LIVES COLLIDE
Epilogue
Rose felt the cool May breeze
through her thin white hair as she created another vase on the pottery wheel.
She smiled. The simple things always made her happy these days.
Her granddaughter, Elizabeth,
playfully nicknamed Lizzie by her father, was filling the cups in a cupcake
pan.
She looked over at the small
television set, which still seemed odd to her, even now, and caught the news
story about something.
"Turn that up, dear,"
Rose said. Lizzie leaned over and turned the knob for volume control.
Rose got up, wiping her hands on
her apron as she watched the set, and then she gasped. There, on the
television, was a picture. A very old, drawn picture. And it was of her.
"What is it, Nana?"
"Well, I’ll be
Goddamned."
*****
"Are you comfortable, Mrs.
Buckman?" Lovett asked. Rose looked up from her set of pictures she had
set on the sideboard.
"Yes. I always have my
pictures when I travel." Rose was on a ship, a ship that was right now
floating in the same spot that the Titanic had sunk in more than eighty-four
years ago.
"Is there anything we can
get you, Nana?" Lizzie asked.
"Oh, have you met my
granddaughter, Lizzie? She takes care of me."
"We met on deck. Remember,
Nana?" Lizzie asked.
Rose shrugged. "Right."
"If there is anything to
make your stay more comfortable…anything you would like?"
"Yes. I’d like to see my
drawing."
*****
The picture looked the same as
she had remembered it last.
"We’re being very careful
about preserving it." Lovett walked around Rose to a table. "These
are a few things we recovered from your stateroom."
"Oh, these were mine."
She picked up the comb and touched the brush. "They look the same as the
last time I saw them." She picked up the mirror. The broken shards showed
back her tired, aging face. "The reflection’s changed a bit." She
chuckled softly. These seemed like another lifetime ago. She was still amazed
at the advancement of technology and how lucky she had been when she had seen
it all come into play.
Rose watched as the crowd’s faces
showed the different emotions as she told her story. Even her granddaughter
hadn’t known the whole story. She stopped after she mentioned Jack dying and
how she made it to a lifeboat.
"What happened next?"
Mr. Bodine asked, eagerly waiting for her next words.
"I saw Cal again. I almost
went up to him, but I remembered all the horrible things he had done and said
to me. I would have been a slave if I had gone back to that life. So, I started
over and I became an actress."
"You know, we never found
Jack on any of the passenger lists," Mr. Bodine responded.
"You wouldn’t have, would
you?" she smiled. "Four years went by, and I was perfectly happy, or
so I thought. I was in a picture, I was known for the plays that I had done,
and I had a man that I thought would be the best part of my life, until I ran
into Jack."
"Jack…but…" Mr. Lovett
said, startled.
"He survived. He was picked
up by the ship that collected the bodies afterward. He went on to sell his
drawings in a gallery. I didn’t know. He didn’t know I had survived, either.
One night, I went into that gallery with my new fiancé on my arm, and there he
was. At first, I wasn’t going to leave Harry. But I told Harry everything. You
see, I hadn’t told anybody about the Titanic. He understood." She sighed.
"He said, ‘Rose, I love you, and I want you to be happy. I always knew
there was something you were hiding, and I knew that you would eventually tell
me. We’ll always be good friends.’ And so, I found out where Jack lived and I
went up."
"Then what happened?"
Mr. Bodine asked, his eyes lighting up with anticipation.
"We married. Two years
later, I had my daughter, Crystal. And we lived very comfortably in Jack’s
hometown for a number of years. He died, of course. Peacefully, in his sleep.
He had a bad heart, and although he had come back from death to be with me,
death still had a grip on him. He was forty. I was sad when he died, but he
told me to go on with my life and be happy. I mourned for months and
months."
"But your last name isn’t
Dawson," Mr. Lovett replied.
"No. That’s because I met
John. John was gentle and kind and he loved me. He loved Crystal, too. He died
last year. I was happy, and I still am. I had a short time with Jack, or so it
may seem to you, but those few years we had--it was a lifetime to me. I
wouldn’t change anything, because we spent every day as if it were our last. We
traveled, we laughed and cried. To this day, I still remember his smile, his
eyes, and his voice. He lives in here." She put a hand to her heart.
"My grandfather…my real
grandfather," Lizzie began. "He was a very generous and loving man. I
never got to meet him, but I see him in every piece of work that is on the
walls of my grandmother’s house. Granddad John--he never made Nana take down
the work. He appreciated it, and he respected Jack." She turned to her
grandmother. "Thank you for telling me the whole story, Nana."
Rose smiled and took her
granddaughter’s hand.
