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Authors: Maggie Leffler

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BOOK: The Secrets of Flight
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S
ELENA
M
ARKMANN IS MY OTHER FREQUENT VISITOR.
T
HE FIRST
time she arrives at the rehab center, we stand there and hug
and cry in each other's arms like we were the old friends we should've been for the last ten years. Then she helps me get back into bed and sits on the side instead of on the chair, the way Jane and Elyse do. It's very sisterly, and I'm grateful for it. Selena gathers herself back together and wipes her eyes and takes a deep breath and then tells me the bad news, that Gene is dead.


Gene?
” I say, shocked. Just a few days before, he'd sent an orchid, and now he's gone? “What happened to him?”

“The other Jean. Jean Fester,” she says quickly. “A heart attack, they think. Her son found her.”

“Good God. Jean,” I say, equally shocked. “Despite all evidence to the contrary, I never thought she'd really die but that her terrible stories would keep coming forever, and she would outlive us all.”

Selena laughs, in spite of herself. “She wasn't the best writer,“she admits, “but she was a good critic. She knew the right questions to ask of an author. And she meant well.”

“She will be missed,” I say, and it's actually, strangely, true.

T
HESE DAYS,
I
HAVE A COMPULSION TO TELL THE TRUTH.
I
TELL
Elyse that I won't be contacting the president about my Congressional Gold Medal, because I'd burned all the records with my real name on it, and she doesn't bat an eye. I tell Selena that there are no twins, and she just shrugs and says, “Oh, Mary, I wasn't born yesterday.” I tell Gene, when he finally comes in person to show me his hangdog face, that it's all right that he couldn't do what I asked of him. The fact is, it was my own fault for not getting my affairs in order years ago, my own
fault for putting him on the spot at the last minute. The real truth is, until the very moment of his confession in my apartment, I never noticed he wasn't there.

“But . . . I haven't slept in months about this,” Gene says. “I went to confession to ask for forgiveness, and I'm not even Catholic, and then I had to be forgiven for that, too. Didn't you wonder about my card?” he adds, meaning the card that arrived with his orchid, which read “I'm sorry, Mary,” instead of “Get Well.”

“I assumed you were sorry that things had not gone according to plan,” I say.

“Well, that, too,” he says, so glum that I have to reach over and pat his hand, and he looks grateful but unconvinced. “I almost forgot; I brought you a present . . .” He suddenly remembers, handing me a rather large, flat gift.

I feel the raised, square edges through the paper and then unceremoniously tear it off. Inside the wrapping is a framed copy of the newspaper article from last July's
USA Today.
Grace, Murphee, and I smile into the wind under the banner: “First women to fly American military aircraft served courageously, blazed trails during WWII.”

“Oh my word. Gene,” I say.

He taps on Miriam Lichtenstein, beaming at the center of the frame, and says, “A little birdie told me that this is you.” His use of the present tense brings tears to my eyes. He's the president now, handing me my Congressional Gold Medal.

“It is me,” I agree with a watery smile. “Gene. Thank you.”

My eyes linger longer on Grace, lost to cancer years ago, and then Murphee of the bottle-red hair.
Whatever happened to
Murphee?
I wonder, and then decide if anyone could track her down, it would be Toby.
A project for tomorrow
.

“When are you coming back to group?” Gene asks.

“As soon as the snow is over,” I tell him, and feel as if I've become another old woman, afraid of the winter.

Andie's visits may be the least frequent, but are often the most entertaining. She has a funny way about her, acting as if she has known me her whole life, while telling me random stories about people I've never met, with great animation, as if I've known them forever, too.

“So, Gordon Palmer asked me out, at least I think he did; I mean, he really just invited me to have coffee in the cafeteria at work. He's kind of a gloomy Gus, but I mean, wouldn't you be if your daughter was on a reality TV show, and you had to sit in a dark room for a living looking at pictures of people's insides? Mom would probably say I should give him a chance,” Andie says.

