Written by Maru
Based on some situations originated by James Cameron.
March 12, 1918
Rose sat outside, watching the
rain fall and smoking a cigarette. In the distance, she heard the shots, the
cries for help, the explosions…but she had learned to block everything out. In
the beginning, she had found it hard to be here in Europe in the middle of a
war, with people dying right next to her, but she had somehow grown used to it.
She had enlisted as a nurse the
very same day she had read in the newspaper that the Lusitania had sank and the
United States would probably soon be taking part in the war. She had felt a
need inside her to go to Europe, to help…in her mind, staying at home while so
many of her neighbors were fighting would have been like…like staying in a
lifeboat while the ship sank. And she couldn’t do that. Not again.
"Rose, dear, Dr. Johnson
needs you inside," one of the other nurses told her.
She finished the cigarette and
dropped it to the ground before following her friend back into the building
where the hospital was located. The sight that met her eyes was terrible, but
she barely noticed it.
"Nurse Dawson! Over
here!" someone called.
She walked towards Dr. Jacob
Johnson, who was kneeling next to a man whose face was completely covered with
mud and blood.
"What can I do?" Rose
asked, looking for the injury to the man’s body.
"He’s been shot in the
chest," the doctor explained. "Get some morphine. Quick!"
The nurse sighed and ran to the
cabinet where the drugs were kept. It was obvious to her that the man was
dying, but he deserved care nonetheless.
Dr. Johnson was a very handy man,
so after almost an hour of hard work, he announced that the soldier was likely
to recover.
"Check on him every hour and
let me know if there’s something wrong."
Rose stood quietly, watching the
man breathe. She found it hard to believe that he had made it through the
surgery and was now sleeping peacefully. Suddenly, an overwhelming feeling came
over her and made her want to clean his face. She didn’t know why. She just
felt it had to be done.
But she hadn’t even walked two
steps from his bed before someone called to her and she had to turn her back on
the man and walk away.
It was almost midnight before
Rose was free again. She didn’t have to work that night, since another nurse
was in charge of checking on the patients during the night. She was walking to
the door, ready to get a well deserved night’s sleep, when she remembered the
soldier she had taken care of earlier that day. Dr. Johnson had specifically
asked her to check on him every hour, and she had completely forgotten.
"Are you coming?" Lana,
one of the other nurses, asked her when she noticed that Rose had stopped.
"I need to check on a
patient," she explained.
"Well, let Helen do it.
She’s in charge tonight," Lana suggested wisely.
But Rose would not hear of it.
She told Lana and the rest to go without her and turned around. She wouldn’t
normally do something like this, but it was different this time. She
felt…something about that particular patient intrigued her.
She got to his bed. Someone had
cleaned his face, but in the dim light, she couldn’t see him very well. She
could tell, though, that he was young–perhaps in his mid-twenties–and that he
had light hair. From the sound of his breathing, he was fast asleep.
Rose stood at the foot of his
bed, feeling inexplicably nervous. She watched his chest going up and down with
every breath he took. It was as if she needed to know that this man was fine.
What the hell is wrong with
me? she asked herself.
She looked at the man’s face one last time before turning to leave.
But before she had taken two steps,
she heard a sound at her back and turned around. The man had just awakened and
was sitting up in bed. He was breathing faster, as if he had had a nightmare.
Rose looked around and saw that the other nurse was busy with another patient,
so she walked back to the bed.
"There, there. You just had
a bad dream…" she told him gently as she cleaned the sweat from his
forehead with a wet towel.
She helped him lay back against
the pillow and fixed his blankets. She waited for him to say something, but
since he didn’t even stir, she thought that he deserved to know where he was
and how he had gotten there.
"You are in the
hospital," she explained. "We almost lost you, but you’ll be fine.
You were shot in the chest."
Thinking that the man might have
gone back to sleep, Rose took a step back, ready to go to her room, but she
suddenly noticed his lips moving. She guessed more than heard what he was
trying to say.
"You should’ve let me
die," he whispered, sounding annoyed.
"You don’t mean that, I’m
sure…"
"Oh, I’m positive. I came to
Europe hoping to get killed, but apparently, I can’t even get that right."
The man turned his back on Rose,
who examined his profile, though it was dark inside the building.
