The Secrets of Flight

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The Secrets of Flight Page 1

by Maggie Leffler




  Dedication

  For Katherine—

  I’m so glad we’re sisters.

  Contents

  Dedication

  Chapter 1: Seeing Sarah

  Chapter 2: 23 Things About Me

  Part 1 Chapter 3: Miri Wants

  Chapter 4: Three Women and a Plane

  Chapter 5: Fly Girl

  Chapter 6: First Flight

  Chapter 7: The Sunny Ledge

  Chapter 8: The Telegram

  Chapter 9: Mock Marriage

  Chapter 10: Sweetwater

  Chapter 11: Confessions

  Part 2 Chapter 12: The First Day of the Rest of Your Life

  Chapter 13: The Marriage Project

  Chapter 14: Steel in Love

  Chapter 15: Miri, Lost

  Chapter 16: Miami

  Chapter 17: Hard Landing

  Chapter 18: The Visitor

  Chapter 19: Goodbye Forever

  Part 3 Chapter 20: Toothpicks

  Chapter 21: Beacon Street

  Chapter 22: Burial at Sea

  Chapter 23: The Bronx

  Chapter 24: Miri, Found

  Chapter 25: Complications

  Chapter 26: The Secrets of Flight

  Acknowledgments

  P.S. Insights, Interviews & More . . .* About the author

  About the book

  Read on

  Also by Maggie Leffler

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  CHAPTER 1

  Seeing Sarah

  It was my eighty-seventh birthday when my sister Sarah walked into the meeting room of the Carnegie Library. Somehow she was still a young girl of about fifteen, with pale blond hair in a single braid down her back, just as she’d been when she scrambled up the climbing tree in the backyard and tossed apples to me on the ground down below. Of course, I knew it couldn’t actually be my sister. Perhaps the Sarah-sighting was yet another side effect of aging. After all, the older I’ve become, the more everyone I come across reminds me of someone I once loved. I had no inkling that the girl with the braid might change everything.

  The day had begun like any other, my birthday notwithstanding. When the doctor called about the results of my recent bone density scan, I was grateful for the tiny touch of humanity all the same. “So, it’s official,” I said, upon hearing the news. “You’re saying I’m a little, old lady.” The doctor chuckled before pushing another pill—this one for osteoporosis, which may prevent a hip fracture and cause sudden, irreversible blindness in certain susceptible people. “Frankly, at this point in my life, I would welcome a hip fracture—just so long as it’s fatal,” I replied. “Mrs. Browning, are you depressed?” the doctor asked, quite seriously, bless her heart. So, I fibbed a little and said to this kind young lady, who was probably about half the age of my son David, “My dear, much the way a youngster anticipates a birthday, I can’t help but be a bit curious as to what exactly will be my end. You may have the luxury of distraction, but for me, death is my next big event.” As the doctor grew silent, I waited for her to stop documenting our conversation into that godforsaken computer, waited for the gladness to arrive in her voice, when it might dawn on her that the date of my birth matched the day of her call. “Mrs. Browning,” she finally said, “are you suicidal?” which was so far from the good wishes I’d been hoping for that I laughed. The joke was on me. I reassured her that I had absolutely no intention of ruining the surprise.

  While the appeal of living forever was long lost on me, it wasn’t as if I didn’t value my existence. I had things to look forward to . . . or, well, one thing, which was my writers’ group, a weekly gathering of senior citizens who struggled to write their memoirs. Herb Shepherd wrote about growing up in Pittsburgh, back when we played kick-the-can in the streets and had to bring all of our laundry in before noon, before our shirts turned black with soot from the steel mills. Victor Chenkovitch wrote heart-wrenching personal essays about his days in a concentration camp. Jean Fester wrote dreadful prose about her myriad health problems that hadn’t—as of yet—been fatal. And of course there was the other Gene, Gene Rosskemp, who mostly seemed to show up for the women, or “young ladies” as he called us with a wink. No one had hopes of publication—no one, that is, except for Selena Markmann, who wrote novellas about domestic violence with “happy endings,” wherein the attacker always appeared remorseful, bearing diamonds.

