BKMT READING GUIDES

On Wings of the Morning
by Marie Bostwick

Published: 2007-11-01
Paperback : 374 pages
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Morgan Glennon’s destiny points straight up into Oklahoma’s clear, blue sky. It’s been that way since he was four years old, imagining the famous flier father he’s never met—he doesn’t even know his name. Now Morgan is in college, a pilot with a plane of his own, and the winds of ...
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Introduction

Morgan Glennon’s destiny points straight up into Oklahoma’s clear, blue sky. It’s been that way since he was four years old, imagining the famous flier father he’s never met—he doesn’t even know his name. Now Morgan is in college, a pilot with a plane of his own, and the winds of what will become World War II are buffeting Europe. Everyone thinks the U.S. will join the Allied forces, so Morgan leaves college to enlist in the Navy. But flying sorties in Asia, watching his friends’ planes go up in flames, robs Morgan of the joy he always felt in the air. Now it’s a battle for survival, and he must utilize all his skill and training to return to the one woman who shares his passion for flying . . . and for life. Georgia Carter learned early on never to rely on a man for anything but trouble, but airplanes are different. They can take a girl places most boyfriends can’t. Remarkably, the war makes it possible for Georgia to do her part as a pilot, in the Women’s Air Service Pilots (WASP). Flying with the WASP brings a special sense of belonging—yet there’s something missing that Georgia doesn’t recognize until a brief encounter with a flyboy on his way to the front.

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Excerpt

Prologue

Morgan

Knowing who I am, you might think I was born to fly. Probably there is something to that. If the yearning for flight is a something you can inherit from your parents like blue eyes or a bad temper, then I suppose I come by it honestly enough. But if that is true, then it might just be the only honest piece of my birthright.

Though it was years before we could talk about my father, Mama says that even as a little boy I sensed the truth, or at least part of it. She still speaks in hushed amazement of the night of my fourth birthday, the night she tucked me in under her present to me, a quilt of the Oklahoma night sky appliquéd with star points over a field of cobalt and midnight, stitched by hand with the three strand thread that held Mama’s whole world together—imagination, determination, and secrets. There was so much we couldn’t, or didn’t talk about.

And I wanted to know everything. Things about her. About me. About why, when she thought I wasn’t looking, she would fix her eyes on closed doors as though waiting for someone to open them. Who was she waiting for? I wanted to ask, but didn’t. Somehow I sensed that if I pulled on the strand that stood for secrets, all of us would unravel at the seams.

Maybe that’s why I made up the story I told her that night, about the father I’d imagined for myself, a father who’d died and flew a recon mission to heaven, just to make sure the coast was clear for me. I knew he was an invention, but an invented father was better than a void. Mama’s eyes welled up when I told her my story, but they were happy tears, I could tell. Somehow I’d hit upon something right, something that caused a flickered light of hope to shine though her tears. I rolled my tale out as a bolt of whole cloth, woven with equal parts of plausibility and fabrication and Mama did what she always did, the courageous thing which made me love her so; she embellished it with explanations and appliquéd on a desire for things the way they should have been and by the time I closed my eyes to sleep we’d stitched a story so sincere and inviting that it could nearly have passed for truth. Nearly.

If the truth is to be told, and I think the time has come, it wasn’t my heritage that drove me to the sky. It was the secrets. I didn’t know the first time I pulled the stick back and nosed my plane skyward, breaking through a bank of bleached muslin clouds into a field of brilliant, edgeless blue that I’d finally found the place I belonged, the only place where my skin didn’t feel as if it was bound too tight around my soul. The longing was always there, but how could I have known what it was I longed for? I was just trying to outrun the secrets.

The family history Mama and I patched together was warm and comfortable and tightly sewn, we wrapped it around ourselves as a covering and shelter from the hard blows of life, but at the end of the day it was just a collection of lies.

There are no secrets in the sky. There is no need for them. When I see the heavens stretched before me, edgeless and infinite, it does not matter where I came from, or where I am going, or who came before me. No one asks me questions and I don’t ask them of myself. That moment is the moment for me, there is no time and no regrets, nothing to weigh me down.

The closer you fly to earth, the more your craft will be rocked and battered by turbulence and if the tumult is strong it can throw you completely off course. But if you fly high enough, where the air is thin and pure and there isn’t oxygen enough to sustain a lie, you’ll find bright skies and air so smooth you can cut through the clouds, slippery and free. That is where I live.

