HEARTS CAN BREAK
Chapter Five
Rose was marched past crowds of
other passengers, standing in huddles and talking like it was all some cruel
joke.
Only she knew it wasn't.
Cal held her back and stopped
her, so that she was pulled against him. She went rigid instantly at his touch,
and threw herself away from his shoulder. There was only one shoulder she
wanted to be near.
Now, more than before, she felt
the bitter cold of the night as she stood in line for a lifeboat. As the chill
seeped through her coat, a dazzling white light lit up the sky. She lifted her
face just in time to see orange embers burning above Titanic against a deep
black sky.
Distress rockets.
The crew was becoming more
desperate and exploding rockets into the air to attract nearby ships to come to
the wounded liner's aid. White rockets always meant trouble at sea.
"Any room for a gentleman,
gentlemen?" Cal asked nervously, trying to get off the foundering ship.
"Only women at this time,
sir," a crew member politely responded. Cal pretended to smile, and then
melted back behind the wall of people to rejoin the DeWitt Bukaters.
"Will the lifeboats be
seated according to class?" Rose's mother's voice appeared at her side.
She turned to see the short woman with a hand raised in the air. "I hope
they're not too crowded," Ruth went on.
Although Cal smiled weakly,
Rose's insides were shattered. Too crowded? What did she mean, too crowded?
Praise God if they were too crowded! This wasn't the newest gown, or a new
dollar bill. This was human lives!
"Oh, Mother," she
fumed. "Shut up!" Her mother turned to her, shocked, as Rose grabbed
her shoulders. "Don't you understand?" Rose cried, shaking her.
"The water is freezing and there aren't enough boats. Not enough by
half." She looked around, past Ruth's frantic eyes. "Half the people
on this ship are going to die."
As the light went out from her
mother's face, Cal turned to sneer again at his bride-to-be. "Not the
better half," he stated matter-of-factly. Stunned, Rose let go of her
mother and turned to look at him. "You know," he went on, "it's
a pity I didn't keep that drawing. It'll be worth a lot more by morning."
Illumination from the ship's deck
showed the burning anger in Rose's eyes as she stood, horrified, staring at the
man next to her. "You unimaginable bastard," she whispered, sickened,
her voice trembling with emotion.
Cal shrugged as Ruth stepped into
the boat, sitting next to Molly Brown. "C'mon, Rose, darlin', there's
plenty of room for you," Molly urged.
Rose didn't notice. Her brain was
throbbing with hurt. Suddenly, like all the other times in her life when
choices mattered, the answer to her question was so clear that she felt blown
over.
Jack was innocent.
It hit her without warning.
She recognized the emotion that
she had been trying to ignore since he had been taken away. She loved him, and
because of their love they had been separated and he had been found guilty.
Because he cared for her, he was now trapped in a sinking ship.
What had she done?
She couldn't let him die. She had
to go to him. It was a physical need, to feel him against her, to let his arms
hold her. She turned against her mother's pleas. The crewman who had been
extending his hand to help her board stood helplessly.
Rose turned and began walking
away, dazed and unaware of anything else going on around her.
Vaguely, she heard her mother
screaming. "Rose! Rose, come back here! Right now!" Of course, she
didn't listen.
Something grabbed her arm, a
hard, steel hand. She was forced to turn and look into Cal's leering face. Oh,
God! There wasn't enough time.
"Where are you going?"
he asked in a rage. Abruptly, he noticed the love struck fires behind the
irises of her eyes. "To him?" he roared, refusing to call that filth
by name. "To be a whore to a gutter rat?"
Now was the time to speak her
mind. How dare he insult Jack, who was more of a man than he would ever be?
"I'd rather be his whore
than your wife," she breathed, with death in her voice.
His face contracted, and she saw
the surprised, angry look he shot her. She didn't stay any longer, but turned
and started hurrying away. She didn't go fast enough.
"No! I said no!" Cal
shouted, and grabbed her elbow again. He began to shake her as she fought
against him, grunting with the effort as passersby stared. She soon realized
that, although Jack was stronger than this man, her strength was far less.
Using the only weapon she had, she hocked back all of her saliva and spit into
Caledon Hockley's eye. Shocked, he let go of her to wipe his face. She turned
and tore away from him, ignoring her mother's shrieks as she was separated from
her daughter.
Rose had to hurry. But, with
fresh, numbing despair, she realized she had no idea where in the ship Jack was.