“She'd probably say, ‘Thank goodness, you're not marrying Blane,'” I add, having heard the whole story about the pillow salesman.

Andie's head snaps up to look at my smile, and then she bursts out laughing. “So true, Aunt Miri, so true,” she says, slapping her knee, and I find myself chuckling, too. How wonderfully odd it is to reclaim my old name—and yet somehow I am still Dave's mother Mary, too. I am grateful to be both.

A
FEW WEEKS LATER,
E
LYSE TURNS UP AT MY DOOR TO SAY THAT
this is the warmest winter Pittsburgh has had in ages, and that she's coming by next Tuesday to walk me to the writers' group,
so that I can see it for myself—the clean sidewalks, the green grass, the hints of spring, maybe even a crocus. I can tell that Elyse is afraid I've become a bit of a shut-in, which I have. If it weren't for Selena Markmann's steady stream of groceries, and Jane's tuna casseroles, and Andie's borscht, which she freezes in small portions for me, I may have actually had to sign up for Meals on Wheels. “Everyone agrees that you should pass something out next time,” Elyse adds. “What about the memoir? I can look and see where we left off.”

“I think I want to write about when I got sick,” I say instead, realizing it all at once. Perhaps this is why Jean Fester had always felt the need to put the horror on paper—to get it out of her and to let it go. But then I remember how painful it was to take on her discomfort as a reader. “I just don't want it to be . . .”

“A downer?” Elyse suggested. “Just write like no one will ever read it.”

“What good advice,” I say with a smile.

And so, I begin to speak as Elyse types my words:
I wake up the first time to an electric shock on my left lower leg—the sort police officers use to silence unruly college students. At least that's what I imagine. I try to jerk my leg away, but my leg won't move.

T
HE GROUP IS ALL THERE FOR MY RETURN:
H
ERB
S
HEPHERD,
Victor Chenkovitch, Gene Rosskemp, Selena, and Elyse, and there are hugs all around. There's even a “Welcome Back, Mary!” cake, and it feels like my birthday. When I hand out my first submission in ten years, Gene cheers.

When I get back to my apartment that night, it looks different, more cramped, the apartment of an old lady with too much furniture in too small a space. I feel a strange sense of
surrender these days, maybe even hopefulness, and I'm not sure if it's because I am worn out from what I've been through, or if it's because after so many eras of regret, I finally got to apologize. Now when I climb into bed and shut my eyes and think about My End, my heart doesn't flutter in panic. Instead, I think about my family, lost and found, and the grace of forgiveness. I remember my vision of the sky, and the way I sailed over the trees. Maybe tomorrow I will open my eyes and find myself here, where the windows won't open and the radiator forces heat even as the weather begins to break. Or maybe I will unlock the door and fly.

Acknowledgments

I
am so grateful to my agent, Brianne Johnson, an early champion of this novel back when it was over a hundred pages longer and every character had a point of view—thank you so much for believing in this story. I am equally grateful to Amanda Bergeron at HarperCollins for her enthusiasm and exquisite editorial advice. I couldn't have hoped for a better editor.

I am so thankful for my sister, Katherine Brown, who provided me with reading material, encouraged me after rounds of rejections, critiqued multiple drafts with complete insight into the characters, and basically made this a better book. Thanks also to my little brother, Brad Lincoln, who read and commented on the third draft, and to my brother Chris Leffler, for urging me to get the novel out there. Thanks to my stepsister, Sarah Carpenter, whose great name I borrowed for Miri's sister.

I'm incredibly fortunate to have spent the last decade of Tuesday nights dissecting fiction with an amazing group of writers: Cindy McKay, Mike Murray, Jennifer Bannan, Scott Smith, Anjali Sachdeva, Eric Ruka, and Joe Balaban whipped this manuscript into shape over bottles of wine (
Snippets!)
. Let's keep meeting forever.

