The World of Tomorrow Read online




  Copyright

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Copyright © 2017 by Brendan Mathews

  Cover design by Lauren Harms

  Cover illustration: Midtown Skycrapers As Seen from Rockefeller Center, New York City, c. 1938 (color lithograph), American School (20th century) / Private Collection / Dato Images / Bridgeman Images

  Author photograph by Tricia McCormack

  Cover © 2017 Hachette Book Group, Inc.

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  First ebook edition: September 2017

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  ISBN 978-0-316-38220-5

  E3-20170725-JV-PC

  CONTENTS

  COVER

  TITLE PAGE

  COPYRIGHT

  DEDICATION

  THE WEEK BEFORE AT SEA

  THE FARM

  MIDTOWN

  SATURDAY JUNE 3 FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  WOODLAWN

  THE PLAZA HOTEL

  FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  MIDTOWN

  SUNDAY JUNE 4 IN CHURCH

  FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  HARLEM

  MONDAY JUNE 5 MIDTOWN

  FIFTY-SECOND STREET

  THE PLAZA HOTEL

  FIFTH AVENUE

  TUESDAY JUNE 6 THE PLAZA HOTEL

  PARK AVENUE

  GRAMERCY PARK

  THE FARM

  BATTERY PARK

  FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  HARLEM

  WEDNESDAY JUNE 7 WOODLAWN

  CENTRAL PARK

  IN TRANSIT

  FIFTH AVENUE

  THE WORLD’S FAIR

  THE BOWERY

  HELL’S KITCHEN

  THE BOWERY

  THE PLAZA HOTEL

  THURSDAY JUNE 8 HELL’S KITCHEN

  THE BOWERY

  HIGHBRIDGE

  LITTLE ITALY

  THE WORLD’S FAIR

  THE PLAZA HOTEL

  THE BOWERY

  FRIDAY JUNE 9 MORRISANIA

  IN TRANSIT

  GANSEVOORT STREET

  THE FARM

  FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  FIFTH AVENUE

  THE PLAZA HOTEL

  SATURDAY JUNE 10 THE PLAZA HOTEL

  GRAMERCY PARK

  FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  THE WORLD’S FAIR

  GRAMERCY PARK

  THE WORLD’S FAIR

  FORDHAM HEIGHTS

  WOODLAWN

  HOME

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  NEWSLETTERS

  To Margaret

  AT SEA

  FRANCIS NEVER EXPECTED THE silverware would be his undoing. Seated in the first-class dining room of the MV Britannic, halfway between the Old World and the New, he surveyed a landscape of crystal stemware and bone china, of crisp linen and centerpieces ripe with flowers he had never seen, in colors he had never dreamed. High above, the coffered ceiling glowed, its milk-glass panels outlined in brass. A frieze marched around the upper reaches of the room—an angular, art deco skirmish of horses, stags, and dogs. Every wall, even the air itself, was awash in hues of honey and amber, and at every table sat men and women gilded in good fortune and turned out in tuxedos, or gowns, or regimental dress. But what did all of this abundance matter when his own plate was blockaded by a medieval armory in miniature? He counted five forks, four spoons, and at least as many knives. He hadn’t a clue where to begin.

  Francis had hoped to take his lead from one of his tablemates: on one side, the Binghams, a mother and daughter returning to New York from their self-styled Grand Tour, and on the other, the Walters, a mismatched pair of marrieds from Philadelphia, accompanied by the wife’s laconic, chain-smoking brother. Yet when the bowls of chilled broth—consommé, the menu called it—were placed in front of them, they all seemed to wait for Francis. Was that how it worked? The nobility dined first, and only then did the robber barons feast?

  Easy enough. All he had to do was select the right spoon, and thereby prove his merit to the Americans, who were under the impression that he was a Scotsman, and a wealthy one at that, and perhaps even one with a castle overlooking a Highland loch. Before he was forced to choose, however, Mrs. Bingham resumed the conversation about the journeys that had led each of them to the Britannic.

  “I’m curious to know, Sir Angus,” she said, for Angus was the name Francis had given, though the Sir was entirely her own addition. “How did you find Ireland?”

  “Oh, it was quite simple, really,” he said. “I took the ferry from Liverpool. The boat knew just where to go.”

  Mrs. Bingham giggled, almost girlishly. Francis might have guessed that she was in her thirties, if not for her daughter, who looked to be about twenty. The missus insisted that he call her Delphine, and as for the miss, she was called Anisette. When Francis inquired about the Frenchness of their names, Mrs. Bing—strike that, Delphine—explained that she had been born and raised in Montreal, where the citizens spoke a purer form of the language than the pidgin bandied about in your average Paris café. As she told it, Quebec had acted as a safe haven where the French language endured without contamination by Continental dialects and the occasional trespass of Prussian troops. And hadn’t the possible return of Prussians or Germans or whatever they were calling themselves these days been one motivation for their trip? It was only last year that Germany had anschlussed Austria, then chased it with a shot of the Sudetenland! Spurred by the fear that there would be no fall collections that year, they had ended four months of touring in a frenzy of Chanel and Schiaparelli.