*****
Jack had recovered from the blow
to his stomach and now stood straight again. He could hear a rushing sound,
which he took to be water. Even though he couldn't see it yet, he knew the
Titanic was sinking. The steepness of the floor beneath him was proof.
"Help!" he shouted.
"Can anybody hear me? Will someone help me? Please!" Of course, no
one came.
*****
Where could Jack be? She tried to
remember any hint that the Master-at-Arms could have given to where he was
taking that man. No memory at all.
Then another vision swirled into
her head, one of Thomas Andrews with his notebook. He knew every rivet in this
ship. He could tell her.
She began to race down the Grand
Staircase, hurtling past people who were making their way upstairs, laughing.
How could they laugh? It seemed a breach against humanity, against the world.
Rose streaked down the linoleum
floor and slipped into the hallways of the first class staterooms. She knew
that the shipbuilder would be herding men, women, and children to the
lifeboats.
"Mr. Andrews!" she
cried, staring desperately down the corridor. "Mr. Andrews!" She took
off right, her breathing labored, until she turned again and saw him--walking
quickly down the carpet, opening doors and calling those inside out on the boat
deck.
"Oh, Mr. Andrews, thank
God!" She sighed, grabbing his lifebelt in anxiety and looking into his
eyes. Before he could say anything, she spilled out her question. "Where
would the Master-at-Arms take someone under arrest?"
He didn't understand how severely
she needed this information. "What?" he asked. "Rose, you need
to be getting to a boat right away!" Mr. Andrews began to try to walk her
down the corridor.
"No!" she exclaimed.
"I'm doing this with or without your help, sir, but without will take
longer."
He shook his head in worry and
sighed, but then met her fear-filled gaze and finally answered. "Take the
elevator all the way to the very bottom. Go down the crewmen's passage. Take a
left, then a right, then go left again at the stairs. You'll come to a long
corridor." She managed to absorb the information and fled without thanking
him.
*****
Jack pressed his head against the
cool steel of the pole he was chained to and sighed.
"This could be bad," he
mumbled.
No sooner were the words out of
his mouth than a more obvious trickling sound filled his ears. He turned to the
source of the noise and saw it--water was now streaming under the walls to him.
"Oh, shit!" he yelled.
"Oh, shit!" He climbed up the beam and pulled, trying to break the
chain binding his hands together. It was of no avail.
He looked helplessly at the icy,
churning sea that seemed determined to swallow him.
*****
Rose flew past the Grand
Staircase, shoving people out of her way. "Excuse me," she mumbled,
out of breath. "Thank you."
After what seemed like an
eternity, she was in front of the elevators. A crisply uniformed crew member,
however, stood blocking her way. She ran into him in her haste, trying to push
him into the machine.
"I'm sorry, miss, but the
lifts are closed," he declared firmly.
Rose's heart pounded. There was
only this man standing between her and Jack. She was not going to let him risk
her love's life.
"I'm through being polite,
Goddamn it!" she seethed, shoving him back. "Now take me down!"
Frightened, the operator again shoved the lever down. "E-Deck," Rose
ordered as she closed the heavy iron gates.
*****
Jack was now up to his shins in
seawater. The water was rising incredibly fast and was extraordinarily cold.
"Come on! Come on! Come
on!" he shouted desperately, trying to slide his hands out of the cuffs.
They wouldn't budge. His face turned red with effort, but in the end all he
could do was turn and watch the water, dread in his eyes.
*****
Rose was breathing harder, fear
outlining every exhalation she made. By now, the man was calmer, but there was
no conversation. She watched the floors flash by, unsure of what she would
find. Was she too late? Oh, God, if Jack was--no, she mustn't think that way.
Water suddenly rushed into the
lift, swirling and churning around her legs. She screamed, her worst fear
confirmed.
"I'm going back up!"
Again, the operator moved to the lever.
If anything, she now knew that
she had to get to Jack as soon as possible. "No!" she cried, shoving
him away from the controls and opening the doors. "No! No!"
She stepped out of the elevator,
wanting to gasp. It felt as if she was deep in ice, the cold was so piercing.
"Miss! Come back!" She
ignored the wild calls. "I'm going back up! I'm going back up!"
Rose turned and watched as the
water was emptied from the elevator while it began creaking to higher decks.
She was alone.
And so was Jack.
The ghostly glow of water on the
white walls made her skin even paler than it was with cold and fear.
