Written by Maru
Based on some situations originated by James Cameron.
Rose felt frustrated. There was
not a more appropriate word for it--she was frustrated. After spending all day
with Jack, hiding from her mother, she couldn’t believe that she had been found
just in time to be placed in a lifeboat with the woman she practically hated.
And the worst part was that Jack had been pushed away from her. Now the Titanic
was sinking and she didn’t have a clue as to Jack’s fate. She just prayed he
had found his way to another lifeboat. She needed him; she wanted to start over
and she needed him by her side, to guide her, to protect her…she couldn’t
picture herself starting over alone. Jack had to join her.
She hadn’t noticed that tears had
formed in the corners of her eyes. What if Jack didn’t make it? Would she go
back to her fiancé and pretend nothing had happened? Or would she have the
strength to turn her back on her mother and Cal and move on, with nothing more
than Jack’s memory to keep her company? She doubted she was strong enough to
break free; at least, not alone.
She looked up once again and saw
the Titanic slowly but surely sinking. At the beginning, she had held some
hope--the Titanic was an unsinkable ship, a floating palace. Surely they were
evacuating them as a precaution, not because they were in real danger. But there
was no doubt about it now. Half of the ship was underwater and there didn’t
seem to be a way back. Deep inside, she knew that in a matter of minutes the
ship would be gone.
Rose was unable to look at it any
longer, so she looked down at her shoes, trying to stop the tears. She couldn’t
lose it; not yet. She had to remain calm. She sighed and felt a bit more
serene, but she didn’t look up.
She was surrounded by other women
who seemed to be in the same state of shock as her. Some sobbed, some whispered
prayers, but most of them stared quietly at the ship. Only one of them acted
completely natural, as if nothing had happened.
"Do you think we’ll have to
stay here much longer? It’s very cold and I’d like a cup of tea," she said
loudly.
Rose looked up, a mixture of
emotions filling her. People were dying and all the woman could think about was
tea? She should be thankful she was in a boat!
"Shut up, Mother!" she
suddenly snapped. This was too much for her. She had put up with her mother’s
attitudes, but this was more than she could handle. "Don’t you understand
that people are dying out there? Don’t you realize that the water is freezing
cold? Are you aware of the fact that in a couple of minutes hundreds of people
could–and will, in fact--die?" she asked in a whisper, not wanting to
spread panic among her companions.
"Why should I worry about
them? You’re here, right? Rose, you’re my family and I’m yours. All we have is
each other. Now, I understand you’re worried about Cal, but…"
"Oh, my God," Rose said
in disbelief. "I can’t believe it. After everything that has happened, you
still think I’m worried about Cal? I’ll tell you, Mother, that if he dies
tonight, I won’t spill one tear over him. And as for that family thing…"
"Come on, Rose. We both know
this is not you talking," Ruth told her, looking nervously around the
lifeboat.
"No, Mother, you’re wrong.
This is me! This is who I really am, only I didn’t know before. I’ve tried my
best to please you, but nothing I ever did seemed to be enough. Now I’m going
to do what I want, when I want. And if you don’t like it, then you can…"
She never got to finish her statement. She felt someone pulling her sleeve and
forcing her down–she hadn’t even noticed that she was on her feet by now.
"Calm down, Rose. There’s no
need to lose it," Molly Brown, another woman on the boat, gently told her.
"I’m sorry, Molly. I don’t
know what came over me," she apologized, hiding her head in her hands. She
sighed, once again trying to regain composure, but before she could, her mother
gave all of them her own views on Rose’s behavior, and she couldn’t take it
anymore.
"You must excuse my
daughter. She became very fond on a steerage boy and started acting this way.
Nothing a day of shopping won’t fix," Ruth explained.
The girl looked up, not knowing
what to say to hurt her mother like she had hurt her.
"Jack was no steerage
boy," she said, trying to keep her voice as normal as possible.
