Written by Verity Thompson
Based on some situations originated by James Cameron.
Applying another layer of
mascara, Rose stared at herself in the mirror...it reflected a woman in her
late thirties, her long, red hair twisted in tight ringlets and spilling from
the black hat that sat upon her head. Her black outfit reflected her thoughts
and feelings that day.
Rose Calvert was now a
thirty-seven-year-old woman, still in the high society life she hated. Rose had
never loved again after the night she had lost everything...even the man she
loved. Rose had two children--Jack was twenty and Megan was seventeen.
Jack was the son of Jack Dawson,
the man whom Rose had loved and lost. Jack had never known about his father, as
his mother hated the subject. Never knowing the truth, Jack had found a father
figure in Rose's husband, Charles Calvert.
Megan was the daughter of Rose
and Charles. Ever since she was a little girl she had known that she wasn't
loved--never by her mother. Rose was cruel, unkind, and never batted an eye.
Megan loved her brother, Jack, dearly. He’d been the only person keeping her
sane and keeping her from taking her own life, as she had planned to many
times. Megan loved her father dearly, but he cared only for the boy, who wasn't
even his.
For the past eighteen years, Rose
had lived a life of luxury, but cried herself to sleep each night, praying to
be free, for her life to end.
Today was the day she would start
anew one last time. Her husband’s funeral. Charles had suffered a heart attack
which had ended his life.
Rose was hurt, but she knew she
had to hide it away, be the cruel, heartless person she had been since she'd
met Charles. Rose knew that, day by day, she had turned into her mother,
pushing away her daughter and controlling people’s lives. She had vowed she'd
never turn into that person, but she had.
Four Months Later
The Calverts had moved to West
Virginia when Charles died. Megan was now starting out as an actress and was
planning to move to New York that summer. Jack, just like his father, was
working as an artist. Rose smiled gently as she flipped through her son’s
portfolio and saw some new sketches he'd drawn of the landscape. They were
beautiful.
“Tea, ma'am?” Minnie, Rose's
maid, spoke.
“Yes,” Rose replied, puffing
gently on a cigarette.
“Mother, may I speak with you?
There's something you should know.”
Rose looked at her daughter. She
really was trying, but she still felt nothing. “Of course,” Rose said quickly.
“James and I are heading to New
York this weekend. He's found a drama studio there for me. We'll stay with his
parents for a while.” Megan smiled. She would finally be free from the bubble
she'd been in all of her life.
“Why, that's wonderful news,
Meg...I hope you'll be happy there.”
Megan smiled. For the first time,
her mother was...well, not nice, but...civil with her.
“Do you have to go this weekend?”
Jack asked his sister. “The house will be lonely without you.”
Megan smiled. Someone cared.
“Yes. I'll miss you, but I have to do this. I want to act. I want to be
famous.”
Jack smiled weakly. “You want me
to take you to the station?”
“Oh, no. James will be with me.
We'll be fine...and I'll visit every summer.”
“Well, make sure you do.”
Late Friday night, Megan was due
to travel to New York.
Looking in the mirror, Megan tied
a ribbon around the end of her braid. This time tomorrow, she'd be free from
society. Megan looked up as she saw the mirror reflect another being. The
corner of her bedroom was dark, and the only light in the room was a small
lamp. The shadow stepped from the darkness and into Megan's vision. She saw her
mother.
“Are you all ready for tomorrow?”
her mother questioned, indicating the suitcase beside her dressing table.
“Oh, yes. It's going to be quite
a journey.” Megan laughed. Tears pricked her eyes as her mother sat on her bed.
Megan looked back in the mirror and saw herself and Rose. She had never really
noticed how alike they were. “Do you know anything about acting, Mother? Do you
know what it's like?”
Rose smiled at her daughter,
tears in her eyes, as well. “I was an actress...once,” Rose replied. Shocked,
but wanting to know more, Megan sat beside her mother on the bed.
“Really? Why didn't you ever say
anything?”
“It was the best, Meg...being
free to do what you like. One of the best times of my life, but when I married your
father, it all stopped. He didn’t like me sharing my body with the rest of the
world...so after five pictures, I gave it all up.”
“For Dad?”
Rose nodded. “Ever since I was a
little girl, I swore to myself I'd never end up like your grandmother--cruel,
heartless, selfish...my father was the only person I loved in the world. Then,
when he died...I was forced into marriage, but...I knew I'd find someone to set
me free one day...and there was a man named Jack...just like you have James.”
“Mom...do you love Jack more than
you love me?”
A single, sparkling tear trickled
down Rose's porcelain cheek. She stood up, wandering over to the window. The
streetlights had just come on. It was quite a hot, sticky night.
“Oh, no...never, Meg.”
“Then why...why do you never tell
me you love me? Why have I always felt unloved? Why me and not Jack?”
Quickly, Rose grabbed her
daughter’s hand and kissed it tenderly. “My darling Meggie…”
Megan couldn't fight back the
tears any longer. She began to cry silently. She had never seen her mother so
emotional, not even at her father’s funeral. “Mom…”
“Megan...when...when I was just
seventeen, I fell pregnant with Jack. I had nothing--just a baby, no husband,
no money--just a grotty little bed. I couldn't even afford a crib for Jack. He
slept in a drawer...full of blankets. He was falling ill faster every day. I
knew I had to get money somehow. So after I swore I'd never go back, I went
home to Philadelphia...Margaret Brown was there…”
Megan gasped. Margaret
Brown...the Unsinkable Molly Brown? “You mean...the Unsinkable Molly Brown?”