"You wouldn’t know what it
feels like…" he muttered, still staring at the wall.
"Oh, I know."
The words shocked her. For years,
she had avoided talking about anything that had happened before April 18, 1912,
the day she had arrived in New York. She had pushed all the guilt, all the
pain, everything, back. And yet here she was…confessing that she, too, had felt
like dying once. That she would have gladly enlisted in the Army to get killed.
"I know you feel like hell
right now, but it goes away eventually. In the end, you’ll realize that you
have to live, and you’ll move on. All the pain you experience at the beginning
is replaced by memories. Good memories, I mean…it’s actually a rather nice
feeling," she explained as she thought of the one she had lost. She closed
her eyes and saw flashes of those three days spent next to the man she had
fallen in love with.
"Well, it’s not true in my
case. Every day that goes by I feel worse and worse…I can’t take it anymore. I
need it to stop. Now."
Rose put a comforting hand on his
shoulder.
"Listen. Like I told you, I
know the feeling. And that’s exactly why I’m not going to tell you something
stupid like you’ll forget her soon. I know that things like losing someone
can’t be forgotten. All I’m saying is that you’ll learn to live without
her."
"Her? How do you know that
I’ve lost a she?"
For a second, she felt like
laughing–which was amusing, considering what a depressing thing they were
talking about.
"I’ve lost a he. I know the
symptoms."
"Oh…I’m sorry for your
loss."
"Likewise," she
replied.
They remained in silence for a
minute or so, each of them obviously in their own world. Finally, the man
decided that the nurse was trustworthy enough and he decided to tell her the
whole story.
"You’re right. I did lose a
she, six years ago…but it’s not just her. It seems that every time I get close
to someone, they die. I’ve lost my parents, a couple of friends, my…Rose…it’s
one thing to get over one loss, but when you’ve seen so many of your
acquaintances die, you start hoping you’re next. I don’t expect you’ve ever
felt like that."
"True," Rose agreed.
"I’m lucky enough to have lost only one person–actually, I lost my father,
but I was little more than a child when it happened, so I don’t remember much.
And I haven’t talked to my mother in years…but what hurts the most–the one I
truly miss--is him."
"Well, think how much it
hurts to have lost one person and multiply it by a thousand. That will give you
an idea of how much it hurts," the man told her.
"This Rose…" the woman
suddenly said. "Was she your wife…your fiancée…?"
The man didn’t reply at once. He
took a moment to put his thoughts in order.
"I think that if I had to
put a name to it, I would say we courted. But she wasn’t my girl. You know what
I mean? We didn’t really have the time to court." He stopped, but Rose
didn’t interrupt his silence. "There are so many things about her I never
asked…her favorite color, her favorite food, her father’s name…all I know about
her is that she was wonderful and that I loved her, though I didn’t even get
the chance to tell her that. See how pathetic my life has become? Every time I
close my eyes, even if I blink, I see her looking at me, waiting for me to join
her. But I can’t get close to her. Every time I reach out, she fades
away…"
The man had tears in his eyes and
was wearing an expression that told Rose that he was seeing his love right now.
She felt sorry for the man because she understood him. She, too, saw Jack
everywhere she turned.
"If there’s one thing I
learned from the man I loved, it’s this--you have to move on. I promised him
that I would make it with or without him, and I have. I miss him with all of my
heart, and if I was to die tomorrow, I would be happy, because I would be with
him. But I’m not going to put a bullet in my head, because I know that he would
be extremely disappointed in me. Once, he made me realize that I would solve
nothing by taking the easy way out, and I now agree with him."
"Sounds like that man was
very wise," the patient said.
"He was the best. And he
enjoyed living so much…to this day, I can’t understand why he died. There’s a
part of me that…but it’s impossible."
The man was going to ask her how
the man she had loved had died, but before he could open his mouth, another
figure approached his bed and looked in puzzlement at the nurse.
"Rose? What are you doing
here? Don’t you have the night off?"
"I do, Helen, but I decided
to check on my patients before I left because I’ve been so busy today that I
completely forgot about them."
"Well, I can take it from here.
Go to sleep. God knows you need it," Helen told her.
"You’re right. See you
tomorrow," Rose said.