"Oh, I’m sorry. Wasn’t he
the man who joined us at dinner? Or did he have a poor twin brother?" Ruth
asked coldly.
Rose had to bitten her tongue to
stop herself before saying what she really thought. "You know what I mean.
Jack was a better man than any of the others I met…he was brave, sweet,
noble…in other words, he was a real gentleman, which is more than some of
your…" She couldn’t finish. She put a hand to her mouth, horrified.
She noticed Molly Brown shaking
her gently, trying to bring her back to reality, but she needed more than that
to shake away the shock of what she had just said. Jack was this and that? Why
was she talking of him as if he was dead? Why had she given up hope already?
"Rose, are you still
here?" she heard Molly asking her. She shook her head and felt the tears
falling. She couldn’t lose hope yet! Jack was the only good thing in her life
and she couldn’t lose him yet. She had to hold on for as long as possible.
"When we dock," Rose
announced, turning to her mother, "I’m getting off with Jack."
"Oh, Rose, don’t be absurd.
We all know that you were with him only because it annoyed me," Ruth said,
almost laughing.
"Mother, I love Jack. And
I’m not going to let you or Cal or anyone come in the way of my happiness
again. Take a good look at me, Mother, because after we dock, you won’t see me
again. I promise."
She turned around and directed
her attention to the ship, which was almost vertical by now. She silently
prayed for Jack to make it out of this alive. She had already announced that
she would break free, and there was no turning back. But without Jack, she knew
she wouldn’t last a day. "Please, Jack, come back to me," she
whispered.
It was past two in the morning
when the Titanic finally disappeared. Rose had seen it happen, her gaze blurred
from the tears. It was hard to believe that something so big, so luxurious, so
supposedly safe was gone, but it was the cruel truth.
As soon as the noises from the
sinking itself died out, a new set of sounds reached Rose’s and everyone else’s
ears. And it was a far more distressing sound--the cries for help from the many
people floating nearby.
Rose had thought that nothing
could upset her more than those cries. She covered her ears, not wanting to
hear them, but she soon discovered that the worst was yet to come. After mere
minutes, the voices, too, died out, and the silence took over. That silence
could only mean one thing--death. No sooner had the voices stopped than Rose
prayed for them to come back. She wished someone would say something; she
didn’t like that silence at all.
She hadn’t realized that another
lifeboat had approached theirs. The officers exchanged a few words and then
ordered the women in Rose’s lifeboat to move to the other one so this one could
go to look for survivors.
Ruth was one of the first to
move, and she dragged Rose with her. She tried to fight her, but she knew that
she would have to move anyway. Still, once in the other lifeboat, she made sure
to sit as far from her mother as possible and tried to put as many people
between them as she could. After a few minutes both boats were ready and they
parted.
Rose followed officer Lowe and
his crew with her gaze. She hoped someone else followed his example and that
together they found hundreds of survivors. But she knew too well that that was
impossible. The most rational part in her hoped they could save as much as ten,
knowing that the cold water must have killed most of them by now.
"Is anyone alive out there?
Can anyone hear me?" Lowe’s voice echoed.
Besides the light of his
flashlight, Rose couldn’t see him. She followed that glow, trying to
distinguish a familiar face, but they were too far from the place where the
Titanic had been to see anything. She could tell, however, when they stopped,
probably attracted by a sign of life, but she noticed that they only stopped
five times.
Five times…was it possible that
only five people had survived in the water? She refused to believe it; she had
probably lost track. They couldn’t have stopped only five times.
After a while, she noticed that
the light was getting bigger. Officer Lowe was coming back. There wasn’t anything
else he could do for them. It was over.
Rose continued to look at the
light. Was she really expecting to see Jack waving at her from behind Lowe? Not
really. But it was better to focus on the light than on the silence.
And then, suddenly, she heard a
sound–the most incredible sound in the world. Rose watched as Officer Lowe
commanded the boat back towards the mass of lifeless bodies. She heard him yell
something, but did not care. That sound filled her.