Rose nodded silently. “I went
back to being a society girl, back with my mother, back where I hated being the
most. When I was nineteen and Jack was two, I met Robert Calvert. He owned a
local theater and knew of my dreams of becoming an actress. So, that was where
it all began...I was a nineteen-year-old single mother when I starred in Romeo
and Juliet. I played Juliet. In 1914, I made a moving picture film and I
met your father. He was Robert's older brother...he was good-looking, charming,
and rich. Nothing like Jack Dawson, the only man I've ever loved.”
“Mom...I had no idea…”
“He was just twenty when he died.
He was an artist...with the most beautiful blue eyes and floppy blonde hair. He
had boyish looks...so heavenly. I was hanging from the back of a ship when we
met.”
Megan's jaw dropped. The only
word she managed to speak was Titanic.
It was piecing together now, bit
by bit.
“I was ready to jump, but he
stopped me, and yes, I fell in love with him. He would have still been with me
today if that ship hadn't had hit an iceberg...but maybe he would have survived
if he had let me die...I would have died for him, but he made me promise to go
on and have lots of babies...but I only ever wanted his, and I got one...a
little boy named Jack Dawson, just like his father. That part of him no one
could take away from me. I could keep him. He was mine and Jack's.”
“So, you don't love me…because
I'm Charles' daughter? Not Jack's?”
Rose shook her head immediately.
“No...no, I do love you, Meg...you're still my little princess, even though
you're all grown up. You're seventeen years old and a picture of me at that
age...James is very lucky to have you, and so am I. I do love you, Meg. I
always have, even though I never showed it. Women of society don't have hearts.
We're just meant to be better than anyone else, but we're not. We're human. We
love, we care, we get hurt, and we have feelings...but living in society makes
you hollow, and I don't want that to happen to you, Meg...so I want you to go
to New York. I want you to be an actress, I want you and James to get married
and have lots of babies...I want you to be happy and free.”
“I love you, Mom.” Megan threw
herself into her mother's arms as, for the first time, she was cradled like a
baby. Rose rocked her daughter gently for what seemed like hours until her
emotion subsided. Pulling away, Rose gently wiped the tears from Megan's eyes
and stroked her finger gently down her cheek.
Both Rose and Megan knew it would
never be the same. Megan now knew that her mother loved her and forgave her for
not showing her love. Megan was to go on and make each day count. She was to
become an actress, marry James, and be happy and free, just like her mother
told her to.
The Next Day
James loaded the three suitcases
into the trunk of his car. It would be a long day. Megan hugged her brother
tightly as he stroked her hair. He kissed her cheek gently.
“I'm going to miss you, Meggie,”
Jack said, his voice cracking with emotion.
“Yes. I'll miss you, too. I love
you.”
Megan glanced around to try to
see her mother, but she was nowhere to be seen. Megan sighed, opening the car
door.
“Meggie!” a voice shouted from
the front door of their house. Megan smiled, running to her mother. “You didn't
think I wasn't going to say good-bye, did you?”
Megan shook her head. “No. Not
now.”
“Meg, in the summer...I'm going
to pack up here and Jack and I will move to New York to be with you and
James...is that all right?”
Megan hugged her mother tighter. “It’s
perfect.”
James squeezed the horn. It
beeped loudly. “We'll miss the train, Meg!” he shouted.
Pulling away from her mother,
Megan kissed her cheek lovingly, taking in every line on her face--enough to
remember for another two months.
Megan ran down the steps of the
porch and got in the car. She waved as the car sped away.
Rose pulled Jack closer to her.
For two months, it would just be the two of them.
Epilogue
Megan went on to become a
successful actress, and in 1951, she won an Oscar for her role as Lilly in Titanic:
A Night To Remember. Megan married James, and they had six children. Megan
acted until she was in her late eighties. She died peacefully in her sleep at
the old age of one hundred in 2015.
Rose did move to New York that
summer of 1932, and acted alongside her daughter for the final time in Motherhood,
a tale about a mother and daughter's close relationship. Rose was finally
reunited with her Jack in 1987 at the age of ninety-two.
Jack became an artist for a film
company, and in 1937 he married a woman named Maria. They had two children, but
Maria suffered many miscarriages, leaving them both distraught. Maria died in
childbirth with her second child, though the child survived. Heartbroken, Jack
moved in with his mother. Together, they raised the children.
Jack Dawson looked upon Rose,
Jack, and Megan proudly. He smiled as he looked at his son, his lover, and her
daughter. He was happy that Rose had kept her promise and moved on.
Seventy-five years after the Titanic sank, Jack was finally reunited with his
Rose. Then his son. Then Megan.
Today, Rose, Jack, Jack, Jr., and
Megan may have passed on to the next world, but their legend lives on, whether
it's through their films or just through imagination. Remember, the heart does
go on!
The End.