His terror of confinement had taken him by surprise, and he said that if he'd known what a nightmare recapitulation of his POW experience it would be, he'd never have walked willingly into the FBI ambush. After dinnerâwe ate in a small Italian restaurant in the VillageâCarolyn and I suggested he come home with us. He seemed not to want to. He could go back to his nearby studio apartment. But we insisted. We both insisted. When he agreed, his relief was palpable. He lived with us then again, while preparing for the trial. Our house became the headquarters of his defense committee. Carolyn set aside her painting and arranged for babysitters for Molly in order to work full-time publicizing the trial and raising money to pay the lawyers. I was up to my ears at the university, but I gave every minute I could. I stifled my ambivalence, and found it possible, to my surprise, to see beyond the posturing and self-righteousness of the war resisters. Hell, in my own, didactic way, I became one of them. I wrote against the war every chance I got. Sometimes my desk felt hot beneath my hands. It was a frenzied, anxious, but exhilarating time. Michael had invitations from colleges and church groups all over the country. Even I took to the platform. I was particularly adept, it turned out, at debating the government lackeys who showed up at teach-ins. They were fodder for me. To speak at an antiwar rally, I discovered, was nothing like lecturing in the classroom. About literature I was wry and circuitous, carefully discursive, deliberately understated. I did not display myself in public. But about the war, to my own surprise, I spoke with unrestrained emotion, particularly as we discovered that spring that our new president was not winding down the violence, but intensifying it. I'll always be grateful to Nixon, that worm. Thanks to him even I could feel pristine. It was glorious, how in hating the war and the warmakers, we could love ourselves. Praise the Lord and pass out pompous leaflets! Right on, Mother!
The antiwar movement was a perfect mix of the ridiculous and the profound, of true nobility and blatant solipsism. And its most memorable moments held both elements in tension.
I remember, for example, a rally at Boston University, the selfstyled "Berkeley of the East." It was held at the football stadium and students from Boston's half-dozen large colleges had filled the stands to overflowing. It was a balmy spring day, and the kids were tricked out in tie-dyed T-shirts, flowing hair and moccasins. Frisbees sailed to and fro above their heads and, between speakers, a blues band wailed away on amplified harmonicas. Michael and I had driven up from New York and we arrived late. A kid at the gate who didn't recognize Michael said that Dave Dellinger and Tom Hayden had already spoken, but that everybody was waiting to hear Father Maguire. Michael winked at me. The note of deference was a surprise from this kid, at least to me. B.U. wasn't Notre Dame or Fordham. I didn't think a priest, even the celebrity-resister-priest, would make much of a dent there. But that was because I had yet to grasp that draft-age boys particularly regarded Michael as their great defender. And kids who wouldn't have thought of going into a church were as susceptible to the Great American Romance of the Priest as their parents had been. Michael was their Bing Crosby. As we walked into the stands, students began to recognize him. He had taken to wearing a black turtleneck sweater and a black windbreaker, a costume other priests would imitate, and, with his height, his leanness, he was a striking figure. As we walked through the stands toward the platform, students began to applaud. Frisbees stopped flying, though the music continued to blare. The closer we came to the platform the more students recognized him and began applauding. They stood. The ovation crossed the stadium like a wave, following us. By the time we reached the platform the band had stopped playing. The musicians were a scruffy, ill-groomed bunch with the studied look of nihilists, but they were applauding too. Michael looked at me, helpless. Thousands of college kids were cheering him. I clapped my hands theatrically toward him and bowed. As he mounted the stairs to the platform he leaned into me. I could sense that he was moved, but also embarrassed. Who was he? Bob Dylan? This was wacky. "Fuck peace," he whispered.
In May, Michael's case was finally heard. It was a simple procedure, quick and anticlimactic. The judge refused to admit into evidence the tape-recording that had been supplied to the
Times,
and when Michael's lawyer subpoenaed Celia Zack, he learned that she had disappeared. In the end Michael's defense consisted of little more than his own testimony. On the stand he was utterly credible, and it seemed to me the prosecutor's inability to shake his story would be decisive. When he sought repeatedly to refer to the war, the judge interrupted him. The war was not on trial. But when the prosecutor repeated the irrelevant slander that Michael had encouraged Nicholas Wiley to immolate himself, the judge allowed it. In his instruction to the jurors, the judge ordered them to disregard all arguments having to do with entrapment. The government was not on trial either. In fact, Michael had succeeded in making an issue, whether the judge allowed it or not, of abusive patterns the government would repeat against other Catholic resisters, against radicals, against genuine hoodlums and eventually against members of the U.S. House and Senate.