  They didn’t ask me to lead the group because I was a published essayist: none of them had read my book, nor could they find it anywhere since the publisher christened it Miss Bixby Takes a Wife, after my tongue-in-cheek essay about how men weren’t the only ones who needed a doting partner to pick up after them. Even before it went out of print in 1958, the collection of essays never got much press apart from a handful of derogatory reviews claiming that it was a “lesbian manifesto” that “stole the angel in the house right out from under Virginia Woolf.”

  They didn’t ask me to lead the group because they adored my writing: in fact, during the eleven years that I had belonged to the group, I had only turned in a single short story. Whenever I would pick up a pen to begin, it would rattle across the page in my shaky hand, leaving nothing of consequence behind. The real reason I ran the show every Tuesday from 6 to 8 P.M. at the Squirrel Hill library? I told them that in my former life I’d been the senior editor of a now-defunct New York publishing house.

  It was an offhand remark I’d once made to Gene Rosskemp after he’d introduced himself in the mailroom of our high-rise apartment building. “Where’re you from?” he’d asked, pumping my hand as I clutched my catalogs and bills, startled by the intrusion of this big-bellied, white-haired stranger in such a small space. Nevertheless, I appreciated the question. It was the first time since I’d moved back to Pittsburgh that someone had assumed I’d ever been anywhere else. “New York,” I said, as he followed me into the lobby, and he said, “Whoa,” as if he’d expected me to say, “The North Side.” Thankfully, he did not ask me how I’d ended up here, the question I’d been asking myself since my husband, Thomas, passed on the year before and I’d made the decision to move back to the city I hadn’t called home in sixty years.

  “What did you do in New York?” Gene asked instead, and when I said that I’d been an editor, oh, did his blue eyes get wide. “Magazine editor?”

  I shook my head. “Book editor. Mostly novels. Some memoir.”

  When he exclaimed, “Mary Browning, you’re just the girl I’ve been waiting for!” I felt like a young training pilot again, practicing spins and stalls in the air. “We got a group going—of writers! And between you and me, Millie ain’t doin’ so hot.”

  “Millie . . . ?” I asked, trying to rearrange my smile into concern, but it wasn’t working.

  “Millie Wisnicki, ‘executive editor’—of the Wisnicki Cousin Camp Chronicles. You want the honest-to-God’s truth,” Gene added, leaning closer and talking behind the back of his hand—the mime of a whisperer, except that he was shouting. “If she had it her way, the group would turn into a knitting club!” Then he laughed and slapped his knee, and I didn’t know what to think of this strange, loud man, except that he’d actually made me chuckle. I joined Gene for the next meeting, and the one after that, and every Tuesday for the next ten years. After the unexpected death of Millie Wisnicki in her carbon monoxide–induced sleep the spring before, Gene suggested the gauntlet be passed to me.

  I took it seriously—or rather, took them seriously. This notion of the Criticism Sandwich, two buns of praise to buffer each liverwurst of criticism, was never on my menu. If their prose happened to make me feel like taking my own life, I was compelled to tell them. On the other hand, if they stirred someth
ing up in me, some forgotten pulse of emotion—like surprise, or even hope—then I’d confess that, too. I wanted these people to write well. After all, it was for posterity.

  My doctor never would’ve dreamed I was a woman with a passion. Nor my grocer Gary, a youngish fellow, mid-fifties and bald, who seemed surprised each week to find that I still had a pulse. My birthday, naturally, was no different, as he hassled himself with retrieving spices for me off the top shelf. He acted as if I hadn’t signed up for Meals on Wheels just to spite him. The real truth was that, though my hands had a tremor, I still managed to cook—chicken soup and applesauce from scratch, and, when I was in the mood for something sweet, my own rogalech. I may not have driven in the preceding eighteen years, but I kept my driver’s license updated, just for the sake of it. I still wore my stack-heeled, patent leather Mary Janes for a short walk to the library each week. I never feared death or cracks in the sidewalk. I did fear, in equal measures, protracted suffering and parallel parking, nearly all medication, and nursing homes. But my greatest fear of all was not having a voice of my own.