"Crewmen's passage.
Crewmen's passage," she muttered to herself. Her eyes caught a sign above
a hallway that read Crew Only. "Crewmen's passage." She turned and
began wading down the corridor.
*****
Now the water was seeping over
the top of Jack's boots. Panic and terror flooded his mind as he clambered onto
the top of a desk.
*****
After making two turns, Rose
found herself at the stairs. She managed to fight to the long hallway Mr.
Andrews had directed her to. She gasped.
The hallway took a right and a
left. There were dozens of doors. She had no idea which one her love was
behind.
"Jack!" she cried out.
The lights flickered. Horror crept into her soul. How much time was left?
"Jack! Jack!"
*****
Suddenly, Jack stopped his
struggle with his handcuffs. There was a sound, a beautiful sound, humming in
his ears.
"Jack!"
He knew exactly who was calling
his name.
"Rose!" he bellowed.
*****
Rose’s eyes flew to every side of
her, as she stood panic-stricken. However, she suddenly heard a voice that made
her insides go calm.
"Jack!" she yelled. She
began to follow the sound of her name and the banging of metal on metal.
"Rose!" she heard.
"I'm in here, Rose! I'm in here!"
She ran against the current of
the water until she was led to a door, which she shoved open.
"Jack!" she cried
again. After she shoved a stand out of her way, she saw him, standing on a
desk, and the relief and love that flowed through her was indescribable.
"Rose!" he whispered.
"Jack! Jack!" she
continued to exclaim until her arms were around him. Feeling his body pressed
to hers was a balm to her soul. "Oh, God! Oh, God! I'm sorry! I'm so
sorry!" She kissed him, putting her hands at the back of his blonde hair
so she could pull him to her. She allowed his tongue to again dip into her mouth
as she let love take her over.
When the kiss broke, Jack looked
at her. "That guy Lovejoy put it in my pocket!" What hurt Rose most
was the pain in his eyes, the pain that she had caused.
"I know! I know!" she
cried, and hugged his neck. He enjoyed the moment for as long as he could. The
ship was sinking fast, and he needed to get her out of here.
"Listen, Rose, you're gonna
have to find a spare key. All right? Look over there in that cabinet. It's a
little silver one, Rose."
She managed to break herself from
him and made her way to the wooden cupboard Jack was nodding his head to. She
opened the glass door anxiously and began to frantically run her hands over the
sets of keys. They knocked against the solid back and tinkled as she raced down
every row.
"Silver, silver,
silver--" she muttered. Then, with hysteria in her voice, she cried,
"These are all brass ones!"
Jack, however, was not going to
become frenzied, for her sake. He had to get her out of the bowels of this
floating palace. He would never forgive himself if he caused her death.
"Check right here,
Rose," he softly suggested, now tilting his head to the desk where Lovejoy
had last been. She ran to it and pulled out a drawer, not concerned with
anything except freeing her love.
It was while she was ransacking
through the papers and tools inside it that Jack finally built up the courage
to ask her the question that had been racing through his mind.
"Rose," he began.
At the sound of his voice saying
her name, Rose automatically froze and spun to look at him.
"How'd you find out I didn't
do it?"
Finally, a smile washed over
Rose's chalky face. "I didn't," she chattered. "I just realized
I already knew."
He allowed her answer to flow
over him. She trusted him. She knew him. She had come back from her own
decision.
It was then that he felt water
swirling around his knees.
"Keep looking," he
reminded her, trying to point his chained hands at the desk.
"Oh!" she exclaimed
tearfully, and went back to tearing through the desk. Jack watched her,
nervously, as the seconds ticked by. If it came to it, he would tell Rose to
leave him, that'd he be all right. Of course, he wouldn't, and she'd know it,
and she wouldn't leave. He prayed to God that she could get him out of there
before that time arrived.
"No key!" she
whispered, fear etching her voice. "There's no key!"
Oh, God, Jack thought. Oh, God, please. Get us
out of here.
When he spoke, he was calm again.
"All right. Rose, you're gonna have to find some help." He paused and
looked deep into her sapphire-jade eyes. "It'll be all right."
Rose looked down at the water. It
would not be all right. It would not, that is, unless she trusted Jack.
She turned and waded to him.
"I'll be right back," she said, and then kissed him for as long as
she could before turning and whooshing from the room.
"I'll just wait here!"
he called after her.