Top Down

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Authors: Jim Lehrer

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Top Down
is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2013 by Jim Lehrer

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House LLC, New York, a Penguin Random House Company.

R
ANDOM
H
OUSE
and the H
OUSE
colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Lehrer, James.
Top down: a novel of the Kennedy assassination/Jim Lehrer.
pages cm
ISBN 978-1-4000-6916-3
eBook ISBN 978-0-679-60350-4
1. Journalists—United States—Fiction. 2. United States. Secret Service—Officials and employees—Fiction. 3. Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917–1963—Assassination—Fiction. 4. Political fiction gsafd I. Title.
PS3562.E4419T67 2013 813′.54′dc23 2013007984

www.atrandom.com

Title-page image copyright ©
iStockphoto.com

Jacket design: David G. Stevenson
Jacket photograph: © Bettmann/Corbis

v3.1

“Where Were
You
?” There it was—the most universal of questions we ask one another following an epic public event.

Now it was the title for a fifth-anniversary discussion at the National Press Club in downtown Washington. On that November 1968 noon hour, the complete question for the discussion was, of course, “Where were you on November 22, 1963, when John F. Kennedy was assassinated?”

I was delighted—excited, frankly—to be one of the three panelists invited to speak. And proud to be a club member because this was truly the center of my universe. The bureau offices of my newspaper,
The Dallas Tribune
, were on the fifth floor of the press club building on 14th Street, two blocks from the White House.

I had told my own story before. It seemed that everyone in America had at least ten times over. But this was the first time I did so in such a public way. More than three hundred people—most of them fellow journalists—filled the room.

The two other panelists spoke before me. The first speaker
was a wire service man who had been on the Washington news desk that November day. He talked about the emotional exhaustion of the conflicting pulls of duty and grief that gripped everyone taking in, writing, confirming, packaging stories from and throughout the world.

The second, a Washington-based network television correspondent who had been in the Dallas motorcade press bus, recalled the scraps of his and others’ frantic searches for what had actually happened. Was Kennedy really hit? If so, where? Was he dead? Where did the shots come from? Had anybody been arrested? What was Jackie doing crawling back on the trunk of the limo after the shots were fired? Where could I find an eyewitness? Where could I find a telephone?

Perhaps I should have felt intimidated as the youngest and least experienced journalist of the three. But I felt that I matched the other two speakers for interest and delivery. My dad, also a newspaperman, always said I had “a gift of gab,” a trait my mother saw as a good thing that could someday lead me from print to television. (“Mark my words, Jack,” she said more than once, “you could be another Chet Huntley.”) But I had absolutely no interest in ever being on television. I was a print man. I was a writer.

But I did spend more time than usual on exactly what to wear to the press club event.
Brainy newspaperman
was the look I was going for with my brown-and-black wool sport coat, gray slacks, and button-down blue oxford cloth shirt with solid dark brown tie. Back in Dallas I always wore a tie, but it was more often than not loose from the collar. That kind
of style was okay for a local newsroom but not for a Washington correspondent. I did it up tight with a smart military half Windsor.

The other press club panelists spoke mostly from notes, while I had written out my story, which I read almost word for word after practicing several times in front of the bathroom mirror at my apartment.

When it was my turn at the podium, I began: “I was working as a reporter for an afternoon newspaper,
The Dallas Tribune
, on November twenty-second, 1963. My assignment was to cover the arrival of President and Mrs. Kennedy at Love Field, stay at the airport until they came back after a motorcade through downtown and a noon luncheon at the Dallas Trade Mart, and then report on their departure …”

In detail I told how I, at the behest of a rewrite man downtown just before the Kennedys arrived on Air Force One, had asked a Secret Service agent about the bubble top on the presidential limo. Was it going to be up or down when the motorcade went through downtown Dallas? It was strictly a weather issue and the early-morning rain had ended. The agent, Van Walters, after having some other agents check the situation, ordered the bubble top off the car. The early-morning rain had ended. I was there when Agent Walters gave the order. There was some loose speculation afterward among law enforcement people and others, which I reported, that the bubble top, if it had been there, might have prevented the assassination—or at least the death—of Kennedy.