It took the jury less than an hour to bring back its verdict. Michael was guilty of willful and malicious destruction of government property. A week later the incensed Irish Catholic judge handed down a sentence of two to five years in prison.
When that sentence was announced there was a gasp in the courtroom. One of the jurors, present now as a spectator, cried, "No!" And Michael's shoulders sagged. When given a chance to speak, he only shook his head. A moment later, after the judge had left and people had begun to clear the room, Michael turned in his place, looking for us. Carolyn's face was buried in her hands. I knew it was her eyes he wanted. I touched her. She uncovered her face and Michael took refuge in what it showed him.
At a time like that friends stand without defenses in one another's company. I knew that the level of feeling between Caro and Michael was more intense than ever, but the context for their feelings, their love, had been radically altered. How can I indicate our states of mind, or the common state I presumed we shared? It is important that you understand. We had all been softened by the years. Once, perhaps, even they would have romped into an affair, believing implicitly, as the young do, that there is only one possible form of expression for such feelings. But it was different for them now because their love for each otherâI knew this with primordial certaintyâexisted inside their love for me. It was therefore radically chaste. It was a love I could encourage. Though we were two sides of a love triangle, Michael was not my competitor. It was as likely that Carolyn should have been, in fact. In that courtroom, after his sentencing, the three of us embraced. We stood together for a long time.
That
was the expression we wanted. Carolyn, Michael and I shared a sense of having come home again in one another.
He continued to live with us during the months it took the courts to dispose of his appeal. Though his coming jail term loomed above us, we found it possible to live happily, as one family. Summer came. In August, to escape the rat-race of antiwar workâMichael was more in demand than everâwe rented a cabin at Lake George. At night after Molly was asleep, we would sit on the porch looking up at the stars. Sometimes I read poetry aloud. One verse of Eliot's became a theme of ours, a joke, but more than a joke because it hinted at the mysteries there were and would always be among us.
Â
Who is the third who walks always beside you?
When I count there are only you and I together
But when I look ahead up the white road
There is always another one walking beside you
Gliding wrapt in a brown mantle, hooded
I do not know whether a man or a woman
â
But who is that on the other side of you?
Â
During the period leading up to our "vacation," Carolyn had worked herself to a frazzle too. Once she'd laid aside her painting, it was as if all her creativity was channeled into organizing, and she had done it with great success. She shunned the celebrity mode that Michael, like it or not, fell into, and she didn't function as a pinch-hit speaker as I did. Instead she spent long hours arranging events, benefits at art galleries, concerts at which the heroes spoke and cocktail parties at which the rich radicals could make donations to Michael's rich lawyers. At all of these occasions Carolyn would hover at the edge of things, making sure the microphones worked and the bartender had ice and the girl at the table by the door had pens with which the chic supporters could write their checks. And Carolyn always looked lovely. She'd developed a style of dressing that was fittingly unconventional; she was surely no lawyer's wife, no socialite, no BonWit DimWit. But she never embraced the counterculture cult of uglinessâuniform unisexuality; workboots, overalls, fatigue jackets, torn flannel shirtsâthat held sway in the movement. I remember her in long, high-waisted dresses, sandals, but still with heels, bangles at her wrists, no makeup but her luxuriant blond hair cinctured in bright, trailing silk like Louise Nevelson or Isadora Duncan. You knew she was an artist, just looking at her. It didn't matter that she hadn't painted in months.
Well, it mattered to her. And the fact that she'd fallen into a role, that of an antiwar hostess, that she despised mattered too. Stokely Carmichael had said a woman's place in the movement is on her back. Carolyn's place, she said, with bitterness that shocked me, was at the door, smiling. We were alone in our room one night at Lake George. It was the first time we'd talked to each other about what those months had really felt like. Her alienation, her weariness, were different from mine, and had led her to a vastly different conclusion.
