In 1960, Roth married Josef Franta, a
Czechoslovak national who traveled on a
Swiss passport. According to her brother Frank, Holly had met Franta in
Geneva, where he was working with the
International Labour Organization (ILO). The same year, Franta purchased a 47-foot wooden 35 tons
ketch named
Visa for $8,500. She was built in 1912 in
Norway as rescue boat no. 26
RS Bergens Kreds and was built by Brødrene Marcussen, Gjeving, Lyngør to the design of the famous Norwegian boat builder
Colin Archer. RS 26's rescue service lasted until 1948 and thereafter sold as a yacht. Franta later put the vessel into Roth's name, and Roth spent $20,000 on renovations. Frank reports that, while Roth had been living in
Paris and
Majorca for several years, she lived aboard
Visa with her husband during the last year of her life. Frank last saw his sister in 1960, just before the marriage. In a letter to Frank dated March 30, 1964, Roth wrote that Franta was having difficulty entering the United States, claiming that the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was keeping a lengthy
blackmail file on him.On October 8, 1964, Roth and Franta departed
Gibraltar aboard
Visa for the
Canary Islands. Two days later,
Visa ran into a storm at sea. On October 11, Roth disappeared. Franta claimed they were twenty miles north of
Safi when, at approximately 4a.m., a force suddenly shook the boat while Roth was above deck and Franta below, knocking him against the wall. Making his way above deck, Franta saw a 145-foot-long ship sailing away from
Visa. He believed he saw a body wearing a
life jacket in the water and called out for Roth, receiving no answer. He steered
Visa toward the area and threw out a
buoy, but the line fouled the propeller. Franta twice tied a line to himself and went into the water to retrieve Roth, but was unsuccessful in both attempts. Returning to
Visa, he fired
flares and a gun to attract fishing boats he had seen earlier. He then used the radio and made contact with Radio Safi. Around noon, a Spanish
fishing trawler called the
Santa Africana hove to, put two men aboard
Visa and took her in tow to Safi. Several fishing craft and a Spanish coastal freighter searched the area for where Roth was presumed to have gone overboard. Frank received a copy of Franta's statement along with a "Presumptive Report of the Death of an American Citizen", dated October 15 and signed by Robert G. Adam, the American vice consul in
Casablanca. The report lists Roth's cause of death as "accidental, presumed lost at sea and drowned." On November 23, 1964, a source at the
U.S. State Department stated that the investigation into Roth's disappearance had not been closed. On November 25, the
Associated Press (AP) reported that Moroccan police had listed her death as accidental and that the inquiry was officially closed. Authorities permitted Franta to leave Morocco at any time, but he stayed in Safi trying to sell
Visa. According to Franta, an
underwriter estimated the damage to
Visa at $5,600. Roth's body has never been found. Julian Muller of the publishing company
Harcourt, Brace & World, a friend of Roth who had been given
power of attorney, described Roth as "tall, attractive, a rare person, kindly, imaginative and much beloved by everybody she knew. She had a great love of literature and letters and her speech and writing reflected it. She was a person of broad interests and highly articulate." ==Adaptations==