I returned to my seat at the discussion table to what I felt
was a dramatic silence. From my perspective, the audience had pretty much hung on my every word. It may sound like a lot of bravado, but I swear I even saw some wetness in a few eyes. Clearly, the agent’s what-if suffering for having made the bubble top decision touched the audience.

A young man from the fourth row shouted out:

“What happened to that Secret Service agent—the one who ordered the bubble top off?”

“I don’t know,” I answered. “I lost track of him.”

And that was how it all began.

“I
DON

T KNOW
.
I lost track of him.”

My words were quoted in the small Associated Press account of the event that went out to newspapers everywhere, including my very own
Dallas Tribune
. I hadn’t expected any press coverage, but I was delighted by the piece. The
Tribune
had promoted me to its Washington bureau in late 1964 and, as the low man on the totem pole, it would definitely help to make a little here-I-am noise with the hometown editors.

It was just after eight o’clock Saturday morning—four days after the press club panel. I was in the bureau office putting the final touches on a Sunday story about the coming of new post offices in seven “fast-growing” Texas towns and cities. Under the leadership of Lyndon Johnson, the federal government was seen—and duly reported by the
Tribune
—as very much a growth industry in Texas.

“Are you the Jack Gilmore who spoke about the bubble top—the one quoted in
The Philadelphia Inquirer
yesterday?”
It was a woman—a young woman under some stress, it seemed by the sound of her voice—on the phone.

I confirmed that I was.

“Mr. Gilmore, I’m Marti Walters, and that Secret Service agent who you wrote about, Van Walters … well that was—is—my father,” she said. “I must speak with you—in person, as soon as possible.”

There was an undeniable urgency in her voice. When I was slow to respond she said, “We’re talking life or death here, Mr. Gilmore. My father’s life is at stake.”

How could I pass up a summons like that? The Kennedy assassination had been the most important story of my journalistic life at that point and probably always would be. I had spent months on the
Tribune
team covering the post-assassination investigation and the unending aftermath developments, including the Jack Ruby trial. I had become the
Tribune
’s go- to reporter on the assassination, and even now from my desk in Washington I still considered myself such five years later.

Without hesitating, I agreed to Marti Walters’s suggestion that we meet for Sunday brunch the next morning at a restaurant in the Washington Union Station.

“I’ll be coming down on the train from Philadelphia,” she said. “I’m short and skinny.”

Trying to be funny, I replied, “No problem. You’ll know me because I’ll be the handsome one with the marine crew cut.”

But funny was obviously not Marti Walters’s thing as I was
met with silence. “I’ll be wearing a brown-and-black-checked sport coat,” I said, soberly.

“I’ll find you,” said Marti Walters.

SECRET SERVICE AGENT TALKS OF DEATH IN DALLAS!

To my knowledge, in the five years since the assassination no Secret Service agents had said much of anything to any reporters about what happened that day in Dallas.

Visions of headlines and glories danced in my head.

I
SAW RIGHT
away that Marti Walters was just a kid. She couldn’t have been a day over twenty years old—if that. Clearly a college girl. Her self-description was right on. Small, almost skinny, short brown hair. Intense. But a happy face—much like the one on a high school girlfriend my mother described as “a blooming rose.” Pretty in a no-makeup sort of way.

We had no trouble recognizing each other. There was not only my coat and the crew cut, there was also … well, I knew I had a bearing about me that often drew attention. Just under six feet, solidly built, good moves. Clearly on the way to somewhere. That’s the way
I
saw myself, at least. And yes, so did my mother.

We went to a corner table at a café that advertised “Food of the World,” which seemed to mean Greek and Italian versions of scrambled eggs and toast.

As soon as we sat down and without any sort of greeting, Marti got right down to it. “The first thing is that you must understand and accept that everything I’m about to tell you is what you reporters call off the record—way, way off the record.”

“I’m not sure I can promise that …”

She held up both hands in a kind of open-palm wrestler pose.
Stop right there
, said her move. “You have to!” She said it with a force that didn’t match her size, age, or demeanor. But I felt it. This kid meant business.

But before I could go ahead with a response, Marti Walters dropped her hands and her head with them. When she looked back up at me a few seconds later, there were huge tears in her eyes. Softly, imploringly, she said: “Please, Mr. Gilmore. Please. I need your help. Promise me first and if it ends up leading to a story you want … well, we can talk about it then.
Please
.”

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