TRAPPED IN THE PAST
Chapter One
I didn’t quite remember getting off the train
and walking down the confusing streets, looking for the familiar house. I must
have been a sight to see with my "borrowed" clothes, messy hair,
unmade-up face, and three bags. In my defense, one of the bags was in fact a
purse--a very large, overstuffed purse, but still a purse. I still wore that
big, black coat that Cal had put on me, not because it was his, but because
Jack had simply touched it and been near it. I would have worn the dress, too,
but it smelled pretty bad and was in bad shape. The last thing I needed was for
someone to mistake me for a whore. But in these clothes I was numb to the world
and didn’t notice the people staring at me, or the fingers pointed my way.
Now I stood across the street from my Aunt
Katherine’s house, staring at it with an unmoving expression. I wanted so badly
to run inside and throw my arms around her, but I was pretty sure that wasn’t
the right thing to do. In any case, she probably thought I was six feet under.
Oh, this was going to be interesting, all right.
Perhaps I should back up and explain to the
reader just what I am doing here and who my Aunt Katherine is. The response to
the first is not a short one, nor one to be ignored. After arriving in New
York, I didn’t know what to do and had dinked around for a couple of weeks,
sleeping wherever anyone would take me--or sometimes simply on a park bench.
Then, too, I must have been a sight for sore eyes; I didn’t shower or bathe for
a week, I kept my sinking clothes on, and I hardly ate. I was a mess. Not to
mention that I couldn’t think straight all the time, thought only of Jack when
I did, and could hardly sleep for more than two hours a night. I was offered a
boarding room a couple of times, but I declined, saying I had other plans. But
I had no other plans. After a fortnight of this listless existence, I finally
decided that enough was enough. The only person I could think of that would
take me in--or much less understand me at all--was my Aunt Katherine.
Katherine had always been an enigma to me--a
wonderful, free enigma that I placed on a high pedestal. She was my father’s
youngest sister. There were six Bukater children born to my grandparents; my
father was the first. After him came two girls, two boys, and then Katherine.
And by the time she came along, my father was already seventeen. He married my
mother at twenty-six and was just about twenty-eight when they had me.
Katherine was the closest in age to me of any of my relatives, though she was
eleven years my senior, and we always kind of looked out for each other. Well,
she more than I. We were alike in the sense that we were both headstrong and
had ideas of our own. Katherine used to tell me these things when I was just
five or six, and I liked to think that it was because she trusted me. It was
all very well until Katherine turned eighteen and announced that she wanted go
to college. This was absolutely unheard of in my family at the time, and my
grandfather had a fit. He told her that she was to get married and have
children, that her job was no more. But Katherine had different plans. She told
him that she wanted to be a nurse and didn’t want to get married just yet. My
grandfather became so angry when she would not leave him alone that he finally
provided her with an ultimatum--she would either do as he wished or she would
be disowned. Katherine chose disownment.
I had never been more proud of my aunt,
though I was not allowed to say so. I was to be cold toward her, I was told,
and with that the visits to see Aunt Katherine soon ceased. It was more my
mother’s doing than my father’s. He loved his little sister, and probably would
have kept contact with her if it had not been for his wife, who told him that
Katherine would be a bad influence. And besides all that, Daddy was head of the
business now since Grandfather had retired and must show his father that he
believed the same, if he wished to keep his position.
So for eight years I hardly knew of my aunt,
only heard of her once in a while. She not only became a nurse, she went ahead
and was one of the first women doctors in Illinois. Other than one time when I
was ten, it was not until my father’s funeral when I was fifteen that I saw her
again. She arrived discreetly and hid in the back, but afterward she pulled me aside
quickly, slipping a letter into my hands before disappearing again. Once home
that night, I read the letter over and over. It was quick and to the point--if
I ever needed anything I was to contact her and she would help. That was a
promise. At the bottom she left her address in Chicago.
All those nights in Philadelphia after
learning of my father’s debts and our money problems and knowing that before
long Mother would try to marry me off, I often wondered if I should write her.
