Part of the data recovered
from a disk
taken in a raid on an illegal
software laboratory,
March, 1981
Jack Kennedy had died in the middle of a Dallas street, his head blown off in front of thousands of spectators and his horrified wife. Bobby Kennedy had narrowly missed meeting his end during a moment of triumph in a Los Angeles hotel. Ultimately, that seemed to have been only a brief reprieve before fate caught up with him...
Jasmine Chang: "Everyone heard the explosion but n.o.body knew whether it was something the demonstrators had done, or if the National Guard had rolled in a tank or if the world had come to an end. I ran down to the lobby with just about everyone else on the staff and a good many of the hotel guests, trying to see what was happening outside without having to go out in it. n.o.body wanted to go outside. That night, the manager on duty had told us that anyone who wanted could stay over if we didn"t mind roughing it in the meeting rooms. I made myself a sleeping bag out of spare linens under a heavy table in one of the smaller rooms. The night before, the cops had cracked one of the dining room windows with a demonstrator"s head. I wasn"t about to risk my neck going out in that frenzy.
"Well, after the explosion, we heard the rifle-fire. Then the street in front of the hotel, already crowded, was packed all of a sudden. Wall-to-wall cops and demonstrators, and the cops were swinging at anything they could reach. They were scything their way through the crowd, you see-they were mowing people down to make paths so they could walk. It was one of the worst things I"ve ever seen. For a while it was the worst. I wish it could have stayed that way.
"The lobby was filling up, too, but n.o.body really noticed because we were all watching that sickening scene outside. The whole world was watching, they said. I saw a camera crew and all I could think was their equipment was going to get smashed to bits.
"I don"t know when Kennedy came down to the lobby. I don"t know why the Secret Service didn"t stop him, I don"t know what he thought he could do. He must have been watching from his window. Maybe he thought he could actually address the crowd-as if anyone could have heard him. Anyway, he was there in the lobby and none of us really noticed him.
"The demonstrator who forced his way into the revolving door-he was just a kid, he looked about fifteen years old to me. Scared out of his mind. The revolving door was supposed to be locked, but when I saw that kid"s face, I was glad it wasn"t.
"Then the cops tried to force their way in after him but they got stuck, there was a billy club jammed in the door or something. And the kid was babbling about how they"d blown up Kennedy at the convention. They threw a bomb and killed Kennedy! They blew him up with Johnson and McGovern!" he was yelling over and over. And Bobby Kennedy himself rushed over to the kid. I"m pretty sure that was the first any of us really noticed him, when it registered. I remember, I felt shocked and surprised and numb all at once, seeing Kennedy right there, right in the middle of a lobby. Like he was anybody. And n.o.body else moved, we all just stood there and stared like dummies.
"And Kennedy was trying to tell the kid who he was, that he wasn"t dead and what bomb and all that. The kid got even more hysterical, and Kennedy was shaking him, trying to get something coherent out of him, we"re all standing there watching and finally the cops manage to get through the revolving door.
"They must have thought the kid was attacking Kennedy. That"s all I can figure. Even if that"s not how they looked. The cops. They looked... weird. Like they didn"t know what they were doing, or they did know but they"d forgotten why they were supposed to do it. I don"t know. I don"t know. But it was so weird, because they all looked exactly alike to me right at that moment, even though when I looked at them again after, they weren"t anything alike, even in their uniforms. But they looked like identical dolls then, or puppets, because they moved all at once together. Like a kick-line of chorus girls, you know? Except that it wasn"t their legs that came up but their arms.
"I know that when they raised their guns, they were looking at the kid, and I thought, "No, wait!" I tried to move toward them, I was reaching out and they fired.
"It was like another bomb had gone off. For a moment, I thought another bomb had gone off, just a split second before they were going to fire. Then John Kennedy-I mean, Bobby, Bobby Kennedy- that"s a Freudian slip, isn"t it?-he did this clumsy whirl around and it looked like he was turning around in anger, like people do sometimes, you know? like he was going, "Dammit, I"m leaving!" And then he went down, and it was so awful because- well, this is going to sound really strange, I guess, but... well... when you see people get shot on a TV show, it"s like ch.o.r.eographed or something, they do these kind of graceful falls. Kennedy was... they"d robbed him of his dignity. That"s the only way I can think to put it. They shot him and humiliated him all at once, he looked clumsy and awkward and helpless.
