Authors: Francine Mathews
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Espionage, #Germany, #Espionage; American
EPILOGUE
September 1939
Cambridge, Massachusetts
BRUCE HOPPER WAS READING
a newspaper, a pipe gently smoking in his hand, when the light was blotted out by a figure in the doorway. He tossed the paper aside.
“Well met,
mon brave
. We’d almost given up on you.”
“Better late than never,” Jack said.
He’d flown across the Atlantic on the Pan Am Clipper
,
several weeks late for the start of term; it was nearly October, his senior year at Harvard, and he was already behind.
“Take a seat,” Hopper suggested. “You look tired.”
“If I had ten bucks for every time I’ve heard that, Professor . . .”
He waited until Jack threw himself into an armchair, then got up and closed the door.
“I read about the
Athenia
. You did good work there.”
Jack laughed abruptly. The Germans had torpedoed the ship two hundred miles off the coast of Ireland on September third—the day England declared war. The
Athenia
had been filled with people fleeing to New York, some three hundred Americans among them.
Hitler accused Churchill of deliberately sinking the ship, to make the Nazis look bad.
Joe Kennedy sent Jack to Glasgow in the middle of the night to meet the American survivors. It was good to put some distance between himself and Jack. They weren’t speaking, and Rose was beginning to ask inconvenient questions. The
Athenia
was the reason he was late for school.
“You got those survivors home on an American vessel,” Hopper persisted. “Even if it
was
without a military convoy. I read it in the paper.
Schoolboy Diplomat Urges American Transport for Athenia Heroes.
”
“They were terrified of being on another British ship.” His eyes slid over to meet Hopper’s. “Schoolboy, huh? The London papers said I was eighteen.”
“You look that young sometimes.”
And sometimes,
Hopper thought,
you look a thousand years
old.
Jack shrugged. He seemed curiously indifferent, and very far away. “The
Athenia
was as much my dad’s job as mine. He paid for hundreds of transatlantic telegrams to the survivors’ families, did you know that? The State department wouldn’t authorize the expense. They didn’t get it—that these people were feeling abandoned by their government, in a war zone. They’d been
torpedoed
in the North Atlantic, for chrissake. But Dad understood.” There was a short silence. “He knows what it means to worry about your family.”
“He should. His own means the world to him,” Hopper said mildly. He tapped the ashes from his pipe bowl and settled back in his chair. “You don’t want to be here, do you?”
“It’s just hard to see the point.” Jack thrust himself from the chair and began to pace restlessly between the bookshelves, his fingers running lightly over the volumes bound in dark leather. That quickly, the impression of malaise was gone and the crackling energy Hopper remembered filled the room. “Dad sent us all home. No choice and no argument. Joe’s in law school. Kick’s been bundled off to college. Her boyfriend’s British, so he’s already enlisted, and God knows if they’ll ever see each other again. Which would suit my mother just fine. But Kick
hated
being sent back. She says we look like cowards. Running at the first sign of danger.”
“Which is how you feel.”
Jack shot him a glance. “Nobody’s
safe
anymore, Professor. Nobody will ever be safe again.”
“You never thought you were.”
“I know I’m always on the edge of dying. But I want to be
doing
something.”
“Then write your thesis.”
“What the hell good would that do?”
“It might rouse American opinion,” Hopper suggested. “Most people still think this is a
European war
, Jack. That it’ll never touch us. You know better. You know it’s coming. Whether we like it or not.”
“Even the Brits tried to deny it was really happening,” he mused. “It took Chamberlain
two days
after the tanks rolled into Poland to declare war! You know how many Poles died during those two days? Churchill said—”
He broke off, and looked at his shoes.
“So you met him.”
“We met. Yes.”
“And he said?” Hopper prompted.
“—That Neville refused to bomb Berlin while the Nazis were fighting in Poland.
It wasn’t cricket,
apparently, to attack from the west, while the Germans were fighting in the east.
Like shooting a man in the back,
Chamberlain said.
Not
the act of a gentleman.”
“—And Winston?”
Jack grinned. “Nearly broke Neville’s pencil neck.”
Hopper didn’t laugh. “But the Poles are still dying.”
“While the rest of us stand around and watch.”
Hopper rose, and grasped Jack’s shoulder. “
Write your thesis.
An analysis of the months leading up to war. Have you got a title?”
He shrugged. “
Why England Slept.
That should make most Americans yawn
.
”
“People will listen to you. You’ve been there. You’ve done your homework. And you’re Joe Kennedy’s son.”
“A lot of people hate my father,” Jack said.
“But they know his name. You can use that,” Hopper insisted.