The man in the bed followed her
with his eyes. He saw her going to the door and looking back at him, as if she
wanted to say something, but she changed her mind and opened the door.
Before she could leave the room,
a bit of light entered the room and fell upon her. In the distance, the man
caught a glimpse of the woman’s curly red hair and her green eyes.
His jaw fell open. "Could it
be…?" he murmured.
Although she had assured Rose
that she could handle all the patients, it turned out that Helen paid no attention
to Rose’s new friend. Normally, he wouldn’t have cared, but he desperately
needed to talk to someone.
That night, he managed to fall
asleep, thinking that the following morning Rose would come back and he’d be
able to ask her all he wanted to know.
But when he woke up the next
morning, it wasn’t Rose who was standing by his bed, but a brunette girl who
looked no more than fifteen years old.
"Good morning," the
girl said cheerfully.
"Hi," the man replied,
trying to hide his disappointment.
"Dr. Johnson took a look at
your wound while you were sleeping. He thinks that you’ll be out of here in no
time."
"Great," he lied.
"I’m going to bring you
something to eat. You must be starving!"
The girl walked away, leaving the
patient alone with his thoughts. Had he really seen what he thought he had
seen, or had it been his mind playing tricks on him? It wouldn’t have been the
first time that he imagined that Rose was close to him. But this time it had
felt so real…they had even talked. She had told him about a certain someone she
had lost…if it had been a dream, Rose would have revealed herself to him, like
she always did.
The little nurse was back five
minutes later, holding a tray of food.
"There you go," she
said as she placed the tray on his lap and helped him to sit up. "You
should eat. You almost died yesterday."
The man nodded. He took the fork
and put a bite in his mouth, though he didn’t feel hungry at all. He felt
confused, and the only person who could help him was most likely a ghost.
"Call me if you need
anything," the girl said. "My name’s Hannah."
"Actually…I could use your
help right now," the man said, giving her one of his most charming
smiles–the kind he used whenever he wanted to get something. It worked, because
the girl giggled. "Last night, I was talking with a nurse, and I wanted to
continue that because I was having the best time…" He didn’t dare to say
that he thought that the nurse was his long lost love, because it would’ve made
him look stupid.
"I think that last night
Helen was the one who stayed, though she’s not what you’d call a good
companion…she would have most likely talked about your wounds and the kind of
surgery she would have performed on you…you wouldn’t have had the best time
with her…I know I don’t."
The man grinned. "No, when
Helen came, the girl left. I think I’ve heard that her name is Rose. Is it
possible?" He tried not to sound too hopeful, even though his heart was
racing so fast that it felt as if it was going to escape him.
"Well, it’s very possible.
We have two nurses called Rose. Rose H. and Rose D. Rose Harrison is a tall,
fat, brunette…she’s nice, but she talks a bit too much for me."
"And the other? Rose
D.?" the man asked.
"I doubt it was Rose D. who
you talked to. She’s not too talkative…I have never heard her say more than ten
words in a row."
"Oh…then I must be mistaken.
Maybe I dreamed of talking to her…never mind."
All the hopes and dreams that had
built inside him for the last couple of hours vanished. All his will to live,
which had come back like a wave, abandoned him once more. Again, he wished the
doctor hadn’t saved him. He wanted to be with Rose again; he wanted to hold her
again…he was tired of fighting.
"Hannah?" the man asked
when she was a couple of beds away from him. "That girl, Rose…what does
the D stand for?"
"Dawson. Rose Dawson,"
she replied. Then she restarted her work.
Jack sat paralyzed with his gaze
fixed on the spot where Hannah had been standing mere seconds ago, but he
didn’t see the other soldiers lying in the beds. In fact, all he saw was
himself, six years ago, waiting in a line to disembark.
People–mostly women and
children--surrounded him, but he might as well have been alone, for he didn’t
feel them. He was inside his own head, haunted by grief and pain…it was too
much for him to handle, too much. All he wanted was to die right there.
An officer approached him and
gave him a sympathetic sort of look.
"May I take your
name?" he asked him.
"Jack Dawson," he
replied, staring at his shoes.
He heard the sound of the pen
scratching across the paper as the officer wrote down his name. Jack guessed
that he would now move on to the next sobbing woman, but he was surprised to
see that the officer had not yet finished with him.