I am the eagle’s son.

Chapter One

Dillon, Oklahoma – 1933

Morgan

There was a patch of dried blood stuck in the crease where my upper lip met the lower. I squashed my face up and felt the blood crack into a dozen dry little flakes. I rubbed them off with my hand, held my palm open and watched the wind grab hold of the rusty flecks and suck them into a passing dust cloud. By nightfall those dried up blood slivers would most likely be blown into the next county but the rest of evidence would be harder to conceal.

I’d used the sleeve of my shirt to sop up the blood that had spurted from my nose where Johnny McCurdle’s elbow had clipped me as I’d wrestled him to the ground. I knew by tomorrow morning he’d be telling everybody that he’d broken my nose but I wasn’t worried about that. There’d been plenty of witnesses to the fight and they’d be more than ready to testify to the truth - that Johnny hadn’t intentionally been able to land a single punch on my face, that he looked much worse than I did when it was all over, that when he fought he closed his eyes and flailed his arms like a girl and that, being frustrated in his effort to connect his fists with any vulnerable part of my anatomy, he’d kicked me in the shins with those hard, pointy-toed cowboy boots he always wore which, in the unwritten rules of schoolyard fisticuffs, is just flat bush league.

On the walk home from school, I’d scuffled down the dirty banks of the irrigation ditch that ran parallel to Grandpa’s parched wheat fields, hoping to find some water to wash the blood out of my shirt. It was spring and the trench should have been home to a fresh and flowing stream, but this was the Oklahoma panhandle in the third year of what would be a nearly ten year drought and there was barely a trickle of water to be found at the bottom of the ditch.

The pump handle squeaked in protest as I wrenched it up and down, trying to bring forth the flow of water. After some effort the old pump complied but even so, the stream that poured from the spout was slow and I knew that our well was getting low. I took off my shirt, squatted down next to the pump, and filled a bucket with water before shutting off the spout. I plunged my shirt into the bucket and scrubbed the stain by rubbing one piece of fabric against another, the way I’d seen Mama do, and noted with some satisfaction that the combination of cold water and elbow grease was doing the trick; the bloodstain was fading.

“Now that your shirt’s clean, have you thought about how you’re going to get it dry before your mother sees it?” The sound of my grandfather’s amused Irish brogue startled me and I jumped.

“Geez, Papaw! You don’t need to sneak up on a guy like that. I almost tipped the bucket over. ”

“Sorry, Morgan.” He grinned and the corners of his eyes drew up like folds in a paper fan. “I whistled to you from the hog pen, but I don’t think you heard me. You were pretty intent on doing your laundry,” he said nodding at my sodden shirt that dripped a trail of water, streaming a dark stripe over thirsty soil.

Grandpa took a step and leaned down to get a closer look at me. His face grew solemn. “That lip is pretty swollen. Your nose doesn’t look any too good either,” he said.

For a moment I considered telling him that I’d fallen or been beaned by a wild pitch during a game of baseball, but I didn’t want to lie to my grandfather. Papaw was my best friend, even if he was a grown up. I couldn’t stomach the idea of lying to him so I didn’t say anything. Papaw’s eyes bore into me, questioning.

Finally, he drew his eyebrows up and smiled. “So, how does the other fella look?”

I grinned. “Not too good. Two black eyes and a split lip.”

“Well, I don’t doubt but he deserved it,” Papaw said evenly and paused for a moment. “Did he deserve it?”

I thought about Johnny McCurdle and the things he’d said about me. About me not having a father. That wasn’t anything new. I’d endured that kind of schoolyard taunting for as long as I could remember. They could say anything they wanted about me and I’d have just shrugged it off or turned the joke on them.

It was one thing to call me names and quite another to bring my mother into it. That day he had. He’d called Mama a name so bad that I didn’t really know what it meant and I bet Johnny didn’t either. Probably he’d heard it from his older brothers, but definitions aside, I got his general drift. The sneer on his ugly face told me of his intent and the shocked gasps from some of the older girls who stood nearby let me know that this was a that word went far, far beyond the normal range of schoolyard insults. Nobody could talk about my mother like that and get away with it. “He deserved it,” I muttered darkly and felt my hand involuntarily ball up into a fist.

“Said something about your mother, did he?” His eyes were dark.