There was someone out there
blowing a whistle to catch their attention. Someone who hadn’t given up yet;
someone who had some hope left. Despite the water, despite the cold, despite
everything, there was someone still fighting.
The women in her lifeboat looked
at the light–the only thing visible through the darkness. The officers, too,
stopped rowing for a while and let that sound be the only thing in their lives
for just a second. And they weren’t the only ones. The wind, although
imperceptible, carried the whistle through the vast ocean. All the survivors
heard it and, for as long as it rang in their ears, they felt safe again. That
whistle blowing seemed to be telling them not to worry.
Rose closed her eyes and let her
mind go blank. All she heard, saw, or felt was that whistle blowing. She heard
it even after the person blowing it had been lifted into the boat. She heard it
even after they had restarted their journey. As a matter of fact, she would
still hear years later, every time she thought of the Titanic. That whistle
would, from now on, represent hope to her. But of course, she didn’t know that
now.
All she knew now was that the
whistle brought her joy and relief. She would soon find out why.
An hour or so later, Rose noticed
lights on the horizon. It’s far too early for sunrise, she thought. The
women on the boat seemed as lost as her, but the officer quickly told them that
the lights they saw were rockets.
"Another ship is
coming," he explained. "Don’t worry. They’ll pick us up in a couple
of minutes, I’m sure."
But they had to wait another hour
before they could consider themselves out of the water. Her lifeboat, number
two, was the first one. A Jacob’s ladder was thrown from the Carpathia and
officers on both sides helped them up. Rose noticed her mother making her way
first, so she waited. One by one, the women exited the lifeboat. Rose stood
behind a particularly large woman and managed to remain unnoticed by her
mother, who happened to have her back turned to her when she stepped on the
ship.
She quickly grabbed one of the
blankets the officers were giving out and covered her head with it. Then she
headed to the third class deck. She had already promised her mother that she
wasn’t going to go back to that life. Just when she turned a corner, she heard
her calling her name. Still, she didn’t turn around. It was too late now.
Once she thought she was safe
enough, in a place where neither her mother nor Cal would dare enter, she sat
down on a bench and sighed. Somehow, she felt much calmer than the night
before. She knew that it would take them a while to pull everyone up on the
Carpathia, so the only thing she could do was wait. She was sure that this was
where she was supposed to be–whether Jack had lived or had died.
After a while, an officer came
and placed a mug full of some hot liquid on her hands. She thanked him and
drank it in a desperate attempt to warm herself. The coat, which was still
splashed from the night spent drifting, wasn’t enough and she was using her
blanket to hide her curls–definitely her trademark--from anyone who might
recognize her. There was only one man she wanted to see, and she was sure he
didn’t need to see her hair to find her. She drank her coffee–it was
coffee--and felt instantly better.
She couldn’t stay still for long.
After a couple of minutes, she jumped to her feet and started wandering around
the third class deck, but everywhere she turned she was greeted with crying
women or people looking sympathetically at her. That made her mad. She didn’t
need their sympathy. She knew that Jack was alive. She didn’t know how. She
just knew. Every since hearing that whistle, she had known.
She walked towards the stern of
the ship, to the place where it had started. Here she had met Jack–at least, in
a place that looked like this. She could hardly believe that it had only been
three days ago. For her, the few days spent with Jack had been like a lifetime.
She had been born the moment she had taken his hand and let him pull her back
onto the Titanic. How could she care about anything when Jack was looking at her
with those beautiful blue eyes?
She knew that Jack would come
here to try to find her. She noticed a couple of boats still floating nearby
and wondered if Jack was in one of them. Could he see her in the distance? She
thought about waving, but she knew it would be stupid.
She focused her attention on the
horizon again. It was sunrise already. It was incredible that just twelve hours
ago she had been making plans with Jack regarding their future together.
"When the ship docks, I’m
getting off with you," she had announced.