"Excuse my interference,
but were you traveling with someone? Because I have a Ro…"
"No," Jack
interrupted him, looking up for the first time. "I was all alone."
He had already checked the
list a thousand times. He had searched the Carpathia all over, had asked every
single crewmember, but he hadn’t found her. None of them, actually. His
friends, his acquaintances, Rose…all of them had died. The Titanic had killed
them all.
Jack–the present Jack--opened his
eyes, which he didn’t remember closing.
He had checked, he repeated to
himself. He had searched the whole list for someone named Rose. There had
been–he now remembered--a Rose Dawson, but he had thought it impossible that
she had taken his name. Dawson was a very common last name, so he hadn’t, for
some reason, dared to believe that that was the same woman he was trying to
find.
"How could I be so
stupid?" he asked himself loudly, making some of the other patients turn
to look at him.
He sat back up and tried to get
on his feet, but his legs felt numb and didn’t seem to be strong enough to
carry his weight. Still, he wasn’t going to let that stop him from finding
Rose, not this time.
With a huge effort, he stood up.
Every step he took hurt like hell, but keeping Rose’s face in mind, he managed
to get to the door. He stopped and looked pleased at what had been his bed. He
reached out to open the door, but in that moment, Hannah appeared and looked
angrily at him.
"What on earth do you think
you’re doing?" she asked him.
"I have to go. Thanks for
taking care of me; I feel much better now. Hardly any pain," he lied.
"Oh, no. I don’t think so.
Come on. Let’s get you back to bed."
"You don’t understand; I
need to find Rose. I need to tell her that I lived…"
"Delusional," Hannah
commented as she grabbed Jack by the arm and guided him to his bed. "You
must have a fever."
"No, I’m not sick. I…I just
need to…Rose…" But he could not finish his thought. Hannah gave him some
medicine and he soon fell asleep.
The last thing he thought before
succumbing was that it was very annoying to be treated like a naughty baby.
Yawning, Rose pushed the door
open. She hadn’t slept at all, thinking of the patient she had left in the
hospital. For some reason she still did not understand, she felt connected to
that man. Perhaps, she thought, God had put her in his way to help him
understand that life was worth living–just like Jack had made her realize six
years ago.
Nevertheless, she didn’t have
time to worry about the man now. She had to work.
"What a morning!" Lana
exclaimed a couple of hours later when she, Rose, and a couple of the other
nurses sat outside the building to have a well-deserved break.
"Do you think this will ever
end?" one of the youngest asked no one in particular.
"I hope it does; I have a
home to go back to, a family waiting for me…" Helen said, and most of the
women nodded in agreement.
"Lucky you," Rose
muttered.
"Don’t be so hard on
yourself, Rose. I’m sure that Mr. Right is out there somewhere," Helen
told her.
I know perfectly well where
Mr. Right is, Rose
thought, but she did not tell them. She couldn’t talk about him.
The nurses talked about trivial
things for a while, until somebody suggested that they all go back. Everybody
agreed.
"Oh, I forgot to tell
you!" Hannah suddenly announced. Everybody looked at her. "Do you
know the handsome young man in bed twenty?"
"What about him?" Rose
asked, shocked. The handsome man in bed twenty was her patient, the one she had
been talking to.
"He’s gone completely
mad."
"Mad? But that can’t be. He
seemed perfectly normal when I talked to him yesterday," Rose opined.
"You talked to him? Oh…he
told me that he had talked to someone, but I didn’t believe him. Anyway, he
tried to run away, said he needed to find someone, tell her that he was
alive…poor thing. I gave him something to sleep."
"Poor boy." Rose
sighed. "Who did he want to see?" she asked curiously.
"Eh…I think he wanted to see
you, actually."
"Me?"
"Yeah. He said that he had
to find someone named Rose and tell her that he was alive."
"He must’ve been talking
about his girl…anyway, I should see if I can do something for him…poor boy. He
has no one to turn to."
She hurried back inside the
hospital and walked straight to bed number twenty. It was much lighter now, so
when she got close enough to the bed, she stopped dead and stared at the man,
who was still asleep.