“Did what I had to do, Papaw.”

He took in a deep breath and nodded. I knew that was all the explanation he required. He wouldn’t ask me any more questions.

Living with three women in our house, Mama, Grandma and Aunt Ruby, who wasn’t my aunt at all but Mama’s best friend who lived with us, I sometimes felt like I was in danger of drowning in a flood of chintz and feminine fussing. The house was bursting with women, but the barn and barnyard, was our world, mine and Papaw’s—a world of men where people didn’t ask endless questions, or go to pieces over the sight of a little blood, where it was understood that sometimes a man had to do what a man had to do, and where sometimes a simple nod of the head was as good as an hour’s conversation. What would I have done without Papaw? I knew I could have told him anything, but I also knew I didn’t have to, he understood.

“I guess we’d better decide what you’re going to tell your mother. Clean shirt or no, she’s going to know that something happened. You’re a sight lad.” Papaw sucked on his teeth thoughtfully and then he walked over near the barn door and picked up a rake that was resting against the wall. He brought the rake back to where I was standing and thunked me, squarely but not too hard, on the head with the wooden handle.

“Hey!” I protested. “What was that for?”

“If your mother asks what happened to you, you can say that you got hit with rake while you were out helping me and it won’t be a lie.”

“You mean like I accidentally stepped on the tines and the handle flew up and whacked me on the face?”

Papaw nodded. “No need to go into details, but yes, that’s the general idea.”

“She’s not gonna buy that, Papaw. Mama is way too smart to fall for a story like that. We’ve got to come up something better.”

“Listen to me, Morgan. Don’t start telling lies to your mother. If you tell one lie you’re bound to have to start telling others just to cover up the first one. After a while it gets to be a habit.”

“But, isn’t this the same thing? I might not be exactly lying to her, but I’m trying to keep something from her.”

“No,” Papaw shook his head. “We’re not trying to keep something from her, we’re trying to protect her from something that could only cause her worry and grief. She’s had enough of that in her life. And if you’ll just tell her your story without offering too many details, she’ll leave you be. You’ll see.”

Papaw was smart about people, I knew, but I couldn’t imagine that Mama would let this slide so easily. Mama wasn’t a big talker herself, but she was interested in everything that happened to me. Almost every afternoon of my life, once I’d finished my chores, was spent sitting on the floor next to Mama while she sat sewing at her quilt frame or tracing around templates for quilt blocks.

When it came to quilt making, Mama was an artist. She made quilts that looked like paintings and, until the Depression was in full swing and cash was so scarce, people waited months and paid top dollar just for the privilege of owning one of Mama’s creations. She had more orders than she could handle and was often weeks behind in her work, but those after school chats were our special time together. She always had time to listen to me jabber away about school, my teachers, my friends, anything that might be on my mind. And the thing is, she didn’t just murmur absentmindedly pretending to listen while rocking her needle up and down through the fabric, making those tiny, absolutely even stitches she was famous for. She truly listened. She asked just the right question at the just right moment. Most importantly, she made me feel important – as though whatever I had to say was worth listening too. Mama knew me inside and out. She wasn’t going to fall for any half-baked explanations about the source and nature of my injury. Papaw read the doubt on my face.

“Morgan, your mother is no fool. Deep in her heart, she’s going to know there is more to the story than you’re sharing, but she’s not going to press you about it. She can’t change the past. Not hers. Not yours. When you can’t fix a problem, sometimes it’s easier to pretend there isn’t one. Know what I mean?”

I looked at him blankly.

“Never mind. You’ll understand when you’re older. Your mother is a good woman, son. No matter what anyone says, your mother is a good woman.”

“I know that.” It was the closet we’d ever come to talking about my mother and, more importantly, my father. Suddenly it dawned on me that Papaw knew who he was – his name, what he looked like, maybe even where he lived and why he wasn’t here with me. Papaw knew everything and I came that close to asking him. My mouth opened and the question formed on my lips. “Papaw,” I began but that was as far as I got. My grandfather could read the question in my eyes, knew what I wanted to ask before I could ask it, and in his eyes I could read, just as clearly, that he wouldn’t give me an answer. He couldn’t. That was Mama’s secret and as long as she kept silent, we’d all have to.

