Impact

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Impact Page 2

by Billeh Nickerson


  heavy with the feeling

  he’d become a man.

  * * *

  THE WISHING WELL

  As her lifeboat lowered,

  one woman recalled

  a childhood game

  where she squeezed

  both feet

  into the bucket

  from a wishing well,

  and held on tight

  as her brothers

  lowered her

  down

  to the bottom.

  She never opened

  her eyes,

  could only tell

  she made it

  by the splash

  and the lapping sounds

  that reminded her

  of hunting dogs drinking

  from a birdbath

  or pond.

  As her brothers

  pulled her

  back up

  she’d think

  of new excuses

  to tell her mother,

  yet another puddle,

  a spilled glass

  of water,

  a leaky vase

  full of flowers.

  * * *

  EDITH EVANS

  A fortune teller once told Edith Evans,

  beware of the water. For years she walked

  with her head down, convinced that if she didn’t

  she’d someday step into a puddle,

  ruin a new pair of shoes.

  When the last lifeboat left without her,

  the deck all of a sudden filled with men,

  she reached down to her ankles, undid the laces,

  threw her shoes into the darkness—and waited,

  waited for the splash.

  * * *

  THE PIANO PLAYER

  Unlike his musician compatriots

  whose instruments could be carried on deck

  the ship’s piano player could only watch

  as his band mates played on.

  At first he just swayed to the music

  then tapped his feet and hummed

  but he couldn’t withstand

  the ache to play along

  even without a sound

  his hands slipping from gloves,

  his cold fingers

  tickling the air, ghost-style.

  * * *

  EPIPHANY

  All those years, he’d never harmed her,

  not once, until she refused to leave him

  and he dragged her by the arm

  through the crowd to the lifeboat.

  She remembers craning her neck to see past

  the hats of the women around her,

  how the last time she saw him

  the haze of lace atop another woman’s head

  made it seem like a giant spider’s web

  had caught him and the ship.

  In the weeks that followed, she kept massaging

  her arm, watching the bruise change colour.

  It wasn’t until it faded away

  that she believed everything:

  the ship sank after the iceberg hit,

  her husband never would again.

  * * *

  STEWARD JOHNSTON

  As if he worried the women in lifeboat No. 2

  would succumb to scurvy,

  Steward Johnston filled his pockets with oranges

  and later watched as an assembly line

  of cold hands passed the small orbs around.

  One woman thought it strange to be eating

  oranges in the dark and struggled

  to peel the skin with her numb fingers,

  her taste buds unable to decipher

  any sweetness beneath the salt.

  * * *

  SOMEONE'S LUCKY PENNY

  slipped out

  of his pocket

  and drifted

  down

  for two

  hours

  IV. Voices

  SECOND OFFICER CHARLES LIGHTOLLER

  What I remember that night—

  what I will remember as long as I live—

  is the people crying out to each other

  as the stern began to plunge down.

  I heard people crying

  I love you.

  * * *

  STEWARDESS VIOLET JESSOP

  A few cries came to us across the water,

  then silence, as the ship seemed to right herself

  like a hurt animal with a broken back.

  She settled for a few minutes,

  but one more deck of lighted ports

  disappeared.

  Then she went down

  by the head with a thundering roar

  of underwater explosions,

  our proud ship,

  our beautiful Titanic

  gone to her doom.

  * * *

  LAWRENCE BEESLEY

  It was a noise no one had heard before

  and no one wishes to hear again.

  It was stupefying, stupendous

  as it came to us along the water.

  It was if all the heavy things

  one could think of

  had been thrown downstairs

  from the top of a house,

  smashing each other, and the stairs

  and everything in the way.

  * * *

  EVA HART

  When we were in the boat rowing away,

  then we could hear the panic,

  of people rushing about on the deck

  and screaming and looking for lifeboats.

  Oh it was dreadful!

  The bow went down first and the stern stuck up

  in the ocean for what seemed to me a long time,

  of course it wasn’t, but it stood out stark

  against the sky and then heeled over and went down.