I wanted so badly to leave like she did. But it was different with my mother
and I. I was her only child. Katherine had been the youngest of six. Without
her, the family still survived. Without me, no such thing would happen. I was
stuck.
It was in New York that I remembered her
promise and got on that train. I had long since memorized the address and
quickly found my way to her house. Now, here I was.
She thinks you’re dead, a loud voice in my head kept saying over and over. And
if she finds out, who knows if the rest of them will or not.
But I had to remind myself that this was not
the rest of my family. This was Katherine. She and I were cut from the same
cloth. We had both been ostracized by our families. Well, one of us surely
would have been if she were still "alive." I decided that I could
trust her.
Taking a deep breath, I walked across the
street and marched right up her front steps. I finally stopped before her front
door, set my bags down, and with a trembling fist, knocked. It took a minute
for Katherine to answer, but when she opened that door and looked at me, her
face went white and she stared as if she were seeing a ghost.
She is, you idiot, I reminded myself. I didn’t know what to do, so I
just stood there, waiting for her to do something. Anything! Finally, after a
minute, I mumbled a soft hello.
"Oh, my God!" Katherine exclaimed,
as if my greeting had brought her back to reality. She placed a hand over her
heart. "Is that really you, Rose?" she asked in breathless wonder.
I nodded. It was I. Not some stupid
sheep that followed whatever society demanded she do. Not that DeWitt Bukater
girl who was supposed to marry Caledon Hockley. It was the real me.
Me. Rose Dawson. No one else.
Katherine’s blue eyes got really big now, but
some color came back to her face. "They told me you were dead," she
stammered. "I got a telegram from your mother. She said you had died…on
the Titanic…something about giving up your seat for her."
I raised my eyebrows. Was that what she had told
everyone? I hadn’t read any of the papers. I didn’t really want to, for the
reason that something like this would be pulled. It disgusted me to think that
it actually had been said. First of all, I wouldn’t give up my seat for her,
and second of all, it was wrong that they had tried to cover up the real
account with bullshit like that.
"There’s more to the story," I
explained to my aunt. There was so much more.
Katherine looked surprised, but she kind of
smiled. "Huh. I guess so." She paused and looked me over, her hands
on her hips. "You don’t look so well," she commented.
Gee, really?
Before I could answer, though, she had moved
aside and motioned for me to come inside. "Come on. Let’s get you some
clean clothes, and then we can talk."
That’s one of the reasons I loved my aunt--no
questions, just care. She looked the same as she had a few years ago--short
physique, auburn hair with the classic Bukater blue eyes. Same old Katherine. I
followed her inside with my bags and stood looking around the hallway as she
closed the door. I had only been here once, when I was ten and we were in
Chicago. My father had sneaked me here for a couple of hours. I’d thought her
house was a magic place then, a haven for those who wanted out of their gilded
society restraints. It still seemed a bit this way to me, even now.
She led me upstairs and down the hallway.
There were three bedrooms: hers and two guests, and a bathroom. I often
wondered why she had so many rooms when it was just her, but when I asked my
mother I was told to shush and not to talk of such things. I was ten; I didn’t
know what such things were.
We stopped in front of a closed door, and
Katherine pushed it open. I immediately recognized my surroundings. This had
been my favorite room when she had given us the tour so many years ago. The
paint was a soft peach color, as were the drapes that covered the two big
windows. There was a big cherry wood dresser with a huge mirror attached, a
desk made of the same material, and best of all, a huge four-poster bed. I remembered
lying down on it before and how comfortable it had been. The same comforter
still graced the tops of the cotton sheets. It was a softer peach than the
walls, but around the edge was about a foot and a half of embroidered silk that
fell to the floor. The whole bed was complete with a down comforter under the
peach one and about a dozen pillows.
"I’ve started calling this the Rose
Room," Katherine remarked, bringing me back to the present.
I turned and looked at her, realizing that
this was because of me. I had spent half the visit in here and the other half
thinking about it. I was flattered, and told her so.
Katherine laughed softly and then motioned to
the dresser. "There are some old clothes of mine in there that you can put
on. The bathroom’s across the hall," she reminded me. With a smile, she
told me that she would be downstairs and then left, closing the door as she
did.