Papaw dropped a big, callused hand on my shoulder. “I’ve got to finish fixing that wobbly board on the hog pen. The sow worked it loose again rubbing up to scratch her back. You pump some fresh water for your chickens and get them back in inside for the night. I saw a big black dog skulking around last night. Probably a stray. Might be the same one that got to Thompson’s birds last week so you make sure you shut those hens in good and tight. We’ve got about an hour to supper. Should be enough time for your shirt to dry.”

“Yes, Papaw.” I stooped over the bucket to squeeze the last drops of water from my shirt. The water wasn’t clean enough to give to the chickens but I could pour it over Aunt Ruby’s tomato plants.

Papaw turned and started walking toward the hog pen but he only got a few steps before he called to me over his shoulder.

“Morgan!”

“Yes, Papaw?”

“You’re a good son.” He smiled and kept walking.

I stood up and shook out my shirt. A quick, sharp gust of prairie wind lifted the wet fabric into the air, blowing dust onto the previously clean cloth. I held tight to the sleeves and the shirt billowed out in front of me like a sail trying to draw me into the breeze and I wished, for the hundredth time, that I was light enough and free enough to fly.

Chapter Two

The 1920s

Georgia

I’ve always been a realist. I had to be because my mother’s grip on reality was so tenuous. Someone had to be the grown up in our family and it was clear to me that Cordelia Carter Boudreaux was not putting in an application for the position.

Cordelia Carter Boudreaux. Lord! How in the world did she ever conjure up a name like that? One thing I’ll say for my mother. She had imagination.

Delia had no more claim of descent from New Orleans aristocracy than she did to the crowned heads of Europe, but it wasn’t her style to let something as inconvenient as facts stand in her way. We weren’t from anyplace half as romantic as the French Quarter or even the Bayou, just the cracker part of Florida, far from the beach, that humid, bug-infested part tourists never go to unless they accidentally read the map sideways and get themselves lost.

I was the child of a moderately well-to-do, married storekeeper named Earl. He came us to visit on Sundays, bringing bags of groceries. There was always a bit of penny candy tucked in among the oranges, grits, and cans of tuna fish. My mother would give me sack of lemon drops or sticky caramels and tell me to go outside and play on the tire swing in the yard while she and Uncle Earl talked. She made it clear that I was not to come in the house and bother her until she came to get me or she’d take my candy away. I guess the pull of my sweet tooth was stronger than my curiosity because I never did sneak inside to see what Mama and Uncle Earl were “talking” about. When I was older I pretty well figured it out.

Earl’s store was at least three or four miles from our house. I don’t know how I figured out the directions, but once I walked there all by myself. How old was I? Four, maybe? Earl gave me an orange Nehi and a ride home in his car. He wasn’t mad or anything, in fact he let me shift the car while he was driving, but he said I shouldn’t wander off so far because I might get lost or come across the path of a mean, old gator with a hankering for the tender flesh of little girls. When we got the house he patted me on the head and told Mama to keep a better eye on me next time.

He was always nice to me and other than cheating on his wife, he didn’t seem like a bad man. I’m sure if he’d realized what he was doing before he got himself mixed up with my mother, he’d have thought twice about adultery. Well, he wasn’t alone in that. Before Delia was through there were a lot of men who would have said the same thing. They could have formed a club and held meetings.

I don’t remember Earl’s last name though I know it wasn’t Boudreax. I do remember that one day—not a Sunday, but a dry and hot, summer day—he showed up at our house, a little shot gun cottage on the edge of town that was in no better or worse repair than the others on our street, and he was mad as hell. I was sitting cross-legged on chipped-paint floorboards of the front porch, cutting Dolly Dingle paperdolls out of an old copy of the Pictorial Review, so intent on my work that I didn’t hear him drive up. Earl stomped hard climbing the porch steps, making my scissors wobble so that poor Dolly lost three fingers on her right hand. I looked up and saw men’s trouser legs and a pair of brogans so covered with Florida dust; they looked like someone had sprinkled them with Hershey’s coca powder.

“Hey, Uncle Earl!” I greeted my father by the only title I knew and waited for him to respond with his usual “Hey yourself, June Bug!” but he didn’t see me. He wrenched open the screen door with such power that I thought he’d pull it off the hinges. He started hollering for my mother even before he got in the house and let the screen door slam closed behind him.

“Jean! Jean! Where the hell are you?”

Her heels made a hurried tap-tapping sound across the wooden floor. She had tiny feet, size fours, which she was very proud of. Even before we moved to the city, my mother wore high heels every day of the week.