  You could hear the people screaming and thrashing about.

  I remember saying to my mother once

  how dreadful that noise was

  and I always remember her reply, she said

  yes, but think back about the silence that followed,

  because all of a sudden it wasn’t there—

  the ship wasn’t there, the lights weren’t there

  and the cries weren’t there.

  * * *

  COLONEL ARCHIBALD GRACIE IV

  There arose to the sky

  the most horrible sounds

  ever heard by mortal man

  except by those of us

  who survived this terrible tragedy.

  The agonizing cries of death

  from over a thousand throats,

  the wails and groans

  of suffering,

  none of us will ever forget

  to our dying day.

  V. Impact

  CARPATHIA

  By chance the Carpathia’s wireless operator

  kept his headphones on

  while undressing before bed

  and in what should have been the last moments

  of his long shift, he overheard messages

  destined for the great ship.

  Come at once.

  We have struck an ice berg.

  It’s C.Q.D., Old Man.

  When her Captain learned of the disaster,

  he ordered heating and hot water turned off

  to conserve as much steam as possible,

  so that her passengers,

  scheduled for sunny Gibraltar,

  awoke to cold cabins.

  Although designed for only 14.5 knots,

  she conjured up 17.5 that night

  as she rushed to the rescue.

  As she grew closer to the scene,

  the Captain ordered rockets fired

  every fifteen minutes

  as a navigational tool for any lifeboats,

  but mostly as inspiration

  for those who’d spent all night in the dark.

  When she arrived at four a.m.,

  her crew couldn’t believe


  all that remained of the world’s largest ship

  lay before them in the wreckage

  floating amongst the ice

  and the lifeboats that speckled the sea.

  Surely, there must be something else,

  they thought, how could she

  just disappear?

  * * *

  FIRST MEMORIAL

  Even the children knew not to play

  around the mountain of lifejackets

  piled on the Carpathia’s deck.

  How strange they seemed empty,

  lifeless on top of lifeless,

  their collars looking more and more

  like holes.

  * * *

  ROSA ABBOTT

  While Rosa Abbott contemplated

  how her family might still be together

  had her arms only been stronger—

  her sons once again pulled from her body,

  into the Atlantic cold and un-amniotic—

  a fellow passenger combed Rosa’s hair,

  stroke after stroke, determined to untangle

  the piece of cork that lodged itself

  while she’d struggled to stay afloat.

  It took a long time and with each stroke,

  again and again, the repetition lulled them

  like the soft strophe of a child’s song.

  * * *

  THE YOUNG WIDOW

  Of all the widows, newlywed Mary Marvin

  had the unfortunate distinction

  of being able to watch

  her wedding after the fact,

  for her husband’s father owned

  a motion picture company

  and made theirs the first wedding

  filmed for all to see.

  Although she would see her eighteen-year-old self

  grow older over the years,

  her nineteen-year-old groom was forever

  on a film loop, never to change.

  * * *

  THE CARVER

  His wife remarked he’d developed

  a carver’s tick where he gently blew

  on everything he cared for

  as if fine sawdust impeded his view—

  be it of her bedtime body or his daughter’s forehead.

  As a child he whittled away at sticks,

  non-stop it seemed, so that his mother teased

  whenever she needed to find him

  she just followed the trail

  of his fresh wood shavings.

  His father nicknamed him the termite

  and his sisters chastised

  for all the wooden bits

  they found

  in their petticoats and frilly dresses.

  When he grew up a master carver,

  it seemed a perfect fit,

  like the way Cinderella’s elegant foot

  found a matching slipper,

  only this time made of wood.

  During his years at Harland and Wolff

  he dreamed in the curlicues

  and elaborate patterns handcrafted

  into the oak panels and staircases

  that made First Class first class.

  The day he learned of the sinking

  he felt an ache not only in his heart,

  but in his fingers and in his lips

  as he blew away at the non-existent

  sawdust, and cried.

