Tuesday was raw and chilly, with a biting wind blustering down from the north. It reminded Lefkowitz how shabby his overcoat was. One of these days, when he could afford it, he needed a new one. On what the Ledger paid, that day was liable to be the twelfth of Never.
As he drove his old Ford across the Potomac to Arlington, he thought it was odd how Robert E. Lee’s mansion and grounds had become the chief military burial ground for the country Lee fought so hard to defeat. Up until 1961, the incongruity never once crossed his mind. He wasn’t sure how he’d known Arlington was Lee’s old estate. The Civil War centennial was more insidious than he’d thought.
Other reporters’ cars and television trucks in front of the mansion showed he’d come to the right place. He had a fresh notebook for the occasion. He’d labeled it “Lefkowitz and Duncan, JFK” on the front cover.
A lot of the mourners--the real mourners, not the professional vultures of the press--were Secret Service agents. They were easy to spot, and not just because they sat together. They were fairly young and tough and clean-cut. From the pictures he’d seen of Clint Hill, the dead man fit right in. Would they have taken a bullet the way he did? A lot of them would have, unless Lefkowitz missed his guess.
A minister came up to the lectern--or was it a pulpit?
Lefkowitz frowned. He’d never had to worry about a distinction like
that before. He wanted to get things right. The clergyman preached
about courage and self-sacrifice and duty. It could have been
inspiring; he said all the right things. But the way he said them
would have put Sominex to shame. Lefkowitz almost dislocated his jaw
fighting not to yawn. Several reporters and a couple of Secret Service
men lost that fight.
At last, after much too longer, the minister said, “And now it is
my great honor and distinct privilege to introduce the Vice President
of the United States, Mr. Lyndon Baines Johnson.”
Johnson stepped forward and took the preacher’s place. He looked
like he’d been ridden hard and put away wet. He looked like he’d tied
one on last night and tried to put himself together with black coffee
this morning. And that, Lefkowitz realized, was probably just what
he’d done.
“Thank you, Reverend,” Johnson said. “All I have I would have
given gladly not to be standing here today.” How did he mean that?
Was he saying he would rather be in Texas? Or did he mean he didn’t
want to speak at anyone’s funeral? Both, most likely. But he made it
sound the way it should have: “A good man is dead--three good men are
dead--because a miserable, rotten coward picked up a rifle and pulled
the trigger.
“Clint Hill knew there were dangers when he joined the Secret
Service. He’d known there were dangers when he went into the Army,
too, and he came through those the way a man should. No one made him
jump up on the trunk of the car that carried the President and Governor
Connally and their wives. Nobody would have thought less of him if he
didn’t do it, because something like jumping up onto a moving
automobile that is under fire is plainly above and beyond the call of
duty. But he did, and because he did it he took a bullet meant for. .
. .” Johnson’s voice trailed off. He had clearly veered off his
prepared remarks. Finally, he finished: “. . . for someone else.
“Now he’s gone--and if God ever needs a bodyguard up there in
Heaven, He knows just where to look, because Clint Hill proved he could
do the job right. He didn’t think of his family first. He thought of
what he’d signed up to do, and he went and did it. I hope that’s some
consolation to those he leaves behind. Chances are it isn’t, not yet.
But one day, maybe, you’ll be proud, because Clint Hill made the whole
country his family in Dallas Friday afternoon. God bless him, God
bless you, and God bless the United States.”
He saluted the flag-covered coffin--he’d served in the Navy during
the war--and then, moving as heavily as if he were wounded himself, sat
down again.
Lefkowitz nodded to himself. LBJ might not want to be here--he
plainly didn’t want to be here--but he did right by Clint Hill, and he
did right by the slain Secret Service man’s family. He said three
times as much as the preacher, and in a lot less than a third the time.
A couple of Hill’s colleagues came up and praised the dead man.
Lefkowitz couldn’t tell how much that meant to his widow. It obviously
meant a lot to the other Secret Service agents. They had to be
thoughtful for all kinds of reasons now. What had been above and
beyond the call of duty wasn’t any more. What Clint Hill did in Dallas
made sure it wasn’t. They had to be wondering, Can I measure up?