“Why hello, Earl. What a nice surprise. I didn’t expect to see you until Sunday. I just made some iced tea. Do you have time for a glass?”

“No! I did not come over here for tea. It’s a workday, Jean. I should be at the store looking after my business but instead I had to drive over here to ask you a question; have you lost your mind?”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about…”

“Don’t give me that. You were over at Annabelle’s dress shop today and you were tracking Marlene from one end of the store to the other, whispering little comments, holding dresses up to yourself and wondering out loud ‘would Earl like this red better, or the blue?’”

“Well, I was at Annabelle’s this morning, but I had no idea your wife was there. I was so busy deciding what dress to buy that I must not have noticed her. She’s not that hard to miss, is she? I did finally settle on the blue one. Shall I try it on and show you? It’s a little low cut in front, but I didn’t think you mind that too much.” Eavesdropping on the front porch, I couldn’t see Mother’s face, but I didn’t have too. Her voice was breathy and I knew she’d be looking at Earl with her eyes wide open and her chin tucked down, that she’d reach up to stroke his shoulder and bite her lower lip slowly, in that way that always made him swallow hard so you could see his adam’s apple bob in his throat. It was a move that never failed—until today.

“Knock it off, Jean!” I heard the scuffle of feet and wondered if he’d shaken off her caressing hand or pushed her away. “You humiliated Marlene today and now everybody in town is talking about it! She came to the store in tears. I feel bad enough about things without you going and making her a laughingstock. She may not be pretty as you, but that’s not her fault. I never wanted to hurt her. Tried to spare her feelings,” he mumbled in a voice husky with guilt.

“I told her I’d quit seeing you two years ago and that I’d joined an Elk’s Lodge all the way over in Bleak Springs and had to drive over for meeting every Sunday. She believed me, or at least she wanted to believe me if only to preserve her dignity. Now you’ve gone and made that impossible!”

“Well, I am so sorry! Forgive me for bursting Miss Marlene’s little bubble of domestic bliss, but you told me some things too, a lot longer than two years ago. You said you were going to leave her. You promised, Earl!”

“That was a long, long time ago, Jean. I was in a fever for you—I was delirious. You were the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen. I’d have said anything to have you.” His voice softened a little, with remembering I suppose, or with wanting. Mama was beautiful with looks that turned men’s heads and would for a long, long time to come.

Earl’s voice grew firmer, as he’d though he’d rediscovered his resolve. “But you had to know Marlene would never give me a divorce. She’s too good a Catholic for that. You knew that, Jean. I knew it too and you know something else? I don’t want to divorce Marlene. She’s been the best wife she knew how to be for thirty years. She’s put up with a lot from me and today, when she came in the store crying like her heart was broke. . . Well, I was never so ashamed of myself.” He was quiet for a moment. “Sometimes I wish I’d never laid eyes on you. It’s over, Jean.”

“I’m sorry, Sugar Bear. Really. Honey, I just love you so much and get so jealous sometimes that I can’t help myself.” Mama used the wheedling tone and endearments that always broke down Earl’s defenses, but when he didn’t say anything I could hear an edge of panic creep into her voice. “Now, Darlin’, don’t look at me like that. I said I’m sorry. I’ll stay away from Marlene from now on. I promise. I’ll never set foot in Annabelle’s again if that’s what you want.”

“Jean, it’s not going to work this time. If the June Bug hadn’t come along, I’d have called it off years ago, but I was trying to do the right thing by her. I was going to move ya’ll over to Bleak Springs in the fall anyway before the Georgia starts school but that’s still too close. Word is bound to get out and I don’t want kids teasin’ her ‘bout not havin’ a Daddy. She’s a sweet little thing. No reason she should suffer just because I’m a damned fool.”

“But, Earl! Daddy!” Mama pleaded. I heard the sound of paper crumpling and Earl’s cold, businesslike voice.

“Take this,” he said. “There’s two hundred dollars in that envelope and a check for another eight hundred. If you will leave quietly by the end of the week, you can cash that check when you get wherever you’re going but if you make the least bit of fuss I’ll stop payment on it. My brother Bob’s a lawyer in Alpharetta. Here’s his card. You write to let him know your address and your bank account number. As long as you don’t contact me, or Marlene, or anyone we know except Bob, I’ll send you seventy-five dollars a month for as long as I live and I’ll leave a little something for the June Bug in my will. But if you ever, ever try to get in touch with me or embarrass my family in any way that is the last dollar you’ll ever see from me.”

