what happens next.” Juddering to a halt. His belly jiggled in the vested suit. “The robber notices that there’s a lot more money in your cage than he suspected.
You have a good five thousand within easy reach. So he leans over and says to give him the rest, or he blows you both to bits. Now do you comply?”

Not as many hands went up. Margo hesitated, then kept hers on her desk. Niemeyer looked around. He asked why those who would now refuse to turn over the money had changed their minds. He called on somebody—not Margo, but one of his most fawning acolytes, a silly rich boy named Littlejohn—who announced confidently that he would have to consider the loss to the bank.

Niemeyer put his small hands on those ample hips. He had been advising the Pentagon on nuclear strategy for a decade, and he rarely bothered to hide his contempt for the rising generation, a group he considered soft on Communism, and stupid into the bargain.

“That answer is so bad it’s not even wrong,” said the great man. “And rather exculpatorial, I might add. A fellow like you would hand over the money without a second thought, Mr. Littlejohn, and we both know it. Whereas the rest of them”—pudgy hands made an arc—“well, the rest of them wouldn’t. Know why? Because, now that the amount of money involved is so large, they’re not sure they believe the robber’s note any longer. Remember. The more the blackmailer wants, the more time we spend analyzing whether he’s really serious. Every second-grader turns over his Twinkies to the playground bully. But even a schoolboy would hesitate if the bully demanded his clothes instead. We’re past the hour. Go. Dismissed.” Nodding toward the center aisle, where Margo always sat four rows back: “Miss Jensen. A word.”

She stood, surprised to be addressed by name. It had never occurred to her that the great Lorenz Niemeyer might know who she was. A couple of students sitting nearby had their heads together, whispering speculations.

The professor beckoned, and Margo hurried forward, wondering whether she was in trouble. Last week, Niemeyer had booted another girl from the class after she turned out not to have done the assigned reading. Close up, the tubby little man looked slightly ridiculous in his wire-framed glasses and expensive suit. One of his hands was bent and twisted; the fingernails were misshapen. He was packing the ancient leather briefcase that had traveled with him to Nuremberg, to Tokyo,
to Moscow, depending on which President he had been serving, and in what capacity.

“Walk with me,” he said.

“Yes, sir.”

The professor led the way, a trio of teaching assistants falling into line behind as they left the lecture hall together. Margo sensed the envious glances of her fellow students and, determined to project serenity, clutched her books tightly.

“What are you doing in my class, Miss Jensen?” said Niemeyer as they burst into the dappling Ithaca sunshine. “Planning to negotiate with the Soviets one day? Or just hoping my name on your transcript will impress the law-school admission committee?”

“I find the subject matter fascinating,” she began.

He waved her silent. “You won’t do better than a B. You do realize that no woman has ever received an A in my class?”

Margo swallowed. “I intend to be the first, sir.”

“Don’t be ridiculous. And stop trying to impress me. My ego is far too large to be flattered.” They crossed between the somber statues of the university’s founders, the teaching assistants still trailing their master like obedient pets. “You’re second-generation Cornell, aren’t you? Didn’t I read somewhere that your father was an alumnus?”

Again he had managed to surprise her. “Yes. Yes, he was. Class of 1941.” Margo chose not to mention that her father had died without ever laying eyes on her—or that her mother had died when she was seven—for she craved not pity but admiration. “He was an engineer.”

“Yes. That’s right.” Niemeyer had conjured a cigar from somewhere. He shoved it unlit between his teeth. “Following events surrounding Cuba at all?”

The abrupt change of subject took her aback. “If you mean the Bay of Pigs, I naturally—”

“Pfah. A year and a half ago. Ancient history, Miss Jensen. I mean now. Current events. Following them or not?”

“I read about Senator Keating’s speech in the
Times,
” she said carefully. On an adjoining walkway, a fortyish man wearing one of those silly alumni hats was heading in the same direction, his cadaverous wife holding his arm. They were gawking and taking pictures of everything.

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