That night, Frankie slept well.
In the morning, she found a closet full of clothes in her bedroom.
Essentials.
Smiling, she dressed in striped corduroy pants and a flowy, embroidered peasant blouse, and drove down to her parentsโ house, where Mom stood on the front step, holding on to a walker. โYโre โฆ late,โ she said, looking agitated.
โIโm not late, Mom,โ Frankie said, helping her mother into the car. Mom slid awkwardly into the seat.
โI love the house, Mom,โ Frankie said. โEverywhere I look, I see you. I know how hard you worked to make it homey. Thank you for letting me live there.โ
Mom nodded jerkily, not quite in control of her movement. Frankie could see how anxious her mother was, how she gripped the console between the seats to steady herself.
โAre you having a little vertigo?โ Frankie asked.
Mom nodded, said, โYes,โ in a way that stretched out the word, misshaped it. โDamn it.โ
Frankie could count on one hand the times sheโd heard her mother curse. โIt will take time, Mom. Donโt be too hard on yourself. The physical therapist will help, and the occupational therapist, too.โ
Mom gave a little snort that might have been agreement or disagreement; it was hard to tell.
In San Diego, Frankie turned into the medical center entrance and parked. She helped Mom out of the car and steadied her. Using the walker, with her knuckles white from effort, Mom limped slowly from the car to the lobby. Frankie checked her mother in and got them both seated in the waiting area.
โScared,โ Mom muttered.
Frankie had never heard her mother even use that word before. โIโm here, Mom. Iโve got you. Youโll be okay. Youโre tough.โ
โHa.โ
A nurse came out and called, โElizabeth McGrath?โ
Frankie helped her mother to her feet, steadied her as she used the walker to cross the lobby. At the last minute, she turned, looked at Frankie through frightened eyes.
โIโll be here when youโre finished, Mom,โ Frankie said, giving her a gentle smile.
Mom nodded awkwardly.
Frankie returned to her seat and sat down. Reaching sideways, she picked through a stack of magazines, found an article about the POWs still in Vietnam.
It reminded her of the League of Families and their quest to bring the POWs home from Vietnam. They had been looking for an office in San Diego when Frankie and Barb had attended that luncheon in Washington, D.C.
Frankie went in search of a pay phone, found one, and called information. โIs there an office number for the League of Families in San Diego?โ she asked the operator.
A moment later, the operator said, โThereโs a National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia.โ
โThatโs it.โ
โIโll connect you.โ
โLeague of Families, this is Sabrina, how may I help you?โ a woman said over the phone.
โHi. Do you accept donations?โ Frankie asked.
The woman laughed. โBoy, do we. Would you like to come by the office?โ
โSure. I have a little time.โ Frankie wrote down the office address and walked out to her car.
In the glove box, she found theย Thomas Guideย for the area, looked up the address, and started to drive.
Across town, on a pretty little side street, she parked in front of a small building that looked like it had once been a restaurant. A hand-painted sign over the door readย THE LEAGUE OF POW/MIA FAMILIES.
She went to the front door, which was standing open.
The office was small, basically unfurnished except for a single desk that held stacks of flyers. A woman sat behind it. At Frankieโs entrance, she looked up. โWelcome to the League of Families!โ
Another woman was on her knees, her face covered by a cascade of blond curls, painting a sign that readย DONโT LET THEM BE FORGOTTEN.ย She waved at Frankie, too. โHi, there! Welcome.โ
The woman at the desk was beautiful in an exotic way, with long black hair and high cheekbones. Beside her, a toddler lay sleeping in a stroller. โIโm Rose Contreras. Come in. Are you a Navy wife?โ
โNo. Iโm Frankie McGrath, former Army nurse.โ
โBless you,โ Rose said softly. โDo you know a prisoner of war?โ โNo. Iโm just here to donate to the cause.โ
โWe welcome all donations, of course,โ Rose said. โAs you can see, we are pretty bare-bones at this point.โ
Frankie opened her handbag, reached in for her wallet. โBut Frankieโฆโ
โYes?โ
โWhat we really need is help raising awareness. The older ladiesโAnne and Melissa and Sheri, the gals married to the mucky-mucksโthey do all the public speaking and testifying in front of the Senate. Iโm chair of the Letter-Writing Committee. Our goal is to write letters to anyone and everyone we can think of who might be able to help.ย Buryย them in letters. And the same with the newspapers. Would you like to help?โ
Letter-writing. Something she could do while she sat with her mother and made the family dinner and waited for Mom to finish her various appointments.