"And I was outraged at that: I know it must sound weird, a man got shot, killed, and I"m talking about how he looked undignified. But that"s like what taking someone"s life is-taking their humanity, making them a thing. And I was outraged. I wanted to grab one of those cops" guns and make them into things. Not just because it was Bobby Kennedy, it could have been anyone on that floor at that moment, the kid, the manager, my supervisor-and I hated my supervisor"s guts.
"Right then, I understood what the demonstrations were about, and I was against the war. Up until then, I"d been kind of for it-not really for it, more like, "I hate war, but you"re supposed to serve your country." But right then, I understood how horrifying it must be to be told to make somebody into a thing, or be told you have to go out and risk being made into a thing. To kill, to be killed.
"All that went through my mind in a split second and then I started screaming. Then I heard this noise... under my screams, I heard this weird groan. It was Kennedy. They say he was dead by then and it must have been the air going out of his lungs past his vocal cords that made the sound. Awful. Just awful. I ran and pulled the fire alarm. It was the only thing I could think to do. And this other chambermaid, Lucy Anderson, she started pounding on the front windows and screaming, "Stop! Stop! They killed Kennedy! They killed Kennedy!" Probably n.o.body could hear her, but even if anyone had, it wouldn"t have mattered, because most of the people out there thought Kennedy was already dead in the explosion.
"It wasn"t the Fire Department that used the hoses on those people. The cops commandeered the fire trucks and did that. And we were stuck in that hotel for another whole day and night. Even after they cleared the streets, they wouldn"t let any of us go anywhere. Like house arrest.
"The questioning was awful. n.o.body mistreated me or hit me or anything like that, it was just that they kept at me. I had to tell what I saw over and over and over and over until I thought they were either trying to drive me out of my mind so I wouldn"t be able to testify against those cops, or trying to find some way to make it seem like I was really the one who"d done it.
"By the time they told me I could leave the hotel, I was mad at the world, I can tell you. Especially since that Secret Service agent or whoever he was told me I"d be a lot happier if I moved out of Chicago and started over somewhere else. He really screwed that one up, and it was lucky for me he did. I left, and I was far, far away when the s.h.i.t really hit the fan. I started over, all right-I got a new name and a new ident.i.ty. Everybody else who was in that lobby-Lucy Anderson, the manager, the other staff and guests-they all disappeared. The last anyone saw of them, the Secret Service was taking them away. The cops vanished, too, but I have a feeling they didn"t vanish to quite the same thing as the others. And the kid killed himself. They said. Right, sure. I bet he couldn"t survive the interrogation.
"Of course, all that was a long time ago. Hard to imagine now how things were then. I was only twenty, then. I was working days and taking college courses at night. I wanted to be a teacher. Now I"m in my early forties, and sometimes I think I dreamed it all. I dreamed that I lived in a country where people voted their leaders into office, where you just had to be old enough and not be a convicted felon and you could vote. Instead of having to take those psychological tests and wait for the investigators to give you a voting clearance. It is like a dream, isn"t it? Imagining that there was a time in this country when you could be anything you wanted to be, a teacher, a doctor, a banker, a scientist. I was going to be a teacher. I was going to be a history teacher, but those are mostly white people. My family"s been in this country forever, but because I"m Oriental, I"ve got conditional citizenship now... and I was born here! I suppose I shouldn"t complain. If anyone found out I saw Kennedy get it, I"d probably be unconditionally dead. Because everyone knows that the rumor that Kennedy was shot by some cops with a bad aim in a hotel lobby is just another stupid rumor, like the second gunman in Dallas in 1963. Everyone knows Kennedy died in the explosion at the convention center. That"s the official version of how he died and if it"s the official version, government certified, that"s the truth.