I dropped my bags on the floor and looked
around. I wanted desperately to flop down on the bed and just lay there, but I
didn’t think Katherine would appreciate me doing so in this coat or my dirty
clothes. So instead, I walked over to the dresser and started pulling drawers
open. I was now taller than Katherine, so most of the things looked like they
would be too small. But I finally found a white shirt and a khaki-colored skirt
that looked like they might fit.
I undressed, throwing my clothes in a heap on
the floor, and then stood in front of the mirror, really looking at myself. I
had gotten thin, my hair was a joke, my breasts sagged down, and there was
still a considerably large purplish bruise on the left side of my body where I
had hit that gate. I was disgusted with myself and quickly put some clothes
back on.
After a few minutes, I cautiously opened the
door and peeked out into the hall. I wasn’t sure what to do with my clothes, so
I just left them and started downstairs. It was odd being out of my same old
things, almost as if I were naked without them. I nearly went back to get the
coat, but then told myself it was better if I didn’t and continued on. My bare
feet made no sound on the wood floor and I was able to get to the living room
without causing too much noise.
Katherine was sitting on a couch, holding a
cup of coffee. She handed it to me when I came in and then picked a mug up off
of the coffee table for herself. I sat down across from her in a chair and
sipped my coffee. It tasted really good.
Katherine didn’t say anything, just stared at
me, and I eventually realized that I should probably talk.
I set my cup down and sat back in the chair.
"You know we were crossing on the Titanic," I stated. Of course she
did. She nodded and I continued. Without realizing what I was doing, I told her
the entire story. About Jack, Cal, everything. I kept watching her reactions.
She looked concerned when I told her about trying to jump, but laughed when I
told her about spitting in Cal’s face. And when I told her about Jack dying,
tears welled up in her eyes. I was afraid she was going to cry, so I finished
the story quickly and just sat there. I wished I could cry. But I couldn’t.
Katherine kept her composure, however, and
kept telling me how brave I was. Brave? I hardly thought that was the word for
it. Starved, heartbroken, dizzy, confused, hurt, lost…those would all work. But
not brave. Brave was for people who fought dragons and who went to war. Anyone
would have done what I did if they were in that position. But I kept my
opinions to myself and let Katherine begin to fuss over me. First she started
to ask me all these insipid questions that I answered numbly. Then she tried to
get me to eat, but I wasn’t hungry. It all passed in a blur and the next thing
I remember clearly is lying in the big peach bed, staring up at the ceiling and
listening to the sounds of the city.
What would happen to me now? I wondered, my mind too occupied to sleep. I didn’t
know what to do with myself. All I knew is that I better get over whatever the
hell was wrong with me…and fast. And the best way I knew how to do that was to
try to forget about it. As far as I was concerned, it had never happened.
I tried to sleep after that, but every time I
closed my eyes, I felt an overwhelming sense of dizziness come over me and I
saw thrashing water. So I just lay there and counted the little bumps on the
ceiling. This too, however, made me dizzy, and I soon abandoned the task and
simply stared.
"Come Josephine in my flying machine,"
I sang softly to myself. The silence was really getting to me. "Up she
goes…up she goes…" God, my voice didn’t even sound like my own. It was
distant, aloof.
After about another hour, I rose from the bed
and crept across the room, putting my hand on the cool doorknob and slowly
opening the door. My clothes were still sitting on a heap on the floor, so I
tip-toed out there and began to search through them. I found the coat quickly
and was about to go back when I saw the dress. On impulse, I grabbed that, too,
and then hurried back to my room. Once inside, I wrapped the coat around myself
and wrapped my dress around my freezing cold feet. Digging into the pockets, I
retrieved the Heart of the Ocean and the several wads of cash. Frantically, I
looked around and finally decided to stash them in the very back of the top
right dresser drawer.
Then I climbed back into bed and snuggled
under the sheets, unable to get warm. But the coat helped. I felt a little bit
better this way. Slowly, I drifted off into sleep, more dead to the world than
I was unconscious, but not by much.