"This is crazy…" he
had replied, thinking that she had lost her mind.
"I know. It doesn’t make
any sense. That’s why I trust it."
And they had kissed. Rose put a
finger to her lips, almost feeling him. Their last kiss…after that, they had seen
the iceberg and they had immediately known what was to come. He had taken her
to her family and had stayed by her side for as long as possible. But when her
time arrived to get in the lifeboat, he had had to leave. He had kissed the
back of her hand, smiled at her, and turned. She would never forget the look on
his face. He hadn’t needed to use words; his eyes did the talking for him. Rose
had known what he had meant--he would find her. And she had trusted him and she
had hoped he was right.
That was why she couldn’t stand
people looking sympathetically at her. Why did everyone just assume the worst?
Why couldn’t they at least wait for all the lifeboats to be emptied? Or was she
being irrational, trying to hold onto something impossible? She didn’t care. To
her, Jack was alive until proven otherwise.
By the time the last lifeboat
arrived, most of the Carpathia passengers had awakened and were gathered on the
deck to see what had happened. Rose knew that the crowd would be enough to hide
her from her family, so she dared go to the deck to see if Jack was there.
Boat number twelve was the one
commanded by Lowe; the one–the only one--that went back to look for survivors.
While the officers helped its passengers, Rose scanned the crowd, but didn’t
see Ruth or Cal. She turned her attention back to the officers.
The first passenger was already
on the Carpathia. A group of nurses walked towards him and wrapped him in
several blankets. They did the same with the second and the third and the
fourth…every time Rose saw them, her heart beat faster, but only for a split
second. She soon realized that none of them was Jack.
Four people were already on the
Carpathia. If Rose was right, there were only two people left in the boat. She
saw one officer reaching out for the next survivor and then she saw another
hand. The sun reflected on something the man was holding, something silver. The
glint blinded her for a second, but she blinked it away. Could it really be?
She opened her eyes again just in
time to see the officer pulling the man up. He landed next to the officer,
apparently too exhausted to move one inch. The nurses were about to get him,
but Rose was faster.
"Jack!" she cried,
rushing towards him. She grabbed a pile of blankets from one of the nurses and
threw them over his shoulders. She also gave him her own blanket. "Talk to
me, Jack!" she begged.
He hadn’t moved at all while she
did this. She stroked her hands over his hair and chest, but still he did not
stir. She noticed that he was as cold as ice, so she was starting to get
worried, but she noticed that his eyes were open. He was conscious, but in
shock.
She sighed, a bit more calmly. He
was alive. That was what mattered.
"It’s all right, Jack. It’s
all right…" she whispered gently.
She reached for his hand, but
realized that he was already clutching something. She looked down and gasped,
for Jack was holding a silver whistle.
"It was you," she
whispered. "You were the one with the whistle. That was why I heard it and
knew everything was going to be all right. It was you, Jack!"
It was hard to stop the tears,
but she knew she had to. She couldn’t break down yet; she had to be in one
piece for Jack. She stood up and pulled him to his feet; then, she put his arm
around her shoulders and walked him the hospital ward. One of the nurses helped
her and in no time she was placing him in a bed. The nurse left to bring him dry
clothes and Rose sat by his side.
She suddenly noticed that his
eyes were closed.
"Jack?" she called.
"Open your eyes, Jack."
Once again, she received no
answer from him. She placed her hand on his chest, praying to feel his heart
beat. But not even that could calm her down. She needed to hear it from him.
She needed to hear his voice telling her that everything was going to be all
right.
"Jack, please!" she
begged, unable to hold back the tears. "Please."
She placed her head on his chest
and heard his heart beat. He couldn’t leave her now; not after everything that
had happened. He had made it this far. Why not a bit more?
She sobbed quietly, her tears
falling onto his collar. His chest went up and down with every breath he took.