"Where I live, they have routine segregation, so I can"t use any of the whites" facilities. I"ve thought about applying to move to one of the larger cities where there"s elective segregation and nothing"s officially "white-only," but I hear the waiting lists are years long. And somebody told me that everything is really just as segregated as here, they"re just not as open and honest about it. So maybe I"d really be no better off...
"But I wish that I could have become a teacher- any kind of teacher-instead of a cook. I can"t even become a chef, because that"s another men-only field. I don"t want to be a chef necessarily, because I really don"t like to cook and I"m not very good at it. But it was all I could get. The list of available careers for non-whites gets smaller all the time.
"Sometimes, I think it actually wasn"t meant to be this bad. Sometimes I think that n.o.body really wanted the military to take over the government for real, I think it was just panic about so many of the Democratic candidates dying along with the President in that blast and the rioting that wouldn"t stop and all that. It did seem as if the country was completely falling apart and somebody had to do something fast and decisive. Well, sure, somebody should have. Somebody should have figured out who was the President, with Madman Johnson and Humpty Humphrey and all those Senators dead-there had to be somebody left, right? All of Congress wasn"t there. I mean, if I"d known, if a lot of us had known how things were going to come out, I think we"d have just let Ronald Reagan be President for four years, run him against Wallace or something and kept free elections, instead of postponing the elections and then having them abolished.
"People panicked. That"s what it all came down to, I think. They were panicking in the streets, they were panicking in the government, and they were panicking in their homes. Our own panic brought us down."
Undated typescript found in
a locker in the downtown
San Diego bus terminal,
April 9, 1993
Our own panic brought us down. For many who were eyewitnesses to certain events of 1968, this would seem to be a fitting coda, if coda is the word, for the ensuing twenty-five years...
Oh, h.e.l.l, I don"t know why I"m bothering to try to sum this up. How do you sum up a piece of history gone wrong? How do you sum up the fall of a country that believes it was saved from chaos and destruction? And who am I asking, anyway? I"m out of the country now, another wetback who finally made it across the border to freedom. There was a time when wetbacks went north to freedom, but I"m pretty sure n.o.body would remember that now. Mexico is sad and dusty and ancient, the people poor and suspicious of Anglos, though I"m so brown now that I can pa.s.s convincingly as long as I don"t try to speak the language-my accent is still atrocious.
But the freedom here-nothing like what we used to have, but the constraints are far fewer. You don"t need to apply for a travel permit in-country, you just go from place to place. Of course, it"s not really that hard to get a travel permit in the U.S., they give them out routinely. But I"m of that generation that remembers when it was different, and it galls me that I would have to apply for one at all if I want to go from, say, Newark to, say, Cape May. I"ve deliberately chosen two cities I"ve never been to, just in case these papers fall into the wrong hands. G.o.d knows enough of my papers have been lost over the years. Sometimes I think it"s a miracle I haven"t been caught.
It"s a h.e.l.l of a life when you"re risking prosecution and imprisonment just for trying to put together a true account of something that happened two and a half decades before.
Why I bothered-well, there are a lot of reasons. Because I"ve learned to love truth. And because I want to atone for what I did to "Carole Feeney" and the others. I"m still amazed that she didn"t recognize me, but I guess twenty years is a long time after all.
I really thought I was doing the right thing at the time. I thought infiltrating the leftist groups was all right if it was just to make sure that n.o.body was stockpiling weapons or planning to blow up a building. Or a.s.sa.s.sinate another leader. I truly wish I could have arrested Annie Phillips and her group long before Chicago. Some of the people I talked to who were in the streets that night blame Annie for everything that"s happened since, and I think that"s why the authorities kept her alive instead of killing her-so the old radicals could hate her more than the government.
After I talked to Annie, I understood why she turned violent, even if I didn"t condone it. If her voice could have been heard in 1964, maybe all these voices could be heard now, though they might not have so much to say...
How melodramatic, "Davis." I can"t help it. I was actually just like any of them in the year 1968- I thought my country was in trouble, and I was trying to do something about it. And- And what the h.e.l.l, we won the Vietnam war. Hooray for America. The Vietnamese are all but extinct, but we brought the boys back home. We sent them right back out to the Middle East, and then down to Nicaragua, and to the Phillipines, and to Europe, of course, where they don"t protest our missile bases much anymore. That big old stick. We"ve gone one better than talking softly and carrying a big stick. Now we don"t talk at all....