Jack hesitated, then lounged over to the door. “I don’t really have a choice, do I? I’ve got to get out of here somehow. See you later, Professor.”
Hopper stared after him, a frown between his eyes.
Patience, mon brave,
he thought.
This war will find each of us, soon enough.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Jack 1939
is a work of fiction—a speculative recasting of Jack Kennedy’s twenty-second year. It was inspired by a photograph I happened to glimpse a few years ago: Jack on a street in Germany during the summer of 1937, wearing clothes he’d probably slept in for a week, hair tousled, head thrown back, mouth open in a grin. He was juggling fruit for the camera. He looked like a wild and free street busker without a care in the world; he was also rail thin, the bones of his face dangerously prominent. I had forgotten completely that he had ever been so young. The image haunted me for weeks. I wanted to know more about that boy.
I began to read everything I could regarding Jack Kennedy’s childhood and experiences during World War II. For those readers whose interest in the period has been sparked by this story, I would recommend, in no particular order, Michael Beschloss’s
Kennedy and Roosevelt: The Uneasy Alliance
(New York: Norton, 1981); Nigel Hamilton’s
JFK: Reckless Youth
(New York: Random House, 1992); Robert Dallek’s
An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917–1963
(Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 2003), which is particularly valuable for its survey of medical records and issues; Will Swift’s
The Kennedys Amidst the Gathering Storm: A Thousand Days in London, 1938–1940
(New York: Smithsonian Books, 2008); Laurence Leamer’s
The Kennedy Men: 1901–1963: The Laws of the Father
(New York: William Morrow, 2001); Doris Kearns Goodwin’s
The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987); Richard J. Whalen’s
The Founding Father: The Story of Joseph P. Kennedy
(New York: New American Library, 1964); Amanda Smith’s edition of her grandfather’s correspondence,
Hostage to Fortune: The Letters of Joseph P. Kennedy
(New York: Viking, 2001); and, of course, John F. Kennedy’s
Why England Slept
(New York: Wilfred Funk, 1940). There are myriad books on the subject, as there are on related topics—J. Edgar Hoover, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, the Mitford Sisters. Colonel Colin McVean Gubbins surfaces in numerous histories of the British Special Operations Executive, and his
Partisan Leader’s Handbook
is (remarkably) available through Amazon.com. The GÖring to buy the 1940 election is discussed in Joseph E. Persico’s
Roosevelt’s Secret War
(New York: Random House, 2011).
Throughout the months of researching his senior thesis in 1939, Jack wrote letters—many to his friend Lem Billings, others to his father that have been subsequently stolen, lost, or destroyed.
Jack 1939
is roughly faithful to his actual itinerary: he was in Val d’Isère when I suggest, and in Moscow, Danzig, and Prague at about the times I send him there. George Kennan’s memoirs mention Jack, whom at the time he viewed as “an upstart and an ignoramus,” at the Czech border in August 1939; it was particularly fun to imagine those two in a room together. I chose not to mention Jack’s trip to Palestine in May 1939, although his letter to his father from Jerusalem is one of the few from the period that survive. The location didn’t fit with the fictional world I’d invented—and this book is, after all,
fiction
.
The picture of Jack juggling is part of the collection of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, where one can also find such things as Jack’s stained and much-stamped passport from 1935; his beloved Wianno Senior yacht,
Victura;
and the telegram Frances Ann Cannon sent to the
Queen Mary
on February 25, 1939. The fact that the telegram exists is wondrous to me—Jack must have kept it in his pocket or wallet throughout the crossing and for the rest of his life. A testament to love and loss, if ever there was one. Many of the Kennedy Library’s collections are open to the public; others, such as the Billings correspondence, are closed collections requiring permission for access. I am grateful to Maryrose Grossman of the Audiovisual Archives, and to Stacey Chandler of the Reference Staff, for their assistance. Open items (including the Cannon telegram) may be viewed online, for those who cannot travel to Boston.
Throughout the process of writing this book, I was unflaggingly supported by my agent of nearly twenty years, Raphael Sagalyn, who read numerous drafts and offered—along with his staff—invaluable suggestions. He placed the resulting manuscript in the care of Jake Morrissey at Riverhead Books, whose editing was masterful and whose enthusiasm for both Jack and this author are sustaining. I’m also grateful to Mr. Morrissey’s assistant, Alexandra Cardia; to copy editor Diane Aronson, who fact-checked the entire manuscript with verve and tact; and to publicist Glory Plata, who helped shepherd the story to the public. It goes without saying that any fault in the resulting novel is entirely mine.
Francine Mathews
Denver, Colorado
December 2011