*****
Rose reminisced about the past as
she looked out at the pristine water. It looked the same as it had when she was
seventeen. It was probably still just as cold, too. She had flashbacks of her
few days on Titanic.
Don’t do it.
Don’t presume to tell me what
I will or will not do. You don’t know me.
Water that cold…like right
down there…it hits you like a thousand knives stabbing you all over your body.
That is, if the fall doesn’t get you first.
So, what is this stupid thing
you’re carrying around?
These are good. These are very
good.
I’m marrying Cal.
They’ve got you trapped, Rose,
and that fire that I love about you…that fire is going to die out.
She breathed in a breath of air
to try and stop the tears. And then, she remembered her life after the great,
bloody ship. How she and Jack had traveled all over. How they had just spent
hours in bed, talking. Then their time running and playing with Crystal. How
serene Jack had looked when Crystal had fallen asleep in his arms and he had
nodded off. Most importantly, she remembered the words he had spoken before she
had left him, the night he had died.
"Rose. Rose, don’t
cry." He had reached a frail hand up to touch her cheek. He had tubes
coming from his hands and body, and he almost looked as white as the sheet he
was lying against. "It’s just my time now. We knew it had to happen
eventually." He tried to chuckle, but started to cough.
"It’s cruel. It’s fate
playing that cruel joke on me again."
"I don’t think it was ever a
joke, Rose. I really think I was supposed to die then, but God, or whoever,
thought that I deserved a second chance, but that chance was only good for so
long. I’m being called back now."
Rose tried to hold back her
tears, but they continued to roll down her cheeks. "Why isn’t it my time,
too?" she asked.
"Because you have to take
care of Crystal."
"Crystal is almost sixteen.
If something were to happen to me, too, she would be able to survive on her
own."
"It would be hard. Rose, I
don’t feel angry. Why do you?"
"I can’t lose you
again."
"But you’re not losing me.
I’ll always be here with you and Crystal. I may be leaving this sick body, but
I’ll always be here." He put his hand to her chest, over her heart.
"I love you, Jack."
"This is the time to say
good-bye now." He frowned. "Even though I’m okay with dying, I don’t
like leaving. I don’t want to leave. I love you, too, Rose. I know I didn’t say
it very often, but I do. I have since the moment I saw you, and it never
stopped." Rose bent down to kiss him for the last time. She had known that
it would be the last time right then, but she hoped desperately that it wasn’t.
"Please be happy, Rose. Go on with your life, do more extraordinary
things, and still live every day as if it were your last. It won’t take long
before you’re telling someone else this."
Crystal had gone in to sit with
her father for a while, and she fell asleep in a chair in the waiting room. She
had awakened to the sound of Crystal’s sobs. Rose opened her eyes and saw
Crystal, long red hair down her back, and flowing, clear blue eyes with deep
red rims. Her face was blemished with red on her cheeks, which showed how upset
she was.
"Papa’s dead, Mama."
She bawled even harder. Rose took her into her arms.
"It’s okay, darling. Papa’s
not hurting anymore. Papa won’t ever hurt again." She tried not to cry
into her daughter’s shoulder, but her eyes refused to hold back and the
floodgates spilled over.
She remembered even more how
Lizzie had looked the day she was born. How proud Crystal and her husband had
been. Rose had held Lizzie in her arms and marveled at how much like Jack she
actually looked.
"She looks like Papa, you
know," Crystal said from the bed.
"I noticed." Rose
looked down at her tired daughter. "He would be very proud of you. A
college woman, a darling husband, a perfect baby."
"You’re wrong, Mama."
Rose looked startled. "He is proud. Proud of you, too, Mama. You went
through a lot, and you’re a strong woman because of it. He’s always been with
us. He promised to always be here, and I never felt otherwise."
Rose looked out at the water
again. She didn’t know how long she had been standing there, but now the sun
had set and it was dark except for the stars. The air was chilly. From within
her pocket, she felt the heaviness. She reached into it and pulled out the
awful blue paperweight. She laughed. After she had started to make money, she
had gone back to the pawn shop and reclaimed it. She didn’t know why. It was a
memento of her past life. It was always around to remind her of how different
she was now. She was finally able to let it go. She climbed up onto the second
rail and looked down once more into the abyss.
"Hello, old friends. I’ve
thought about you often. I’ve never forgotten any of you."
She smiled, remembering all those
she had met that had died. She looked at the diamond one last time, and then
watched as it slithered off her palm and into the water.
"I’m ready now, Jack. I’m
coming to be with you now." She sighed and started back toward her
stateroom.
The End.