Some of the reporters headed off to file their stories instead of
going out to the newly dug grave not far from the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier. Lefkowitz almost did himself. He listened to more
long-winded speechifying from the preacher, and to the farewell volley
fired by veterans.
Johnson presented Mrs. Hill with a folded, cased flag, the kind any
veteran’s widow was entitled to have. “Thank you,” she said from
behind her veil. “You did real well for me and for Clint, and I know
you’d rather be somewhere else right now.”
“Ma’am, it’s nothing personal, not as far as you and your husband
are concerned,” LBJ said. “Somebody else, maybe, but not you.”
Lefkowitz wondered if he should use that in the story. He decided
not to. It wasn’t what the day was about. But he remembered.
#
Duncan had wondered if he would get one of the press seats aboard
Air Force One, or if the President would take his revenge on the Ledger
by making him pay his own way to Austin. His bookkeepers grumbled
enough about the cost of renting a car, getting a room, and feeding his
face while he was out of town. Airfare might have tipped them over the
edge. If Kennedy were punitive, it was better than even money that
Duncan would have still paid his own way.
But he got the invitation, which he hadn’t for Kennedy’s trip to
Dallas the week before. Maybe Lefkowitz’s story made the
administration decide to invite him, to show it was above little
games. If so, he owed the younger man a drink or three.
The 707 took off much too early in the morning. But there was
plenty of coffee aboard, and Danishes for breakfast. “The care and
feeding of the press,” David Brinkley observed, sticky sugar on his
lower lip. His budget didn’t make coffee and a sweet roll mandatory
most of the time.
When the airliner touched down at Austin, the security at the
airport astonished Duncan, and he’d expected it to be tight. Secret
Service agents and Texas Rangers were everywhere. Some carried
pistols, some Tommy guns, and some scope-sighted rifles. They all wore
don’t-tread-on-me expressions. Evidently there was no unified chain of
command, because every so often they would start screaming at one
another.
Preston Smith, the new governor of Texas, met the President on the
tarmac. He was a little bald man who wore glasses and a black bow tie
with, God help us, white polka dots. “Thank you for coming back to our
state, Mr. President,” he said. “I only wish we were meeting under
happier circumstances.”
“So do I,” Kennedy answered. “But this is the last chance I’ll
ever have to pay my respects to Governor Connally, and nothing could
keep me away.” He spotted Duncan in the crowd of reporters and
photographers and cameramen. If the look on his face didn’t say, So
there, Duncan had never seen one that did.
He didn’t need to rent a car to get to the state Capitol, where
Connally’s body had lain in state since Saturday. Governor Smith had a
motorcade laid on. The President and First Lady traveled with the
governor and his wife in a Lincoln convertible with a weird transparent
plastic bubble on top.
“Is that thing bulletproof?” Duncan asked the driver of the much less elegant sedan into which he was shoehorned.
“No,” said the man, who looked and sounded like a plainclothes
cop. “But if there’s some nut with a gun along the route, we hope
he’ll think it is. And we didn’t publicize which route we’d use,
either, so if there is a nut, he may be waiting in the wrong place.”
He paused to light a Tareyton, then added, “I wouldn’t tell any of you
this shit if you could get it out fast enough to make a difference.”
“Do you think we’d endanger the President’s life for a scoop?” one
of the other reporters in the crowded car asked indignantly.
“Why take chances?” the driver said.
The Texas Capitol was modeled after the one in Washington, though
its walls were red granite, not marble. Governor Connally lay in the
rotunda, surrounded by portraits of former governors and also--unique
touch--of Presidents of the Republic of Texas. Texas Rangers served as
his honor guard.
Duncan and the rest of the press crew were searched before being allowed up the stairs to the balconies overlooking the
flag-draped coffin. They were searched twice, in fact--once by Rangers and once by Secret Service men.
Having been frisked, Duncan got to watch JFK and Governor Smith
come up to the coffin. Kennedy saluted it. Then, as if that didn’t
seem enough, he set a hand on it, under the flag. He said something to
Preston Smith; Duncan had heard a local reporter call the new governor
“Presto” with mixed affection and scorn. Smith, who looked more like a
small-town pharmacist, nodded.