In the weeks since I finally got out of the country, I"ve been having this recurring dream. I keep dreaming that things turned out differently, that there was even just one thing that didn"t happen, or something else that did happen, and the country just... went on. And so I keep thinking about it. If Johnson hadn"t run... if Kennedy hadn"t been killed... if that bomb hadn"t gone off... if it had only been half the number of demonstrators... if Dylan had showed up.
If Dylan had showed up... I wonder sometimes if that"s it. G.o.d, the world should be so simple. Instead of simple and brutal and crude.
Even after putting together this risky account, I"m not sure that I really know much more than I did in the beginning. I was hoping that I might figure it all out, how, instead of winning the battle and losing the war, we won the war and lost everything we had. But it could have been different. I don"t know why it"s so important to me to believe that. Maybe because I don"t want to believe that this was the way we were going no matter what. I don"t want to believe that everything that was of any value is stuck back there in the Sixties.
Papers found in a hastily vacated room.
in an Ecuadorian flophouse.
by occupying American forces.
during the third South American War.
October 13, 1998.
Catch That Zeppelin!.
Fritz Leiber.
This year on a trip to New York City to visit my son, who is a social historian at a leading munic.i.p.al university there, I had a very unsettling experience. At black moments, of which at my age I have quite a few, it still makes me distrust profoundly those absolute boundaries in s.p.a.ce and Time which are our sole protection against Chaos, and fear that my mind-no, my entire individual existence-may at any moment at all and without any warning whatsoever be blown by a sudden gust of Cosmic Wind to an entirely different spot in a Universe of Infinite Possibilities. Or, rather, into another Universe altogether. And that my mind and individuality will be changed to fit.
But at other moments, which are still in the majority, I believe that my unsettling experience was only one of those remarkably vivid waking dreams to which old people become increasingly susceptible, generally waking dreams about the past, and especially waking dreams about a past in which at some crucial point one made an entirely different and braver choice than one actually did, or in which the whole world made such a decision, with a completely different future resulting. Golden glowing might-have-beens nag increasingly at the minds of some older people.
In line with this interpretation I must admit that my whole unsettling experience was structured very much like a dream. It began with startling flashes of a changed world. It continued into a longer period when I completely accepted the changed world and delighted in it and, despite fleeting quivers of uneasiness, wished I could bask in its glow forever. And it ended in horrors, or nightmares, which I hate to mention, let alone discuss, until I must.
Opposing this dream notion, there are times when I am completely convinced that what happened to me in Manhattan and in a certain famous building there was no dream at all, but absolutely real, and that I did indeed visit another Time Stream.
Finally, I must point out that what I am about to tell you I am necessarily describing in retrospect, highly aware of several transitions involved and, whether I want to or not, commenting on them and making deductions that never once occurred to me at the time.
No, at the time it happened to me-and now at this moment of writing I am convinced that it did happen and was absolutely real-one instant simply succeeded another in the most natural way possible. I questioned nothing.
As to why it all happened to me, and what particular mechanism was involved, well, I am convinced that every man or woman has rare, brief moments of extreme sensitivity, or rather vulnerability, when his mind and entire being may be blown by the Change Winds to Somewhere Else. And then, by what I call the Law of the Conservation of Reality, blown back again.
I was walking down Broadway somewhere near 34th Street. It was a chilly day, sunny despite the smog-a bracing day-and I suddenly began to stride along more briskly than is my cautious habit, throwing my feet ahead of me with a faint suggestion of the goose step. I also threw back my shoulders and took deep breaths, ignoring the fumes which tickled my nostrils. Beside me, traffic growled and snarled, rising at times to a machine-gun rata-tat-tat, while pedestrians were scuttling about with that desperate ratlike urgency characteristic of all big American cities, but which reaches its ultimate in New York. I cheerfully ignored that too. I even smiled at the sight of a ragged b.u.m and a fur-coated gray-haired society lady both independently dodging across the street through the hurtling traffic with a cool practiced skill one sees only in America"s biggest metropolis.