  “And if it all settles down?” Francis-as-Angus said.

  “Can it ever be a mistake to visit Paris?” Mrs. B’s eyes twinkled, and he saw how easily Mr. Bingham, whoever he was, must have fallen.

  During Mrs. Bingham’s recitation on family, fashion, and all things français, the Philadelphia trio had begun with their broth, and Francis tried to take note of which spoon they had chosen. He thought he was being clever, but as he caught the eye of the silk-sheathed Marion Walter, she stared back at him with feline hunger. His blood surged—a jolt from groin to gullet—and he looked away, only to meet a similar gaze from her brother, Alex, a small man neatly encased in a tuxedo. Horace Walter, much older and rounder than the others, was already clouded by his first two cocktails; he had eyes only for the next course. The Walters were returning from a trip through Italy and Germany, where they had taken part in a brisk tourist trade catering to Americans eager to see firsthand the proper way to run a modern nation. They had rendezvoused in Le Havre with
Alex, whose itinerary had taken him through the seaside resorts of the Mediterranean. Apparently, there was a Mrs. Alex still on the Continent—something about friends in Biarritz who simply could not part with her until after some festival or other. He seemed unfazed by her whereabouts—his only mention of her was accompanied by a jet of cigarette smoke—but the Binghams tsk-tsked and fretted about how lonely he must be without her.

  Conversation turned to Sir Angus, his reasons for traveling to New York, and oh-by-the-way, was he traveling alone? Francis explained that he was escorting his younger brother to New York for medical attention. That much was true, though he transformed Michael into Malcolm to keep his alias intact. Young Malcolm had been grievously injured while foxhunting, he told them, and there wasn’t a doctor in Britain or Ireland who could help him. “His case has baffled the finest medical minds in London, but I have high hopes for what the American doctors can tell us,” he said, taking a swipe at the old empire while goosing the national pride of his companions. He quickly saw that his story had elicited another reaction: Anisette, who had lips like a bow on a box of sweets, practically cooed in admiration. This Sir Angus was both landed aristocrat and benevolent protector—a Scottish Mr. Darcy, minus the unpleasantness of the first thirty-odd chapters.

  “It’s admirable,” she said, “what you’re willing to do for your brother.”

  “The question, Miss Bingham, is what wouldn’t I be willing to do for my brother?”

  Francis was growing more confident with the quality of his counterfeit Scotsmanship. As the entrées were presented, he asked the Binghams what news they had from home. “I must confess that I devote little time to ex-colonial affairs,” he said, but the truth was that life in Dublin had offered only a moviegoer’s knowledge of New York: newsreels, The Thin Man, Forty-Second Street, A Night at the Opera. He should have known more about the city. His older brother, Martin, had emigrated years before, but Francis knew little of his life; he was a musician, married, had a child or two, and lived in a place unmusically called the Bronx. Over the years, communication between the brothers had gone from strained to nonexistent. Martin knew nothing of Francis’s escape, Michael’s condition, or their father’s recent death. Of course Francis would seek him out, but first he had to decide what to tell him. Martin was sure to have questions that Francis wasn’t ready to answer.

  But while Martin could be difficult, the Americans were easy. He had assumed that they would be a uniformly anti-royalist lot; what about their man George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson with his “all men are created equal” talk? Surely the Americans would have been bred with a distaste for crowned heads and any hint of duke- or earlishness. But no. Thanks to Francis’s accent and the rumor of a peerage, the Americans aboard the Britannic—the women, especially—were drawn to him like crows to corn. And Francis, for his part, was playing the peacock. The suits he had purchased in Cork were not backbench grays and clubbish blues. He had paired glen plaids with boldly tartaned waistcoats; if he was in for a Glasgow penny, he was in for an Edinburgh pound. It should not have surprised him, once he saw the stir he caused, how easy it was for word to spread. He’d had one brief chat on the top deck with a woman whose hat he had rescued from the rapacious winds of the North Atlantic, and by the late dinner seating Angus MacFarquhar was the most eligible bachelor on the Britannic.

  While the Binghams courted the favor of Sir Angus, Horace Walter engaged in vociferous, fact-free talk about Roosevelt and his latest plans for the ruination of the country. His greatest fear was the final takeover of America by communists, socialists, freeloaders, court-packers, and others bent on stripping the best members of society of all they owned and passing it willy-nilly to the drunks and the wastrels who still lined up for free soup and stale bread. Before he resumed drowning himself in gin and creamed herring, he opined that the Depression hadn’t been all bad—that it had, in fact, helped to thin the ranks of a certain class of bounders who had gate-crashed high society in the ’20s.

  “A necessary winnowing of the wheat from the chaff,” he said. As he spoke, his hand went, as if by its own volition, to the diamond-topped stickpin in his lapel. He touched it the way Francis had been taught to strike his breast when the priest intoned the Agnus Dei.

  The others nodded, either in agreement or out of a desire to move on to another topic. Francis offered a “Quite, quite,” though with little gusto, and fixed his gaze on the man’s pouched sow eyes, then on the diamond, and finally on his wife.