  As per the ritual, when I paid for my cup of coffee and a bun and the few jars of spices for my pantry, Gary watched as I carefully counted out the change before he took the time to recount it—right down to the penny, as if, in the previous decade, I had ever once been wrong. “You are one amazing woman, Mrs. B,” he said, the way he did every time, as he dropped the quarters and dimes into the register. I never once felt flattered. It was insulting, really, to have the ability to count be considered my great achievement.

  Nevertheless, there were small benefits that the little old lady status afforded, I decided. Like at the Carnegie Library, where I could slip into the conference room carrying my contraband mug of coffee and paper bag of bread, and the security guard didn’t so much as say boo.

  Inside our dark paneled room, the group was already gathering in their seats, chattering about their adorable grandchildren, their fascinating travels, and their impending surgeries.

  “How’re the girls?” Herb Shepherd asked me, after showing me a picture of his great-grandson in a baseball uniform. “Josie and Hazel, right?”

  “Wonderful. So grown up,” I said, patting my empty pockets for footage of my own. I leaned toward him and whispered, “And Tyler got the job with Microsoft!”

  Herb’s eyes widened with delight, as Selena Markmann interrupted with a tap of her pencil on the table. “Good news, people. My great-niece—the one who is getting her PH.D. in psychology—is willing to type up any of our stories for a very reasonable hourly rate. So, if you’ve got something longhand or need a transcriptionist, she could use the work to help pay for books. Gene? Mary?” she added, handing out the information on Xeroxed pieces of paper, which I folded up and slipped into my purse out of politeness.

  It wasn’t that I didn’t have stories to tell like the rest of them, but I certainly didn’t want to run the risk of being analyzed. Whenever I toyed with the idea of penning my own memoir, I quickly gave up when confronted by the disquieting notion of telling my secrets. Years ago, after reading my one and only submission, they’d dissected my fictional heroine’s character flaws like a roundtable of psychiatrists: “compulsive liar” and “clinically depressed,” they pronounced. If I told the truth about my past, I could only begin to imagine what they’d think of me.

  I decided, right then, not to mention my birthday. Gene would’ve wanted to run out and buy cupcakes, and that would’ve upset the other Jean, who had brittle diabetes. If anyone remembered, since the first year I let it slip and Millie showed up with a blanket she’d knitted for one of my great-granddaughters, I would do my best to keep them on the task at hand.

  Except the task at hand that Tuesday night turned out not to be the writing at all, but instead the girl with the braid who walked into the conference room and looked around just as I was clearing my throat to begin. Her nose was not at all Sarah’s nose and her eyes were more hazel than brown, but they were thoughtful like Sarah’s and the girl carried herself with the same hesitant curiosity. After a moment, when no one appeared to claim her, I cleared my throat again and tweaked my glasses up on my nose, waiting for her to say she’d lost her study group and to make a hasty exit.

  “Is this—the writers’ group?” the girl asked.

  “Which writers’ group?” I asked, arching my eyebrow.

  “The ad—the one in the paper.” She held up a wrinkled clipping from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and read, “’Seeking New Writers! Talent and experience not necessary but interest in the craft a plus! Open to the public!’”

  “I’m afraid you must be in the wrong—”

  “That’s us, honey,” Selena interrupted me, her gold wrist bangles jangling together against her purple sleeve. “I placed the ad a couple of weeks ago. We needed someone to replace Millie,” Selena added, without even looking my way.

  “You’re in the right place—no pun intended!” the other Gene said, and the girl cracked an uncertain smile before taking a seat.

  And then it was my turn to be baffled. I didn’t give a hoot about Selena, who was obviously holding a grudge against me for not sharing her view that a wife-beater belonged in her “Hollywood Ending.” No, it was the girl baffling me, as she slipped a notebook out of her backpack, took out a pencil, and chewed on it as she listened. I felt disoriented in her presence. Could this be a reincarnation of Sarah? Did she know my older sister, in some other life, how we’d shared everything—from clothes, to dolls, to a twin bed in the crowded apartment over my stepfather’s dress shop? We even shared piano lessons: Sarah got the teacher, while I hovered by the door, memorizing her fingers on the keys. Or was it just coincidence, the way she and Sarah wore their hair identically and chewed on their pencils with the same revolting attention to the eraser?