The years had done nothing to
Jack Dawson. He looked exactly like she remembered him. Tall, thin, blond…the
only thing strange about him was that he was alive!
"Jack…" she muttered,
her eyes fixed on his pale face. "Jack, wake up," she whispered.
"Jack…" Tears had started to fall from her eyes, but nobody noticed
them.
She fell to her knees, completely
overwhelmed. This man could not be Jack; he just couldn’t. If Jack had been
alive when the Carpathia picked them up, she would have known, because she had
checked; she wouldn’t have missed him. Jack had drowned. The suction had been
too much for them to handle and he had let go of her hand as soon as the Titanic
had disappeared under the water. She had called his name; she had tried to find
him in the crowd, but he hadn’t been there.
But on the other hand, hadn’t
Jack told her that he was a survivor? And hadn’t she trusted him? She had been
sure that Jack would survive. As they hung from the back of the ship, she had
feared for her life, not his.
"No," she whispered.
"No, he died," she said, trying to push the hope away. This man
wasn’t–couldn’t be--her Jack.
"Rose? What happened to
you?" she heard someone ask her, but she did not reply. She felt someone
grabbing her by the arms, trying to help her to her feet, but still she did not
move. "Get Dr. Johnson!" the same voice ordered.
All the noise woke Jack up. At
first, he didn’t understand what was going on around him. He saw a group of
women gathered around something he could not see, but then one of them moved a
little and he saw what appeared to be a mass of curly red hair lying on the
floor.
"Rose?" he asked.
"Rose!"
For the second time that day, he
ignored the pain that filled him when he stood up and walked towards the crowd.
"What are you doing? Go back
to bed!"
Paying no attention to the nurse,
Jack knelt beside Rose and put his hands on her shoulders.
"Rose…Rose, it’s me,"
he whispered. She stopped sobbing, but did not look up. "Talk to me,
Rose," he pleaded.
"No," she muttered,
shaking her head. "No, it’s not you. You’re dead; you died! I…I must…I’m
imagining things."
"No, Rose, you’re not. It’s
me; I’m alive. Please, Rose, you have to trust me."
She shook her head again and
covered her eyes with her hands.
"Still the stubborn girl I
knew," Jack commented, smiling. "Come on, Rose. Take my hand."
He moved his hands to her face
and took her hands. He felt her trembling, but she let him take her hands from
her face, though she still had her eyes shut.
"Rose…"
"If I open my eyes now and
you’re not here, I will feel really stupid and I…I will cry and…and everybody
here will think I’m an idiot…and…"
"I promise you, Rose, that
when you open your eyes, I’ll be here."
She sighed and opened her eyes.
Since they were so full of tears, she didn’t recognize him at first, but after
a few moments, she saw him smiling at her and exclaimed, "Jack!"
She threw herself into his arms
and hugged him with all her strength.
"You’re here! You really are
here! How? I thought…I looked…" She pulled away and looked at him.
"Oh, my God! You look terrible!" she said.
"Well, thanks, Rose; you
look great, too," he replied, smiling.
"No…you almost died
yesterday! You should be laying down, not…come on." She got to her feet
and helped him do the same.
She guided him to his bed and
covered him in blankets, then sat next to him.
The nurses looked amazed at them,
but instead of asking Rose what was going on, they thought it was best to leave
them alone since, it was quite obvious, they had a lot of catching up to do.
"I’m so stupid…I completely
lost it," she apologized. "What about you? You’re awfully calm. Did
you know I was alive?"
"God, no. Not until this
morning, at least. Even last night, when we talked…I felt something, but I
didn’t know it was you. When I heard your name was Rose, I assumed it was a
coincidence, and even when I saw that you have red hair, I didn’t think it was
you. But today, I heard that there was a nurse here called Rose Dawson…"
"Oh, so you’ve heard…"
she said, looking away, ashamed. "In my defense, I needed a new name to
hide from my mother and Cal, and yours seemed…right."
"I underestimated you, Rose.
It never even occurred to me that you would take my name. Thanks for trusting
me."
She smiled at him and laid her
head on his chest.
"Jack? I love you,
too," she whispered.
He smiled at her. "That
wasn’t the way I had planned to tell you, but what the hell! I love you; I
really, really do."