Just then I noticed a dark, wide shadow athwart the street ahead of me. It could not be that of a cloud, for it did not move. I craned my neck sharply and looked straight up like the veriest yokel, a regular Hans-Kopf-in-die-Luft (Hans-Head-in-the-Air, a German figure of comedy).
My gaze had to climb up the giddy 102 stories of the tallest building in the world, the Empire State. My gaze was strangely accompanied by the vision of a gigantic, long-fanged ape making the same ascent with a beautiful girl in one paw-oh, yes, I was recollecting the charming American fantasy-film King Kong, or as they name it in Sweden, Kong King.
And then my gaze clambered higher still, up the 222-foot st.u.r.dy tower, to the top of which was moored the nose of the vast, breathtakingly beautiful, streamlined, silvery shape which was making the shadow.
Now here is a most important point. I was not at the time in the least startled by what I saw. I knew at once that it was simply the bow section of the German zeppelin Ostwald, named for the great German pioneer of physical chemistry and electrochemistry, and queen of the mighty pa.s.senger and light-freight fleet of luxury airliners working out of Berlin, Baden-Baden, and Bremerhaven. That matchless Armada of Peace, each t.i.tanic airship named for a world-famous German scientist-the Mach, the Nernst, the Humbolt, the Fritz Haber, the French-named Antoine Henri Becquerel, the American-named Edison, the Polish-named T. Sklodowska Edison, and even the Jewish-named Einstein! The great humanitarian navy in which I held a not unimportant position as international sales consultant and Fachmann-I mean expert. My chest swelled with justified pride at this edel-n.o.ble-achievement of der Vaterland.
I knew also without any mind-searching or surprise that the length of the Ostwald was more than one half the 1,472-foot height of the Empire State Building plus its mooring tower, thick enough to hold an elevator. And my heart swelled again with the thought that the Berlin Zeppelinturm (dirigible tower) was only a few meters less high. Germany, I told myself, need not strain for mere numerical records-her sweeping scientific and technical achievements speak for themselves to the entire planet.
All this literally took little more than a second, and I never broke my snappy stride. As my gaze descended, I cheerfully hummed under my breath Deutschland, Deutschland uber Alles.
The Broadway I saw was utterly transformed, though at the time this seemed every bit as natural as the serene presence of the Ostwald high overhead, vast ellipsoid held aloft by helium. Silvery electric trucks and buses and private cars innumerable purred along far more evenly and quietly, and almost as swiftly, as had the noisy, stenchful, jerky gasoline-powered vehicles only moments before, though to me now the latter were completely forgotten. About two blocks ahead, an occasional gleaming electric car smoothly swung into the wide silver arch of a quick-battery-change station, while others emerged from under the arch to rejoin the almost dreamlike stream of traffic.
The air I gratefully inhaled was fresh and clean, without trace of smog.
The somewhat fewer pedestrians around me still moved quite swiftly, but with a dignity and courtesy largely absent before, with the numerous blackamoors among them quite as well dressed and exuding the same quiet confidence as the Caucasians.
The only slightly jarring note was struck by a tall, pale, rather emaciated man in black dress and with unmistakably Hebraic features. His somber clothing was somewhat shabby, though well kept, and his thin shoulders were hunched. I got the impression he had been looking closely at me, and then instantly glancing away as my eyes sought his. For some reason I recalled what my son had told me about the City College of New York-CCNY-being referred to surrept.i.tiously and jokingly as Christian College Now Yiddish. I couldn"t help chuckling a bit at that witticism, though I am glad to say it was a genial little guffaw rather than a malicious snicker. Germany in her well-known tolerance and n.o.ble-mindedness has completely outgrown her old, disfiguring anti-Semitism-after all, we must admit in all fairness that perhaps a third of our great men are Jews or carry Jewish genes, Haber and Einstein among them-despite what dark and, yes, wicked memories may lurk in the subconscious minds of oldsters like myself and occasionally briefly surface into awareness like submarines bent on ship murder.