More dignitaries came out to pay their respects: Senators
Yarborough and Tower, Texas Congressmen, governors from other
states--Duncan recognized Rockefeller of New York and Pat Brown from
California--and some men who had to be important or they wouldn’t have
been there.
Duncan thought Preston Smith was the only man wearing a bow tie.
He was damn sure Smith was the only one who’d broken out in polka dots.
“No, it’s not disrespect,” the Texas reporter said when he asked.
“That’s the only kind of tie old Presto’s got. It’s his trademark,
like. Connally would drop dead all over again if he wore an ordinary
one.”
“Okay,” Duncan said. “A character, is he?”
“Well, if you see him in one of those things, you don’t forget
him,” the Texan answered. “You may go, ‘Who’s the damn fool in the
polka dots?’ but you don’t forget him. A politician could do worse.”
Nellie Connally and her three children came out. She embraced the
President and Jackie. She and John had had another daughter who’d died
five years earlier. How do you go through so much sorrow? Duncan
wondered. Mrs. Connally carried herself like a queen--or maybe that
was just the eerie calm of shock.
Someone brought a wheeled cart up to the catafalque on which John
Connally lay. The Rangers lifted the coffin onto the cart. They
wheeled it out of the Rotunda, and. . . . Duncan lost sight of and for
a little while as he and the rest of the press crew scrambled down the
stairs.
When he got outside, the Texas Rangers were putting the coffin on a
wagon drawn by six black horses. A wooden ramp had been set up over
the Capitol stairs to let them guide the cart down safely. Another
black horse stood close by, this one riderless, with tall black boots
reversed in the stirrups. The wagon started down the path that led
south to Congress Avenue. A Ranger led the riderless horse after it.
Governor Smith, the Senators, and most of the other dignitaries walked
behind it. The President and First Lady went back to the bubble-topped
limousine. Reporters scrambled into cars to follow.
The procession made its slow way past the Texas Ranger monument and
the Alamo monument beside it, past monuments to volunteer firemen and
to the Confederate dead. It turned right on to West Eleventh Street,
right again on Colorado, and right once more time on Fourteenth. Then
it turned left up Congress on the way to Nineteenth and the City
Cemetery to the east.
People lined the streets to say their last goodbyes to John
Connally--and, no doubt, to stare at the President and the other
prominent people. Some wore mourning, others ordinary clothes. Many
carried U.S. and Texas flags. Texas Rangers kept the crowd on the
sidewalks. All the same, they and the Secret Service men had to be
getting ulcers. If another nut with a gun was out there, would he see
whether that bubble really could stop a bullet?
Riding in a car at a slow walk felt surreal, as if Duncan were
moving in a dream. It wasn’t quite a mile from the Capitol to the
cemetery. It should have taken five minutes at most. It was somewhere
close to twenty-five instead. He smoked three cigarettes before they
finally got there. The other reporters in the car were puffing away,
too. When he got out, his throat was raw and his eyes stung.
Most of the leaves were off the trees at the cemetery. The grass
was starting to go yellow. The waiting grave stood open, a new wound
in the earth. Duncan shook his head. He had his reporter hat on; he
wasn’t supposed to think like a novelist or poet here.
By the grave, they’d set up a portable lectern with a glass shield
in front. More glass--Duncan hoped this stuff really was
bulletproof--formed a square around the lectern. A minister stood
there now, but the protection wasn’t for him. It was for John Kennedy.
They couldn’t put bulletproof glass around the folding chairs the
President and Jackie sat on. They did surround them with Secret
Service agents close by and Texas Rangers out a little farther. The
agents and the Rangers looked jumpy as hell. A sniper could pop up
from anywhere. Duncan knew the feeling. He’d had it on Iwo.
The minister said whatever ministers say. Duncan took notes on it,
notes he’d boil down into a sentence--two at the outside. Then
Governor Smith came up. The Texas Rangers grew particularly alert. It
was, after all, their former boss who’d stopped a bullet. The assassin
might have wanted to kill Kennedy. He had killed John Connally.