They sat there for what seemed
like hours. Jack caressed her hair and whispered things in her ear. She felt
amazing and never wanted to leave, but they heard some noises coming from
outside and Rose bit her lip.
"I should go to work
now…" she said bitterly.
"I understand."
"I don’t want to go…"
"But you have to."
She stood up and fixed her dress.
"I’ll be back as soon as I
can," she assured him.
"I’ll be waiting for you
here."
She smiled at him. When she
turned, Jack sat on the bed and reached out to take her hand. He pulled her
back, making her fall onto him.
"Don’t I at least get a kiss
for being such an understanding person?"
She smiled at him and kissed him
with all her might.
"I’ll be right back,"
she repeated.
He kissed her again and then let
her go.
"Do you think we’ll ever
have a normal relationship? Without people or bombs constantly interfering
whenever we want to be together?" he asked her as he watched her leave.
"It wouldn’t be much fun
that way, would it?" she replied, smiling. He smiled back at her.
"Hurry up. I need a nurse
constantly looking after me," he joked.
Rose managed to convince Dr.
Johnson to keep Jack in the hospital for a couple of weeks to make sure he was
really recovered. The truth was that while Jack was there he was safe and she
could see him every day. As soon as he was discharged, he would have to go back
to fighting and there was a chance he would be killed.
"You have to promise me that
you will survive, Jack," she told him the night before he left. "I
don’t think I can handle losing you again."
"You won’t lose me, Rose.
I’ve been avoiding death for years now and I’m not planning to lose my life
now," he assured her. "Do you trust me?"
"Yes…" she admitted
reluctantly. "Well, you’d better get some sleep. Somebody is going to pick
you up first thing tomorrow."
"Rose, I’ll be fine!"
he repeated, noticing that she wasn’t being completely honest with him.
"I know, but that doesn’t
stop me from worrying, does it?"
Jack moved away a little so that
she had room on his bed. She crawled next to him and buried her face in his
shirt.
"I’m sorry! I promised
myself I would be strong, but I can’t. Jack, please, don’t die…I know I told
you I had managed to let go, but I can’t. If you die, I…"
"I’ve never been so happy in
my entire life; I’m not going to let anyone take you away from me again, okay?
Now, get some sleep. You also need to be rested tomorrow."
Rose fell asleep after a couple
of minutes, but Jack didn’t. He checked that she was really asleep and crawled
out of bed. Somebody had brought him his few belonging, which included only a
pocket watch that had belonged to his father and a pad of paper. He sat on a
chair that had been placed at the foot of the bed and started to draw Rose.
When he was done, he folded the paper and put it in his pocket. Then he took
another sheet of paper and started a different drawing, one of a couple
standing on the bow of a certain ship, their arms widely extended and the wind
in their faces.
A quarter of an hour later, he
had finished and looked pleased at it. Then he looked back at Rose, who was
still sleeping peacefully on his bed, and smiled. He turned the page and wrote
his good-bye to her, since he knew that waking her up the next morning would
mean a tearful good-bye and would do him no good.
Dear Rose,
I know that when you wake up
you’ll be very mad at me for leaving without waking you, but you have to admit
that it’s easier this way. I love you, Rose, and I want the best for you. And I
can’t see you crying, far less when it’s my fault.
Two weeks ago, I used to think
that my life was horrible–remember what I told you? But that changed the moment
I discovered that you were alive. For the second time, you came into my life
and made everything look good again. I know you think that I was doing well
before I met you, but you’re wrong. I was bored with my life, bored with my
loneliness, with having no one waiting for me where I went…but now that I have
you, that has changed. Wait for me, because I’ll be there. Sooner or later,
this’ll be over and I’ll come find you. It will be great; I have it all
planned.
Anyway, I should probably take
advantage of the bed while I can…I love you, Rose, and I can’t wait to see you.
Jack
PS. I hope you like the
drawing. For me, it was the best part of our trip, wasn’t it?
Jack folded the paper and left it
on the chair, and then he crawled back into the bed, where he fell instantly
asleep.
Jack had been right in predicting
that Rose would get angry at him when she woke up and found him gone. However,
when she found his drawing and his letter, she had to admit–though she didn’t
tell anyone what she felt--that he had been right--watching him leave again
would have been awful. So, she chose to believe him and waited for him.