"I've decided to do a raid, Durk."
"What?" I sat forward. I'd been propped against the headboard of our bed. I was wearing pajamas. She wore a T-shirt, no bra, and shorts. A blue engineer's bandanna was tied around her head.
"On the Dow Chemical offices at Rockefeller Center next month. A symbolic burning of napalm against its creators. We're going to burn some files."
"You're not serious."
"I am. There are seven of us. I have to do it, Durk. I haven't done anything."
I stared at her, unbelieving. This was the most insidious thing about the antiwar movement, how it could make such generous, dedicated, zealous workers feel as though they'd done nothing. Shit, she'd done nothing
but,
for months. For the crazies who were always within an inch of taking over, the only contribution to peace that counted was the act of going to jail. It was self-aggrandizement through self-punishment. It was madness. I'd never expected Carolyn to fall for it. I had to control my anger, I had to work at understanding her, at listening. I said quietly, "Why am I only hearing about this now?"
"Well, there wasn't any point to both of us being in on it, was there? We couldn't both do it."
"Because of Molly, you mean."
"That's right."
"Well, I'm glad you thought of her to that extent."
"Don't use Molly against me in this, Durk. Don't be angry at me. I need your support."
I took her hand in mine. "Caro, I think it's brave of you to want to do it. But you can't. You simply can't. They'd use it against Michael."
She shook her head. "He doesn't know about it. We've kept him out of it on purpose. Obviously the court would use any involvement on his part to extend his sentence."
"And when you and whoâJack? Sonny? Kate?âwhen you get busted in Dow Chemical they're going to think Michael's not involved? He got two to five years, remember? You want to make sure he serves every possible day, is that it?"
"Of course not. But we do want him to know that what he's begun will continue."
"Sweetheart, it can't continue. Not that way. There's only one Michael Maguire. There's only one hero."
She withdrew her hand from mine and looked away. What a disappointment I was to her. It was true. There was only one Michael. I was a disappointment, of course, to myself. But, hell, I was used to that. Nevertheless, I pressed the point, because I was right. "We have to work against the war, Caro, in the ways that
we
can. That means not making Michael's situation worse. And it also means, by the way, staying close to Molly. You'd be in jail a year."
She looked down at the thin bedspread, smoothed it with her hands. "But, Durk," she said finally, "I haven't done anything against the war. And I haven't helped Michael."
"You want to take his place in jail, don't you?"
She looked up and I saw the flicker of her recognition. She nodded slowly and I could read her worry. "I think I would handle it better than he will."
I was about to say, "You would. You're stronger than any of us." But before I could I had a recognition of my own. She didn't want to take his place in jail. She just wanted to be with him. The truth stopped me cold. Before I maneuvered past it, Molly cried out sharply from the next room, the panic of a bad dream in her voice. Carolyn went to her at once.
I was alone with unwanted knowledge. Carolyn was far more like Michael than like me. If she'd been a nun still, instead of my wife, she'd have been his virgin princess, his Saint Joan at the head of his army. It did not occur to me to think of her as his Magdalen.
When Carolyn returned she stopped short in the doorway of our room and leaned against the jamb. Wearily she unknotted her bandanna and shook her hair free. Then she looked at me pensively. "You're right, Durk. I couldn't leave Molly. She's what's kept me from becoming even harder."
"You're not hard, darling."
"I hate the war. I hate what it's doing to us. Don't you feel it?"
"Yes. But I didn't know it was the war."
"What else is it?"
I shrugged. "Quotidian Distraction, darling." I could be so insufferably blase. I patted the bed, Come sit. She crossed to me. I said, "Once Michael is gone, you and I can withdraw somewhat from all that antiwar shit." She started to protest. I stopped her. "You know we can. We're both in it because of him. He drafted us, didn't he?" She nodded. "You simply
must
start painting again, Caro. You're an artist. That's the longing you feel, the unhappiness. You're not
working.
You must work. Your paintings are the opposite of war. That's how you resist. That's how you keep faith. You are an artist, Caro!"