Thanks to my surrogate sisters, Shannon Perrine and Elizabeth Finan, along with Ellen Sarti, Dedee Wilson (my fellow night owl), Wendy McCorkle, Amy Nevin Martin (my pseudo-sister-in-law), Susie Hobbins, and Joy Lynn, as well as medical schoolmates Ernie Lau (the man, the myth) and Jay Lieberman for your friendship.

Thanks to Women Airforce Service Pilots Lucile Wise, who answered all of my emails regarding the WASPs, and Florence Shutsy-Reynolds, for discussing her experiences during WWII, conversations that truly brought Miri's story to life. “Shutsy” encouraged me to take a demo flight on an antique plane, a suggestion that did not mesh well with my fear of heights. Instead, I watched United States Navy training films: “Flying Sense” produced in 1944, as well as “Advance Flight Training with AT-6 SNJ, Take Offs, Approaches and Landings.” In addition, I read
They Flew Proud
, by Jane Gardner Birch, a history of the Civilian Pilot Training Program, which was where I came across the “Ten Commandments for Safe Flying” from the Piper Cub Owner's Manual. Conversations with commercial pilot Grey Hobbins also helped tremendously. I'm sure I got things wrong, and the fault is entirely mine. Thanks also to Danielle Marcus, for sharing with me everything I needed to know about Jane's career as an asbestos attorney.

Portions of Mrs. Browning's medical crisis were inspired by my own experience with anesthesia, which I wrote about in an essay for the inaugural issue of the University of Iowa Carver
College of Medicine's
The Examined Life Journal
, titled, “The Other Side of the Stethoscope.” Thanks also to Dr. Chris Bartels for making a reluctant patient better.

My mother-in-law, Sue Martin, gave me a copy of an article written by Elmer Puchta, LTC AUS, a retired army Captain who commanded the 3360th Quartermaster Truck Company in 1944. The article included an intriguing paragraph about a convoy of trucks sent to Paris to obtain the French liquor that had been taken by the Germans. “The security for this convoy was greater than any cargo we carried,” Puchta wrote. He also mentions a surviving bottle of champagne drank on his wedding night. This anecdote, which is part of the Veterans History Project in the Library of Congress, inspired Gene's writer's group story about the captain of a truck company.

The article “Tuberculosis sanitorium regimen in the 1940s: a patient's personal diary,” was a fascinating account of life in a TB sanitorium written in 1944 by a young mother who had to be separated from her husband and baby after her diagnosis. Her diary, published in the
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
in 2004 by Raymond Hurt, FRCS, DHMSA, inspired Sarah's time spent battling TB in the pre-streptomycin era. Piero Scaruffi's “A Time-Line of World War II” on the web was extremely helpful to my research as well.

I am grateful for my mother, Dr. Martha Leffler Lincoln, whose spirit I have felt pushing me through this story, and my father, Dr. Allan “Ted” Leffler, who pulled an all-nighter many years ago to help Kristie Burke Murray and me construct the most aesthetically pleasing toothpick bridge in the history of Atholton High School. Thanks to my stepmother, Melissa Leffler, who has always kept the family together despite all of our losses.

To my sons, Jacob Martin, a budding writer who thought of the title to this novel back when he was seven years old, and Owen Martin, who was two when I wrote the first chapter—thank you both for putting up with the writing of this book. I am so lucky to be your mother. Eternal gratitude to my husband, Tim Martin, without whom there would be no book. I love you more.

P.S. Insights, Interviews & More . . .*

About the author

Meet Maggie Leffler

About the book

The Women Behind
The Secrets of Flight
: An Essay

Reading Group Questions

Read on

Further Reading

About the author
Meet Maggie Leffler

MAGGIE LEFFLER
is an American novelist and a family medicine physician. A native of Columbia, Maryland, she graduated from the University of Delaware and volunteered with AmeriCorps before attending St. George's University School of Medicine. She practices medicine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where she lives with her husband and sons.
The Secrets of Flight
is her third novel.

BOOK: The Secrets of Flight
7.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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