Two days went by without any kind
of news. Then another day came and went, and still no word from Jack. After a
week, just when she was starting to lose it, she got a letter from Jack telling
her that he was in Belgium. On April fifteenth, he wrote her a very short note,
which said only:
Still alive. Don’t panic!
Love,
Jack
She smiled when receiving it,
because she knew that Jack was probably worried about her, since it was the
anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic. But that was all she heard from him
for months. He occasionally wrote her a few lines, but he didn’t say much.
"But no news is better than
bad news, right? No news is good news," she usually replied when someone
approached her, asking her how she was doing. And it was true--she knew that if
something happened to Jack, she would know. Since he had no family, Rose had
become the only person who cared about him, and he had told everyone to contact
her in case of anything. At least, that was what he had told her in one of his
very few letters.
April gave way to May and then
came June…every day, Rose would wake up early and stare through the window for
a couple of hours, until it was time for her to go to work. She would examine
each patient’s face carefully, thinking that Jack could be one of them, but she
never found him. As the days went by, she started to find it harder and harder
to focus on her task, and her workmates were beginning to get annoyed by her
attitude.
"We all have our men
fighting out there, but you don’t see us distracted!" Helen told her one
day.
"I know, I know…sorry,"
she apologized, not really meaning it. All she cared about was Jack, and Helen
wasn’t going to make her change her mind.
But not everyone thought like
Helen. Rose received a lot of support from the younger nurses, who were still
amazed by her love story.
"Still no word from Jack?
Don’t worry. Something probably happened to the mail," Hannah usually told
her.
"Yes. Yes, that’s probably
it. The mail…"
Finally, in the early days of
July, the nurses couldn’t take it anymore and decided that it was time Rose took
a break.
"Look, honey, we understand
you. We really do. But we have to work. People are risking their lives and are
counting on us to save them, and frankly, you’re putting us behind," Lana
told her.
"I know. I’m sorry…"
"Nobody is blaming
you…"
"I know. But I don’t want to
go. Please, give me a chance. I promise I won’t think of Jack so much."
In the end, the nurses agreed to
give Rose another chance.
"But if I catch you
daydreaming again…" Rose H. warned her.
"I’ll be out of here. I
know. Thanks."
From that day forward, she tried
to keep Jack of her head. It wouldn’t be the first time, would it? she
told herself. It worked pretty well for a week. One nurse was constantly
watching her every move, but other than that, everything went back to being as
it had been before that evening in March.
But then her life took an
unexpected turn yet again. It was an evening in July and Rose was about to
finish her shift. She was standing at the foot of a bed, writing something down
about the patient so that the night doctor would know what to expect about him.
She was close to the door, but she didn’t notice the man walking through it.
He stopped in the doorway and
examined the room, as if trying to find someone in particular. But before he
noticed Rose, a tiny nurse approached him, a wide smile on her face.
"Mr. Dawson, what brings you
here again? Another nearly fatal wound?"
Rose dropped the chart she was
writing in. Jack smiled.
"Actually, Hannah, I’m not.
Have you seen…"
"What are you doing here? I
thought you were in Belgium!" Rose said, turning to face him.
"Never mind," Jack
added, still addressing Hannah. "Your friends wrote to me and told me you
weren’t concentrating enough on your job and that it was my fault. Well, I
couldn’t be responsible for your transfer, so I came back. I spoke to my
commanding officer, told him I wanted to be transferred to France, and he
agreed," he explained.
"They wrote to you? Why
didn’t you tell me?"
"I did. I told you! I wrote
you a thousand letters. Something must have happened to the mail."
"Told you!" Hannah
commented from a corner, where she and a couple of other nurses were trying to
listen to their conversation.
"So…you’re here…again…"
"It was hard enough having
to live thinking you dead, but now that I know you’re not, it’s much harder not
to see you every day," he told her, holding her hands in his.
"You’re so amazing,
Jack…sometimes I don’t know what I did to deserve you," she replied,
smiling.
"Are you on duty for much
longer?" he asked her.