“But, Earl. Honey…”

“Don’t test me on this, Jean. I’ve made up my mind.”

That’s how my mother and I wound up on a train to Chicago in the summer of 1926 and somewhere on that journey, while the steady thump of wheels on rail ticked off the miles between Florida and Illinois, Mother made herself up.

She was no longer Jean Carter, pretty cracker, spurned mistress of an aging Florida grocer. Using a handful of a French phrases she picked out of a French-English dictionary she’d found abandoned in the parlor car and her own imagination, she invented Cordelia Carter Boudreaux, a petite and pretty, genteel widow in reduced circumstances. Cordelia was the wife of the late Colonel Beauregard Boudreaux, an elderly gentleman of the Big Easy who had met and fallen for the charms of a young Atlanta belle on her post-debut tour of the south. It seems Cordelia admired the Colonel but had been shocked when he proposed because she did not love him. However, her parents, people of impeccable southern lineage themselves, pushed for the match. Cordelia had been too malleable to resist. “I was so young, you see. Just sixteen. Mama said I didn’t know what love was, which was of course, quite true. I suppose it still is.” She blushed and fluttered her lashes nervously delivering this last. The implication was that the Colonel, while devoted to his child-bride, was too elderly to fulfill his matrimonial obligations too her. Cordelia was not only beautiful, she was pure in body and breeding, an irresistible combination.

Our new life in Chicago required my mother to write a new autobiography under a new penname. On the other hand, I was still Georgia June Carter but I’d never be known as June Bug again. From the moment we stepped off the train Union Station in Chicago, I was no longer my mother’s daughter but her baby sister whom she’d taken in after our parents, who had lost their fortune due to the machinations of an unprincipled business partner, died suddenly in a car accident. Living with an orphaned sister, rather than an illegitimate daughter, gave Delia an air of nobility and self-sacrifice that only added to her charm. And it wasn’t a totally unlikely ruse. Delia couldn’t have been more than fifteen or sixteen when she gave birth to me, young enough to be my older sister.

In many ways I’m grateful to Delia. Watching the mess she made of her own life made me determined not to make the same mistakes. I would make my own luck—not invent it, imagine it, yoke it to something as ephemeral as love. I would work for it and rely on myself.

I told you. I am a realist. That’s the only way to get on in life. But it doesn’t hurt to have some luck. The first taste of mine came in August of 1927.

At least, I’m pretty sure it was August. Bert, a car salesman and the first in the series of Chicago uncles, Delia, and I were going on an outing. I know it was summer because I wasn’t in school, which was fine with me.

So, even though the August heat was thick enough to make the brim on Delia’s hat curl and my legs stick sweat to the leather rumble seat, I was happy—happy to be out of school, happy to be riding in Uncle Bert’s new roadster, happy to be headed out to Midway Airport with the rest of the crowds, happy and excited because I was going to see the most famous man in American and maybe the world—Charles Lindbergh, at the Chicago stop on his forty-eight state victory tour!

After his groundbreaking transatlantic flight from New York to Paris, the papers were full of Lindbergh and aviation. If there was other news in the world, no one cared. Every kid on our block was practically vibrating with anticipation because the Lone Eagle was coming to our city. I had never seen an airplane except in still photographs and newsreels, but that was about to change. I was one of the lucky ones who were actually going to see him because I had access to transportation. Bert had taken the day off work and borrowed a car from the dealership so he could drive us to Midway in style. He seemed a little smarmy to me but I was willing to overlook that for the time being. For the moment, I actually approved of Delia’s taste in men.

We left early because we wanted to find a good spot where we’d be sure to see Lindbergh. So did everybody else. We were stuck in traffic and with the mid-western sun sweltering down on us. Bert offered to put the top up but Delia demurred. “That’s all right. I imagine it would be even hotter with the sun beating on that black fabric. At least this way we can catch the breeze when it passes. But, of course, you know best, Bert.” Delia smiled and laid a gloved hand on Bert’s forearm. “If you want to put up the top, I’m sure that will be just fine with me.”