There was no way she could survive
alone. Jack had showed her that life was for living and it was because of Jack
that she was here right now. He wouldn’t leave her–she wouldn’t let him.
"You have to go now, miss.
We’ll call you if anything happens," the nurse, who had returned carrying
a pile of clothes, told her.
Rose nodded, pulled herself up,
and looked at Jack again.
"You promised you’d find
me," she whispered. "I’ll be at the stern," she informed the
nurse.
"I’ll send someone in a few
minutes. As soon as we know what’s wrong with him," she promised.
Rose nodded gratefully and left.
The nurse had told her the truth.
Less than fifteen minutes later, Rose was told by one of the officers that Jack
was suffering from hypothermia and pneumonia. His condition was severe, but
since he was young and strong, he had a great chance of surviving.
Rose was grateful to hear this,
but she was still worried. She wouldn’t allow herself to relax until she heard
Jack telling her it was all right to do so. She wanted to be next to him, but
the officer had been clear--no visits.
She sighed and suddenly realized
how tired she was. She hadn’t slept in thirty-six hours and she had been
wandering around the ship for four. She spotted an empty bench nearby and sat
on it, completely incapable of staying on her feet for one more minute. She lay
back and stared at the sky above her. The sun shone just like it had shone
yesterday. How was it possible? After last night, how could the sun shine like
nothing had happened? Hadn’t it heard the news?
Now she was thinking crazy.
Surely the lack of sleep and the shock had gotten to her. She yawned. Maybe she
should try to get some sleep. Besides, she could hear of Jack any minute and
she had better be at her best.
She noticed something in her
hand. She opened it and found the silver whistle. She must have taken it from
Jack without noticing. Smiling, she put it back into her pocket. That whistle
meant so much to her–to them, actually, her and Jack. That whistle had given
her hope when she had almost given up. That whistle had helped Jack survive and
had brought him back to her. She decided that she would always treasure that
whistle, and smiled to herself. Then she closed her eyes and fell fast asleep.
She was awakened a couple of
hours later by the same officer as before. The news he brought this time were
far more pleasant--Jack was awake and had asked for her. Rose jumped to her
feet and followed him into the hospital ward.
Jack was sitting up in bed, pale
as the sheets, looking expectantly at the door. At this sight, Rose felt that
she could finally let go; she didn’t have to pretend to be strong anymore; Jack
was there. Jack would take care of her.
She smiled at him and made her
way towards the bed, where she was received by him. He took her hand in his and
gently pulled her closer. She was surprised to feel that his hands were still
cold, although his chest and neck were as hot as fire.
"Fever," he explained,
noticing her concern look. "Don’t worry. Nothing a few days resting won’t
cure."
"How are you feeling?"
she asked.
"I’ve been better and I’ve
been worse," he replied, smiling. "Don’t worry, I won’t die. It takes
more than a cold to kill me."
"Cold?" she repeated,
looking at him. "From what I’ve heard, you have more than a cold. The officer
told me you suffered from hypothermia and pneumonia."
Jack shook his head, showing her
how little he cared. "I feel perfectly fine, so don’t worry. I could as
well have a cold."
Rose smiled and placed her head
on his shoulder. "In the end, that’s all that matters."
Jack kissed her forehead and
leaned back in bed. Truth be told, he didn’t feel as great as he had told Rose,
but he didn’t want to worry her. He closed his eyes and tried to catch his
breath; even the few words he had spoken had been a great effort.
He felt Rose squeezing his hand
gently and opened his eyes. He found that she was looking at him with love
glowing in her eyes.
"You don’t have to pretend
you feel great," she reminded him.
He smiled gratefully at her.
"I will get better," he promised.
"I know you will. But for
now I can take care of you. Don’t worry."
He kissed her again and then,
smiling at her, he said the words he had been meaning to say ever since the
third class party.
"I love you, Rose."
For a split second, she looked
utterly shocked, but then she, too, smiled at him and replied, "I love
you, too, Jack."
The End.