"Uh…actually, I was just
leaving." She turned to Helen, who had just opened her mouth to say
something. "Yes, I’m leaving. I’ve been behaving perfectly well for the
past few weeks and this is my reward. I haven’t let Jack interfere with my
work, so…if you need me, don’t try to find me. I’ll see you all tomorrow."
Grabbing Jack’s hand, she dragged him outside.
"You haven’t changed one bit
since I first met you," he said.
"Is that a good or a bad
thing?"
"For me it’s great! Cal
might find it unacceptable, though."
"That makes it even
better!"
They laughed like they hadn’t
laughed in years. They walked for a while, until Jack came to a sudden halt.
"Listen, Rose, there’s
something I’ve been meaning to ask you for a while now, but–I must say--I’ve
been behaving like a coward–or a child. I prefer a child."
"Jack, what’s wrong? I
didn’t know you were the nervous kind of person…" she said, still smiling.
"I’m not. I’m really not.
I’m nervous now, but that doesn’t mean that I’m a nervous person…"
"I was joking! Seriously,
what’s going on? Should I be worried?"
He smiled at her. "No, you
should not," he assured her. "If anyone should be worried, it’s me--I
could ruin everything!" he added, more to himself than to Rose.
"Jack?"
"Okay, okay…here it goes.
Since I first met you, Rose, I knew you were special. You were hanging from the
back of that ship, willing to give up your own life just to teach two horrible
people–I know one of them was your mother, but…well, you must excuse me for not
liking her--a lesson. And I must say, you looked damned good–you still do, by
the way--" Rose smiled at him. "You are the most powerful woman that
I’ve ever met, and I fell for you like I’d never fallen for anyone before. The
three days we spent together were great, the best I had had in years. But then
we got separated, and I felt as if I were dead. I came here to die, but
instead, I found you…God works in mysterious ways, doesn’t He?"
"Tell me about it! But I
don’t understand. Why were you so nervous about telling me this?"
He took a deep breath, and then
added, "For the past six years, I’ve felt like hell, and I don’t want to
feel like that again. I love you, and I don’t want to lose you again, so I
guess that what I’m trying to say is this--Rose…will you marry me?"
She stared at him in shock. Never
in a million years could she have predicted this. Jack, asking her to marry
him?
"I know you may think it’s
too soon, but, if you think about it, we’ve known each other for six years. And
besides, we’ve already make it through a crazy fiancé, a controlling mother, a
sinking ship, six years apart, and we are about to survive a world war. That’s
more than most couples have to go through, right?"
"Jack, please, stop
talking," she begged him.
"Oh…oh, I see. Yeah, I know
what you think…"
She put her hands to his face and
forced him to look at her.
"I can’t kiss you unless you
shut up," she told him.
He gave her a quick smile, but
before he knew it she was on him, kissing him like she had never kissed him
before. After what seemed like hours, they stepped apart. After a few seconds
of catching her breath, she looked at him in the eye, and said, "Of course
I will marry you."
She smiled at him, and he smiled
back.
"Good…" he said, trying
to sound carefree, but failing. Rose’s smile grew wider, seeing him like that.
"Then I guess I should give you this," he added, pulling something
out of his pocket. Rose gasped. "It belonged to my mother," he
explained. "She gave it to me shortly before she died. She said that I
should find the perfect girl and give it to her. And now, I finally have."
"Jack, it’s…gorgeous!"
she whispered.
He knelt in front of her and took
her left hand in his.
"I can’t wait to make you my
wife," he said, as he put the ring on her finger.
"Neither can I. I mean…I
can’t wait to become your wife."
They spent hours walking through
the streets of the small town near which Rose’s hospital was located. They were
oblivious to the people around them, to the sounds of the bombs in the
background. All they cared about was the upcoming wedding, which would take
place as soon as the war was over.
"So, all we have to do now
is wait, right?" Rose asked.
"Don’t worry, Rose. Things
will eventually fall into the right place," he assured her. "They
always do."
He kissed her on the forehead and
together they watched the sunset. Jack felt confident now. He knew that this
time was the right one--he and Rose were finally ready for what would surely be
a great, long love story. On the Titanic, they had both had a lot of unfinished
business and they hadn’t been ready for one another yet. But that had changed.
No war could keep them apart any longer. They would have their happy ending.
The End.