  “Well, who would like to begin?” Selena Markmann asked brightly, and I emerged from my reverie, feeling a mite foolish. Selena had just delivered my usual line.

  Unfortunately, it was Jean Fester’s night, an embarrassing showcase for the group. We were critiquing her bypass surgery.

  “I found it a little hard to get through . . .” Gene gently remarked.

  “That’s because it was!” Jean snapped.

  I kept watching the girl. Her manner was civilized: after all, we were not what she’d been expecting, but she stayed anyway. She even listened politely to the debate over whether or not it was a good thing that we all felt as if we’d been cut open by the end of the piece. And in her white blouse and khaki trousers—“Generals Pants,” we called them in the service—her appearance was decent, too, as if she were waiting for a review from General Hap Arnold himself and the chance to pass from ground school into the air. But it wasn’t her decency that shocked me; it was that she was there at all, like a birthday present I hadn’t realized I’d been waiting for.

  “Mary?” Herb Shepherd finally asked, when the room had gone silent, and I realized belatedly that Mary was me—still me, after all these years.

  “I have to admit, Jean, it wasn’t quite my cup of tea . . .” I began.

  “Having my chest cracked open wasn’t exactly my cup of tea, either!”

  “Remember, we’re here to critique the writing, not you.” I smiled in the direction of her flaring nostrils and suggested that perhaps she’d rather read my suggestions. “I, for one, will be updating my living will to ‘do not resuscitate,’” I added, and the other Gene laughed, as Jean Fester collected all of her feedback into a pile with a harrumph.

  “So, you want to be a writer?” I asked the girl afterward.

  She lowered her eyes. “Yes, well . . . my grandmother says that if you love to write, then you already are a writer. I’m working on a novel.” I smiled, enjoying her quaky confidence. Looking up again, the girl glanced around the room. “Is this group just for . . .”

  Those Not Long for This World? I thought.

  “. . . nonfiction writers?” she finished.

  “We w
elcome all writers, including those of fiction. What is your name, my dear?”

  “Elyse,” she said, shoving next week’s submission into her backpack before zipping it shut.

  Something caught in my chest. “Elyse.” I smiled again. She smiled. “I am Mrs. Browning,” I added.

  “Nice to meet you, Mrs. Browning. And all of you,” she said to the rest of the group. The men were smiling at her a little dopily, but Selena looked smug, as if she’d handpicked the girl herself.

  “I do hope you’ll be back,” I said.

  “Oh, I’ll be back,” she said, sounding vaguely confident.

  When I got home that night and settled into my recliner, I was still thinking about the girl with the braid. The TV was on, tuned to a commercial for the prescription that had been offered to me that same afternoon. This medication could cause blindness, coma, or even death. If any of these side effects should occur, call your doctor immediately. I aimed my remote to make the screen go black again.

  When I climbed into bed later, my heart was skipping beats. I thought about Elyse again. Maybe she would come back next week. Maybe she would write something worth reading. Maybe she would make me a writer again. Maybe I could tell her the truth about me. I shut off the light and waited. Something filled up my chest again, an unfamiliar vibration, and I regretted how cavalierly I’d spoken about My End earlier that day. With one hand over my heart, I inhaled and exhaled, imagining Sarah watching over me, coaching me to breathe. The fluttering passed. I felt my shoulders relax. Maybe my heart wasn’t stopping but expecting—like the moment I held baby Dave in my arms and knew he was the one who would make it home. Maybe this was just my life, starting over.

  CHAPTER 2

  23 Things About Me

  By Elyse Strickler

  1. When I was five, I wanted to be the first woman president of the United States, but my mother said the job was too stressful. “Oftentimes people will try to assassinate you—do you know what that means?” Mom said. So, I picked astronaut instead. “Oh, sweetie. Most of them blow up,” she said. So, I chose writer—of novels, but Mom said it was next to impossible to get published, and that I would need a day job. So, for my day job I chose scientist. She said the PH.D. programs could be surprisingly cutthroat, and it was hard to get tenure at places like the National Institutes of Health. When I asked if I could be a doctor like Daddy, Mom said, “Absolutely! Honey, you can be whatever you set your mind to!” and Daddy said, “That’s my girl!”

 

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