Frankie smiled. โI would love to join that effort, Rose.โ
Writing letters on behalf of the League of Families and the Vietnam prisoners of war quickly became an obsession.
Frankie wrote when she felt lonely, when she couldnโt sleep, when she felt anxious, when her mother was in physical or occupational therapy, while she sat in the waiting room at the medical center. She wrote sitting on the beach after dinner. She wrote to everyone she could think ofโHenry Kissinger, Richard Nixon, Spiro Agnew, Bob Dole, Harry Reasoner, Gloria Steinem, Walter Cronkite, Barbara Walters. Anyone who might listen and help or talk to someone who might.ย Dear Dr. Kissinger, I am writing on behalf of our American heroes, the men who have been left behind. As an Army nurse who served in Vietnam, I know the horrors these men will have endured. They went to war for their country, to do the right thing, and now our country must do the right thing in return. We cannot leave any manโor womanโbehind โฆ
When she wasnโt writing, she was with her mother, helping her to walk, encouraging her to eat enough to get her weight back up, driving her to and from appointments. It was slow going, recovery from a stroke, but her mother exerted her considerable will and pushed forward, sometimes to the point of exhaustion. The doctors were amazed at the speed of her recovery; Frankie and her father were not. Bette McGrath had always had a will of steel.
All in all, Frankie thought she was doing well; her mood swings had diminished and she hadnโt suffered through a Vietnam nightmare in weeks, had never yet wakened on her bungalowโs bedroom floor. Every other Sunday, she wrote to Barb and Ethel, and she received regular letters in return. With long-distance phone charges so exorbitant, they had to make do with letters.
It didnโt bother her (although it bothered her mother) that she had no real social life and hadnโt been on a date since โฆ well, before Vietnam. Love was the last thing on her mind. All she wanted was peace and quiet.
By late June 1971, nearly two months after sheโd moved home, Frankie had settled into a steady routine. Helping her motherโs recovery gave her
satisfaction, and writing letters on behalf of the prisoners of war gave her purpose. But todayโfinallyโshe had been invited to do more than just write letters.
In midafternoon, she parked her car at the Chula Vista Outdoor Shopping Center and headed for the escalators. The shopping center was decorated in red, white, and blue bunting for the upcoming holiday weekend and most of the storefronts were advertising aย SALE!ย of some kind.
In the courtyard, beneath a palm tree, a table had been set up. Behind it sat a pert, pretty young woman who wore her teased blond hair in two low ponytails; she was writing a letter. To her left was a crude bamboo cage, not nearly big enough for a man to stand upright in. A banner around the cage readย DONโT LET THEM BE FORGOTTEN.
Frankie smiled and slid into the empty seat. โIโm Frankie,โ she said, extending her hand.
The woman shook it. โJoan.โ โHow is it going today?โ
โSlow. People are getting ready for the holiday.โ
Frankie straightened the stack of flyers in front of her. In the center of the table was a box of POW bracelets that sold for five dollars apiece.
Joan went back to her letter. โDo you thinkย Live up to your damn promise, President Nixonย is too aggressive for the first sentence?โ she asked Frankie, poising her pen tip just above the paper.
โI donโt think you can be too aggressive,โ Frankie said, taking out a piece of paper and a pen.
A young man with long hair and a bushy beard walked past their table, muttered, โWarmongers,โ under his breath, and kept walking.
โFreedom isnโt free, asshole,โ Frankie yelled. โHow come you arenโt in Canada?โ
โWe arenโt supposed to yell at the peaceniks,โ Joan said, grinning. โBut what a stupid rule.โ
โItโs more of a guideline,โ Frankie said.
Joan laughed. โHow long has your husband been a POW?โ
โIโm not married. My brother and โฆ several friends died over there.
Your husband?โ
โShot down in โ69. Heโs in Hoa Lo.โ โIโm sorry, Joan. Kids?โ
โJust one. A girl. Charlotte. She doesnโt remember her dad.โ
Frankie touched the womanโs hand. They were about the same age, living very different lives, but the war connected them. โHeโll come home, Joan.โ
A dark-haired woman in a black-and-white plaid pantsuit neared the table. โThey put our soldiers in cages like that? Really? Where they donโt have enough room to stand up?โ
โYes, maโam.โ โWhat did they do?โ โDo?โ Joan asked.