My happily self-satisfied mood immediately rea.s.serted itself, and with a smart, almost military gesture I brushed to either side with a thumbnail the short, horizontal black mustache which decorates my upper lip, and I automatically swept back into place the thick comma of black hair (I confess I dye it) which tends to fall down across my forehead.
I stole another glance up at the Ostwald, which made me think of the matchless amenities of that wondrous deluxe airliner: the softly purring motors that powered its propellers-electric motors, naturally, energized by banks of lightweight TSE batteries and as safe as its helium; the Grand Corridor running the length of the pa.s.senger deck from the Bow Observatory to the stern"s like-windowed Games Room, which becomes the Grand Ballroom at night; the other peerless rooms letting off that corridor-the Gesellschaftsraum der Kapitan (Captain"s Lounge) with its dark woodwork, manly cigar smoke and Damentische (Tables for Ladies), the Premier Dining Room with its linen napery and silverplated aluminum dining service, the Ladies" Retiring Room always set out profusely with fresh flowers, the Schwartzwald bar, the gambling casino with its roulette, baccarat, chemmy, blackjack (vingt-et-un), its tables for skat and bridge and dominoes and sixty-six, its chess tables presided over by the delightfully eccentric world"s champion Nimzowitch, who would defeat you blindfold, but always brilliantly, simultaneously or one at a time, in charmingly baroque brief games for only two gold pieces per person per game (one gold piece to nutsy Nimzy, one to the DLG), and the supremely luxurious staterooms with costly veneers of mahogany over balsa; the hosts of attentive stewards, either as short and skinny as jockeys or else actual dwarfs, both types chosen to save weight; and the t.i.tanium elevator rising through the countless bags of helium to the two-decked Zenith Observatory, the sun deck wind-screened but roofless to let in the ever-changing clouds, the mysterious fog, the rays of the stars and good old Sol, and all the heavens. Ah, where else on land or sea could you buy such high living?
I called to mind in detail the single cabin which was always mine when I sailed on the Ostwald-meine Stammkabine. I visualized the Grand Corridor thronged with wealthy pa.s.sengers in evening dress, the handsome officers, the un.o.btrusive, ever-attentive stewards, the gleam of white shirt fronts, the glow of bare shoulders, the muted dazzle of jewels, the music of conversations like string quartets, the lilting low laughter that traveled along.
Exactly on time I did a neat "Links, marchieren!" ("To the left, march!") and pa.s.sed through the impressive portals of the Empire State and across its towering lobby to the mutedly silver-doored banks of elevators. On my way I noted the silver-glowing date: 6 May 1937 and the time of day: 1:07 P.M. Good!-since the Ostwald did not cast off until the tick of 3:00 P.M., I would be left plenty of time for a leisurely lunch and good talk with my son, if he had remembered to meet me-and there was actually no doubt of that, since he is the most considerate and orderly minded of sons, a real German mentality, though I say it myself.
I headed for the express bank, enjoying my pa.s.sage through the cl.u.s.ters of high-cla.s.s people who thronged the lobby without any unseemly crowding, and placed myself before the doors designated "Dirigible Departure Lounge" and in briefer German "Zum Zeppelin."
The elevator hostess was an attractive j.a.panese girl in skirt of dull silver with the DLG, Double Eagle and Dirigible insignia of the German Airship Union emblazoned in small on the left breast of her mutedly silver jacket. I noted with unvoiced approval that she appeared to have an excellent command of both German and English and was uniformly courteous to the pa.s.sengers in her smiling but unemotional Nipponese fashion, which is so like our German scientific precision of speech, though without the latter"s warm underlying pa.s.sion. How good that our two federations, at opposite sides of the globe, have strong commercial and behavioral ties!
My fellow pa.s.sengers in the lift, chiefly Americans and Germans, were of the finest type, very well dressed-except that just as the doors were about to close, there pressed in my doleful Jew in black. He seemed ill at ease, perhaps because of his shabby clothing. I was surprised, but made a point of being particularly polite toward him, giving him a slight bow and brief but friendly smile, while flashing my eyes. Jews have as much right to the acme of luxury travel as any other people on the planet, if they have the money-and most of them do.