I felt the plane a split second before I saw it – felt a vibration come through my elbow where it rested on the metal body of the car, rising up through my forearm, to my chin, to my head where the humming started in my ears and grew into an echo, a rumble, a roar at once mechanical and alive, more powerful and terrible and wonderful than anything I’d ever heard. I felt a great surge of wind and heat, the stirring of troubled air just before a storm. I looked up.

He was coming in for a landing, flying straight over the line of traffic, not more than a rooftop’s height above us. Delia and Bert and all the other people in the stranded cars around us immediately ducked down in an instinctive crouch, stooping to protect their heads while covering their ears against the howl of engine noise. And just as instinctively, I leapt onto the back of the rumble seat, shouting, reaching skyward, stretching on tip-toes, unfolding my fingertips high and straight, trying make myself large enough to touch that wonderful, magical plane, trying to catch hold and fly. The Spirit of St. Louis headed straight for me. I imagined that inside Charles Lindbergh saw me, a little girl standing tall with longing while the world around her cowered in fear, and that the wavering dip of his wings as he came in for landing was much more than an answer to a turbulent headwind; it was a private salute between us, an acknowledgement that he recognized me as one of his own. He passed over me, a breaking wave of silver and shadow that felt like a gift of farewell, a remembrance to tide me over until we met again. And it did.

The sea surf ringing in my ears condensed and gave way to the sound of my own ringing laughter and the faint echo of Delia’s shouting for me to get down, for heaven’s sake get down Georgia, what were you thinking, you could have gotten yourself killed.

“Did you see it? Did you see it?” I shouted, still laughing. “Delia, did you? He was flying!”

“Georgia! Get down from there this instant! What’s got into you? Of course, he was flying.” Delia barked, her initial fright giving way to exasperation. “Why do you suppose we came down here?”

What was obvious in Delia’s mind was astounding in my own. I was silent for a moment, marveling that she failed to sense what I did, to feel in the wind and heat and shadow the opening of doors. The world never would, never could be the same. Didn’t she see?

Then I remembered, Lindbergh’s plane heading toward me, singling me out from the crowd as one who knew and me rising up to return the salutation. It wasn’t for everyone then, this calling to the air. How strange. Looking at Delia, beautiful and desired in ways I could never be, I felt suddenly special, lovely and more important than I had a moment before. Simultaneously, Delia seemed different in my eyes, smaller and powerless. I was only seven years old, but I knew my mother would never again be as important to me as she had before I climbed onto the rumble seat and tried to catch hold of a dream revealed. How strange. How wonderful. view abbreviated excerpt only...

Discussion Questions

1. After his plane crashes in the Pacific, Morgan recalls a sermon that Paul had preached years ago, in which he talked about generational sin. What was he talking about, and how did the memory of this sermon help Morgan change the course of his life and Georgia’s?

2. Ultimately, how did Morgan and Georgia overcome their backgrounds to come together as man and wife?

On the Wings of the Morning Discussion Guide

3. For both Morgan and Georgia, flying is initially more than a hobby or a job. Explain what role flying plays in both of their lives, when they were younger, before they joined the War effort, and, later, after they had been buffeted by the forces of war.

4. Neither Morgan’s nor Georgia’s parents were married, during a time when being born outside marriage came with considerable social stigma. How did being born “out of wedlock” define Morgan and Georgia? Discuss how each mother handled the stigma, and, if you were in her place and time, what you would have done to protect yourself and your children from the stigma? Given the social changes since that time, how do you think Eva Glennon and “Cordelia Carter Boudreaux” would have handled their plight today?

5. In any good story, there is a point where the author grabs the reader emotionally. When did Marie Bostwick “have you” in On Wings of the Morning? What was the first scene that pulled on your heartstrings, that made you want a character to achieve his or her goal? What other scenes stand out in your mind in this regard?

6. What did it say about Eva’s character that she would not marry Reverend Van Dyver, especially given the times? What do you think enabled her to marry him later in the story?

7. Why do you think Eva didn’t want to tell Morgan the identity of his father? How would knowing that Charles Lindbergh was his father have changed his life?

8. What role does quilting play in Eva’s life, at the beginning of the book, and at the end? If you are a quilter, how does the craft enrich your life and that of your family?

9. On Wings of the Morning is filled with many brave characters. Whom do you admire most? Which one is your favorite and why?