โTo end up in cages. Are they like that Lieutenant Calley from My Lai?โ
Stay calm. Educate, donโt annihilate.ย โThey served their country,โ Frankie said. โJust like their fathers and grandfathers, they did as the country asked in wartime, and they were taken prisoner by the enemy.โ
The woman frowned, picked a nickel-plated bracelet out of the box, read the name on it.
โThatโs someoneโs son, maโam. Someoneโs husband,โ Frankie said. โAnd theyโre waiting for him to come home.โ She paused. โThis womanโs husband is in their prison.โ
The woman pulled a five-dollar bill out of her worn billfold and handed it to Frankie, and then put the bracelet back in the box.
โThe idea is that you wear the bracelet until he comes home,โ Joan said. โTo keep his memory alive.โ
The woman retrieved the bracelet, fit it on her wrist, stared down at it. โThank you,โ Frankie said.
The woman nodded and walked away.
For the next half an hour, Frankie and Joan handed out flyers, sold bracelets, and wrote letters. Frankie was halfway through her latest letter to Ben Bradlee when she felt Joan poke her elbow into her side.
โIncoming,โ Joan whispered.
Frankie looked up, saw two men walking toward their table.
No. Not two men, or not really. A man and a boy. Father and son, maybe; the man was tall and thin, with graying shoulder-length hair and a mustache. He wore a black Grateful Dead T-shirt and ragged jeans and sandals. The boy beside himโsixteen, maybe seventeenโwas pumped up with muscles and wore anย ANNAPOLISย sweatshirt. He was clean-shaven and
his hair was 1950s-short. They stopped in front of the table, beneath the
DONโT LET THEM BE FORGOTTENย banner.
The older man stepped closer. โStill fighting for the cause, I see. Frankie McGrath, right? Coronado girl?โ
It took a moment for Frankie to recognize the man sheโd met at the protest in Washington, D.C. โThe surfer psychiatrist.โ
โHenry Acevedo,โ he said, smiling. โThis is my nephew, Arturo.โ He turned to the young man. โYou see those cages, Art? Take a good, long look.โ
Arturo rolled his eyes, gave his uncle a good-natured nudge in the side. โMy uncle is pissed Iโm going to the Naval Academy in September. But my dad is thrilled.โ
โMy brother went to the academy,โ Frankie said. โHe loved it.โ โMy husband, too,โ Joan added. โItโs a great school.โ
โIโm not in favor of a college that pumps out warriors and then sends them into harmโs way,โ Henry said.
โJust be proud of him, Henry,โ Frankie said quietly. โHeโs making an honorable choice even if you donโt agree with it.โ She pushed the box of bracelets toward the young man. โFive dollars if youโd like to help bring a hero home.โ
Arturo stepped forward, looked through the bracelets. โGroovy. Do you know any POWs?โ he asked Joan.
โMy husband,โ she said, showing Arturo her bracelet. He leaned in to read it.
โNineteen sixty-nine,โ Arturo said. โWhoa. Heโs been there a long timeโฆโ
Frankie felt Henryโs gaze on her, but he didnโt speak. After a moment, he put an arm around his nephew. โCome on, future flyboy. Letโs let these beautiful women save their husbands.โ
โIโm not married,โ Frankie said, surprised to hear herself say the words. โWill wonders never cease?โ Henry said as he tossed two twenty-dollar
bills on the table. โKeep up the good work, ladies. See you soon, Frankie.โ He led Arturo away, who pulled out from beneath his uncleโs arm,
obviously thinking he was too old for it.
โWas that โฆ you know, the guy who always plays a cowboy on TV?โ Frankie shook her head. โHeโs a doctor.โ
โI donโt know why youโre still here,โ Joan said, pulling out a nail file, filing a broken nail.
โWhat do you mean?โ
โIf a man that foxy looked at me the way he just looked at you, I wouldnโt let him walk away.โ
โWhat? You think โฆ no. Itโs not โฆ I mean, heโs old.โ โTime doesnโt mean what it used to,โ she said.
Frankie couldnโt disagree with that.
July 27, 1971
Dear Frank,
Greetings from blazingly hot Captiva Island. Thatโs in Florida. Land of leathery people who drive yacht-sized cars and start cocktail hour at breakfast.
I know you are going to scream, as is Babs, who is getting the same letter. Noah and I eloped! I know you girls wanted to be at my wedding, but I just couldnโt wait. We couldnโt wait. When push came to shove, I didnโt want a day that smelled like flowers and tasted like cake. When your mom isnโt around โฆ I donโt know. I just didnโt want that. But we will celebrate, and soon!
Love you,
girlfriend
,
Mrs. Noah Ellswort h