  “And what of the royal visit?” The question came from Alex. He and his sister had the same narrow build, the same shell of brilliantined black hair. One of the only deviations between brother and sister was the pencil-line mustache that traced the ridge of his upper lip. Alex eyed him quizzically as wisps of smoke drifted from his cupped hand. “Will you be taking part in the festivities?”

  Royal visit? Alex had mentioned it in such an offhand way that it must be common knowledge, but which royals? And visiting where? This was exactly why Francis had meant to stay out of society during the voyage—to avoid just this sort of stumble. He knew that as quickly as his notoriety had spread, so too could his unmasking. He dabbed at his mouth with his napkin, buying time. “My first responsibility must be to my brother,” he finally said. “Any festivities will have to wait until after I have consulted with his doctors.”

  Alex arched an eyebrow: unconvinced or unimpressed. Francis folded his hands. He meant for the gesture to be nonchalant, but it looked like he was fidgeting.

  “I don’t see what all of the fuss is about.” Marion’s words came slowly, languor mixed with white burgundy. “The crowned heads of England, certainly that’s exciting. But at the World’s Fair? Wild horses couldn’t drag me there.”

  “Yes, my lovely,” her husband said, “but what about a wild horseman?”

  “Do pipe down,” she said. “No one—”

  “Oh, I think the World’s Fair sounds lovely!” Anisette positively beamed. “The crowds may be horrid, I know. But the pavilions look so bright and so full of light and so—oh, what’s the word?”

  “I think you struck the nail on the head when you said horrid,” Marion said. “First thought, best thought—right, dear?”

  Anisette persisted: “Modern. Everything looks new, but not just newly built. Newly imagined. As if the whole world has been remade, but better than before.”

  “Now, that does sound lovely,” Francis said. He was happy to steer conversation away from this royal visit, and to find another topic on which Francis and Francis-as-Angus could agree: a better world—a world of fresh starts—sounded lovely indeed.

  “I don’t know that lovely is the word for it,” Alex said. “The aesthetics have an aroma of the fascist about them. All those hard angles and empty-eyed statues. A bit too orderly by half, for my tastes.”

  “You’ve got it all wrong,” Horace said. “A more fascist aesthetic is just what the World’s Fair, and in fact the whole country, needs. The Italians, if you can believe it, they’ve got it figured out. And of course the Germans. Exemplary. Government and business working together, hand in fist—”

  “Oh, Horace, not this again,” Marion said.

  From the next table came a swell of oohs and aahs: dessert, a ziggurat of glazed fruit, had been set alight. Francis was nervously aware that it had been almost two hours since he’d left his brother, and seeing his chance, he rose from his seat, begging leave of the ladies of the table. “My brother,” he offered by way of an excuse. “He needs minding, and I fear I have dallied too long in your charming company.” He gave a curt nod, a winsome smile, and then he was striding out of the dining room. Only Horace failed to mark the moment that he disappeared from sight.

  NO ONE AT the table knew that ten days earlier, Francis Xavier Dempsey had been an inmate in Mountjoy Prison, Dublin, where meals were strictly a one-spoon affair. Convicted of trafficking in books banned under the Censorship of Publications Act as well as in other luxuries proscribed by the
tariff-hungry, priest-fearing politicians of the fledgling Republic of Ireland, he had been halfway through a three-year sentence. At the same time, his brother Michael, not yet eighteen, had been an inmate of a different sort, locked up in the seminary and preparing for life as a missionary in some steamy, godforsaken corner of the globe. And their father? Ten days ago he was still alive, no doubt muddling through another lesson instructing the sons and daughters of farmers on the proper conjugation of the Latin verb amare.

  Now their father was in the ground and his death had made possible a new life for his sons. One moment, Francis and Michael were kneeling in prayer at his funeral, each expecting to return to his own place of confinement. The next, a map was pressed into their hands, they fled in a stolen car, a house was blown to bits, three men lay dead, money rained from the sky, and Michael was broken but still breathing. Somehow, through the workings of God or luck or the unrecognized genius of Francis himself, he rose from that cock-up of death and wreckage and seized the day. Wouldn’t his father have told him to do exactly that? Carpe diem. Well, he had carpe’d the diem and squeezed it for all it was worth.

  Pursued by the massed forces of the church and the state—not to mention the Irish Republican Army, whose safe house–cum–bomb factory Francis had played some role in demolishing—he devised a way to spirit Michael and himself out of Ireland. They would travel first class, dress first class, and act as first class as Francis could manage. It sounded mad, but the First-Class Plan, as he christened it, landed the Dempsey brothers in a stateroom on the Britannic, with the crew and passengers convinced they were a pair of young Scottish lords. Francis hoped that his peerish pretensions would keep lower-born passengers at bay, and that his affected Scottishness would scramble the senses of better-born Englishmen. He had no plans to socialize with the other passengers, and, before tonight, had relied on room service for his meals. He was, after all, a fugitive, and after ten days on the run, he needed to rest.