10. Saying goodbye to Morgan when he climbed into his plane must have been a very difficult déjà vu moment for Eva, even more difficult than saying goodbye to his famous father. Have you ever had to say good-bye to anyone—a sweetheart, son or daughter leaving for war, for example—and wondered if you would even see them again? How did you handle the parting? How did your life change after they left? How did you change in their absence?

11. Georgia said of her mother, “Delia had spent her whole life trying to become a wife—anyone’s wife—because that was what would turn her from a nobody into a somebody. That just didn’t seem right to me.” Yet Georgia agreed to marry a man she didn’t love. Why did Georgia marry Roger? What did both gain from the marriage?

12. What surprised you about the way the U.S. government treated members of the Women’s Air Service Pilots Training Division (WASP)? How were these one thousand WASP trailblazers for women’s rights in this country?

13. What did Georgia mean when, after flying the BT-13 on the base in Sweetwater, Texas, she said “I walked the wind”? What did flying that plane do for her memory of her husband, Roger? How did this help her come to grips with the reason she married him?

14. While trying to make sense of the war in the scheme of things, Morgan said to Georgia, “Sometimes we get so focused on the small pains and tragedies of life, and even on the enormous ones, that we forget to see the larger goodness and beauty in life. For us, death is the ultimate punishment, but it must be different from God’s perspective. Maybe God sees it more like a gift.” What is your personal belief about death? What did this passage reveal about the author and about Morgan’s character?

15. Morgan also tells Georgia, “But, if our lives had turned out even a little bit differently than they did, taking a few turns we felt were better at the time, we could have missed the things that bring us our greatest happiness.” What did he mean by this statement? How was it that despite experiencing terrible losses, Morgan found goodness in life, while Georgia was still questioning her belief in a higher power? Why do you think Morgan and Georgia were not able to get together at this point?

16. Before Morgan leaves San Diego on his visit with his mother and Paul, he realizes, “She was still my mother, but now she was my friend, too. It was nice.” Have you reached this point with your children or your mother? If so, what did it take to get to this point? What changes needed to occur on the part of the child and the parent?

17. What was your attitude, and that of the young pilots, toward Lindbergh when he appeared as a special guest of McDonald’s 475th Flying Squadron when Morgan was present? How did their opinion of “the old man” change? How did yours? How did Morgan’s?


Notes From the Author to the Bookclub

Dear Readers:

When I read that, prior to his history-making flight across the Atlantic, the then-unknown Charles Lindbergh barnstormed in Texas and Oklahoma, the plot for my debut novel, Fields of Gold, ignited in my mind. After he lands his plane in a wheat field in the Oklahoma panhandle, his chance meeting with a beautiful and intelligent farm girl changes her life, and Lindbergh’s, forever. That book was a finalist for the prestigious Oklahoma Book Award, and though the story of Lindbergh, Eva Glennon and their illegitimate child, Morgan, was completely fictional, it seemed to touch a chord of truth with readers. I received an amazing amount of mail from readers who wanted to know what happened to young Morgan, the child who didn’t know the identity of his father, only that he shared his passion for soaring through the clear blue skies.

I answer that question in On Wings of the Morning, a November trade paperback that is being featured in the October 1 issue of Library Journal, a dream come true for this author.

In On Wings of the Morning, Morgan enlists in the Navy and becomes a World War II fighter pilot in the Pacific. For the second time his mother watches a man she loves climb into the cockpit of a plane and take off, not knowing if she’ll ever see him again. Having three sons of my own, two grown and gone, this story really hit home for me. I shed buckets of tears when I wrote this book.

Before Morgan leaves the States, he befriends divorcee’ Georgia Carter, a remarkable Women’s Air Service Pilot (WASP), who shares his passion for flying—and a lot more. I think you’ll like Georgia—a strong woman—and I know you’ll enjoy learning about the WASP, the women who helped pave the way for the many female fliers to follow, and whose selfless contributions to the war effort deserve to be celebrated. I know you’ll come to love and respect these women as I have.

As time allows, I’ll be happy to visit with readers’ groups by phone. Just e-mail me at [email protected] to set up a time.

Enjoy your reading!

Marie Bostwick

Book Club Recommendations

Member Reviews

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  "Historical Fiction"by Stacey R. (see profile) 03/02/08

This is a story told by two main characters. This is the second book of a series and to get the Charles Lindberg connection you would need to read the first book Fields of Gold because my book club wondered... (read more)

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