“I don’t want to be here,” Preston Smith said, his accent heavy and
sweet as cornbread. “I wanted to be governor one day, but not like
this. John Connally wasn’t done using the job. He was good at it,
too. I learned from him every single day. I wanted to go on doing
that till John decided to turn his hand to something else. Then I’d
take what I had learned and try my best with it. Well, one of the
things I learned in a hurry is that John Connally would be a tough act
to follow. Now I have to try, and I feel horribly unprepared. I
wanted John around for many, many years to come. He should have been.
It’s a crying shame that he isn’t, and I’ll just have to carry on
instead. With God’s help, maybe I can do some of what he would have.”
He bobbed his head and sat down, a decent little man who suddenly found
himself in a bigger role than he was ready for.
John Kennedy took his place. As soon as the President stood behind
the lectern, you forgot about Preston Smith. Kennedy might have come
from some different and superior species: taller, handsomer, more
self-possessed, and better dressed.
“Governor Connally was taken from us too young,” he said. “He had
much to live for, much yet to do. He would have gone far had he
lived--no one can doubt that. He’d already come a long way, serving
his state and his country with courage and with wisdom.”
He looked around at the dozens of men protecting him from another
assassin’s bullet. When he continued, “Why would anyone want to take
the life of such a man?” the question didn’t sound rhetorical. He
might have asked, Why would anyone want to shoot at me? Then he
answered himself: “An assassin tries to lift himself to the level of
the man he slays. A little man thinks he can make himself big with the
squeeze of a trigger.”
His voice hardened. “The harshest punishment we can give an
assassin, then, is to forget him. Once Governor Connally’s killer is
tried and convicted and punished, let us never speak his name again.
Never. The Greek historian Herodotus tells of a man who burned a great
temple to win everlasting fame. ‘I know his name,’ Herodotus says,
‘but I will not set it down here.’ And that man who wanted to be
remembered forever has been forgotten for twenty-five hundred years.
Let us do the same today.”
Duncan wondered which of Kennedy’s speechwriters knew about the
ancient Greek. It was no great secret that JFK hadn’t done all the
writing on Profiles in Courage, even if his was the only name on the
spine. But whoever came up with them, Kennedy made the lines his own
when he delivered them. That talent he had in abundance.
“Let us forget the wretched assassin and recall the man he stole
from us,” the President said. “As an attorney, as a naval officer, as
a public servant, as a husband and father, John Connally showed
everything that was best about the United States of America. Let us
remember him for what he was and for what he might have been. Let us
mourn his loss to Texas, to the United States, and to his wife and
children. And let us vow to do everything in our power to make sure
such a tragedy does not, cannot, happen again. May that too form part
of Governor Connally’s legacy.”
He stepped away from the lectern. A few people hesitantly clapped
their hands. Were you supposed to applaud a funeral oration, even from
the President? Duncan didn’t think so. Most of the audience must not
have, either, because the clapping was sparse and quickly faded.
Secret Service men bunched themselves around JFK so no one could get a
clear shot at him as he went back to his seat.
A Texas Ranger in a uniform tunic and a kilt played “Amazing Grace”
on the bagpipe. Duncan couldn’t decide whether it was beautiful or the
most tasteless thing he’d ever heard. Somebody behind him whispered,
“It’s a catfight with a tune.” He looked back over his shoulder. No,
that wasn’t a reporter. Duncan lifted the line for his story.
He didn’t know what Kennedy would be doing during the evening, or
with whom. Maybe nothing, maybe not with anybody. Jackie was along,
after all. Whatever the President would be doing, he’d do it in a
nicer hotel than the one where Duncan was staying. When Duncan got
there, he discovered that the Ledger’s travel office had found what was
surely the cheapest joint in Austin.
He also discovered several other newspapermen were staying there.
That made him feel better about the world. Misery, like anything else,
did love company.
#

Does Oswald get killed by Jack Ruby? And if he doesn't, does he get convicted? Please answer this.
Posted by: Christian Kellum | October 23, 2008 at 02:10 PM