  * * *

  NEW YORK

  Out in the harbour, one reporter chartered a boat

  to shadow the rescue ship,

  used a megaphone to tempt the crew

  with the promise of a few month’s pay

  to give an exclusive interview

  by jumping overboard and swimming to him.

  Thirty thousand gathered that night around the pier,

  more than a full house

  at major league baseball’s Hilltop Park.

  Some showed up to confirm

  the fate of their loved ones,

  others just hoped to satisfy their curiosity

  catch a glimpse of the survivors,

  the famous, the infamous,

  all that spectacle and pain.

  * * *

  GROUP PHOTOGRAPH, SOUTHAMPTON

  Someone thought it a good idea to document

  the devastation further—as if numbers weren’t

  vivid enough—the photographer moving them,

  boys in back, girls out front,

  each of them a relative

  of a lost Titanic crewman.

  It’s the same sort of photograph taken

  after coal mine disasters or when an entire fleet

  from a fishing village goes missing—

  in every photograph there’s always

  an older sister holding a younger sibling

  or boys almost old enough for a father to teach them

  how to shave. In every photograph there’s always

  a young girl with a big smile,

  just an ordinary girl

  smiling.

  * * *

  THE CABLE-SHIP MACKAY-BENNETT

  Although it seemed a cruel irony,

  the crew stocked her hold

  with one-hundred tons of ice.

  They covered her decks

  with burlap and coffins,

  enough embalming fluid for hundreds.

  They brought along an Anglican priest,

  undertakers who wondered

  how they’d work at sea.

  Not even double wages

  or extra rum rations,

  not even reminders

  of how much comfort

  they’d bring grieving families

  could lessen their dread

  of the moment

  they discovered wreckage

  and needed to begin their task.

  They had fished all their lives

  for haddock, mackerel, and cod,

  but never for corpse,

  so when they arrived on scene

  they thought the white specks

  in the distance were seagulls,

  not whitecaps caused

  by waves breaking

  over bodies.

  Men in teams of five

  lowered themselves into cutters

  no larger than Titanic’s lifeboats

  and in the open ocean

  they searched

  for those held up by lifejackets,

  many with arms outstretched

  like sleep walkers,

  though they’d never wake again.

  Row, situate, grab, and hoist.

  Row, situate, grab, and hoist.

  Row, situate, grab, and hoist.

  They retrieved over 300,

  including a young boy,

  no more than two years old.

  In Halifax, one newspaper

  nicknamed her The Death Ship,

  as if she were the root

  of the tragedy,

  and not just another messenger

  forever changed

  by the knowledge

  she brought back

  to shore.

  * * *

  TEN MINUTES FAST

  He always prided himself on being timely,

  set his pocket watch ten minutes fast,

  a trait the men in his family shared

  along with broad shoulders, dimpled chins,

  and a taste for adventure.

  Had he travelled with his father or brothers

  the embalmer who found him

  might not have been surprised

  to see the pocket watch indicate two-thirty—

  ten minutes after the Titanic went down—

  but as he travelled alone,

  his was the only watch out of step.

  At first the embalmer pondered how

  he’d cheated the ocean of those precious minutes—

  whether he’d stayed afloat

  atop a piece of wreckage or treaded water

&n
bsp; with the watch held over his head—

  then, in an indignity specific to his family,

  the embalmer declared he’d arrived late.

  * * *

  THE EMBALMER'S DAUGHTER

  Her mother once explained

  it was like playing dollies,

  dressing people up in their Sunday best,

  pretty as a picture, her father’s hard work

  helping everyone remember

  how much they loved someone.

  She thought of this whenever

  children threw spitballs or rocks,

  pulled the ribbons from her hair,

  or teased that she smelled like a corpse.

  No matter how fragrant the soaps

  or expensive the perfumes,

  it was if they could smell

  the disinfectant and formaldehyde

  that followed her family

  as fish smell follows fishermen.

  When word spread that the boat

  filled with the Titanic dead

  would soon return to Halifax,

  she thought of her taunting classmates

  and her father’s hands working hard

  to make things beautiful again.

 

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