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Hearts That Survive

Page 13

by Yvonne Lehman


  Armand had a direct connection with the Cunard Line, which wired that White Star had sent the message that the Titanic had hit an iceberg but all was well. As he conveyed the message to the pastor, both breathed a sigh of relief. The damage wasn't as bad as some reports made it out to be.

  He began making and receiving calls immediately. Halifax would need to take care of the ship's passengers until they could be transported by another ship or by train to New York. He didn't know what he could do, but he'd be available.

  Nobody believed that there was any real trouble. The Titanic was the greatest, grandest mode of transportation ever built.

  Other than the one Noah built, Armand thought with a trace of humor. But God had directed that one down to the kind of wood and the size. He'd have to look into it and see which was larger, the Ark or the Titanic.

  But he wasn't trying to make a point. For all he knew, God had instructed Andrews and Ismay and each worker about how to build that ship. Noah's problem was rain. The Titanic's was an iceberg.

  Both floated, apparently, because the next message came that all the passengers were safe on the Parisian and the Carpathia. Because of ice encountered on the way to Nova Scotia, they would be taken directly to New York.

  The train trips were cancelled.

  It looked like their initial scare was unfounded. They wouldn't have to find available space for thousands of ship and train passengers.

  But the crew would need their help. The Titanic was being towed by the Virginian to Halifax.

  29

  Time didn't mean anything anymore, and Lydia wondered if they were all dead and this was a forever place. There was nothing to scream about now. A stillness lay in the air and across the smooth sea.

  All of a sudden someone found a voice. And another.

  "We're saved. We're saved," rang out over the ocean. She couldn't imagine that that boom and light on the horizon represented safety. An irrational crewman lit a piece of paper and a woman's hat to wave above his head as a signal. That would make no difference.

  Did anything?

  Nevertheless, an object came into view. Something inside warned she might be hallucinating. "Careful. Be still," someone cautioned.

  But hope stirred in the little boat as the bigger object drew nearer. Where the rowers found strength, she didn't know. They wanted to get on that ship, for it to take them somewhere, for some reason unknown to her.

  The ship stopped. People in the boats climbed up rope ladders. Some were taken up in chairs dropped for them. Officers quietly gave orders. Crew members acted in a professional manner, as if this took place every day.

  Lydia was fastened into a chair, and she began to rise. Looking up, she saw passengers lining the railings, silent, staring with the kind of concern and disbelief she'd seen on that other ship.

  Maybe John was here. Had been in another boat. When she was brought to the deck and taken from the chair, someone wrapped a blanket around her and held her around the shoulders while she shivered. They were asked if they were first-, second-, or third-class passengers. She opened her mouth to speak, but nothing came out. She was led to the wall, and she slumped against it and slid to the floor, exhausted.

  People were around but it was like a—no, not a dream. A vague awareness. So tired, so cold. "Let's take the coat off and wrap you in another warm blanket."

  After a while she was able to reach out and take the cup offered. It was warm. She could swallow, but it hurt going down her aching throat. That didn't matter. Finally she could lean her head back.

  Someone mentioned the lovely sunrise.

  Nothing was lovely. She should have let the sea swallow her up. But not as long as there was a chance, for John. She was wearing a wedding dress. Harriett's wedding dress.

  "Harriett," scraped across her throat and onto her tongue.

  "She wouldn't leave without her models and staff and dresses."

  Lydia wasn't sure she had uttered the name aloud. Nor had she known Molly was next to her. Then she saw Caroline and the children.

  Molly added to her statement, "That was her life."

  Was.

  John was her life. When feeling returned to her frozen limbs, she went to the railing and stood looking out to sea with the others, ignoring those who said soup and sandwiches were available in the dining room. She couldn't eat.

  She stared at the hundreds of people who were being brought aboard from the lifeboats, more slowly than the sun rising above the horizon. Then someone said there were no more boats.

  No more?

  There had to be.

  One more.

  "Nothing more out there but ice." That was said so quietly. So matter-of-factly. She looked to her right. And left. Sympathetic expressions were on every face. So different from those below that grand staircase, in that other life she had lived. These people were divided into classes too.

  Passengers wore stylish clothing.

  Survivors wore blankets.

  "Beautiful sunrise," someone said, as if it hadn't been said before, and a response was, "Yes."

  What was wrong with them? That must be a Carpathia passenger saying such a ridiculous thing. She would never have a sunrise without John.

  She didn't know the blanket had slipped from her shoulder until it was put back on and held with an arm across her shoulders. After another forever moment she allowed her eyes to slide to the side. Was it John?

  Her head turned quickly.

  Craven.

  It started to come. It rose in her throat. She put her hands on her stomach. Nothing came up but the taste of bile. The sound from her throat was foreign. She'd heard it somewhere. Yes, now she knew. She'd heard it on the ocean. From those helpless, freezing to death. It was a death groan. A hundred, a thousand death groans.

  She was freezing to death without John.

  He would not leave her. Like this. With her hand on her stomach, she remembered. His look had said Take care of our child. She couldn't. Without him. Her stomach seemed to know that.

  What little sense her mind had, knew that.

  So she stared at Craven, saw his mouth move with incoherent words like come away from the rail, let's get you something, you need to sit, eat, drink something, sleep, foolish meaningless things like that. What good would any of it do?

  She tried to give voice to her thoughts. What are you doing here? Why didn't you put John in the boat instead of yourself? If you cared about me why didn't you make sure John was with me? You could have picked him up instead of that child.

  That's when she knew she was an evil person. Oh, she wanted that child to be safe. Her thought was not against that child. She wanted the thought to go away. She looked toward the sun, and it hurt her eyes. They were filled with dry tears, and the sun baked her eyes, hurting.

  She wanted everyone to be safe. But for herself, she wanted John. She turned, and the announcement was made that everyone should meet in the main lounge. There would be a service.

  As if they were the walking dead, they obeyed. They crowded in and sat or leaned against walls and each other. A minister thanked God for those who were saved and spoke a few respectful words for those lost at sea. Many murmured prayers.

  A woman became hysterical. A few others joined. Captain Rostron fought back tears, and when the short service ended, he announced that names would be taken. Survival lists would be wired to New York. A doctor would examine each person. Then they could go to the dining saloon for brandy, coffee, breakfast, and then be told where they might bunk.

  Like sheep, first-class passengers followed stewards and stewardesses to the dining saloon, and Lydia sat at a table.

  "Your name, please?"

  How could she speak? She had not spoken all night after yelling herself hoarse calling for John. She could only make a rough sound. She didn't know how she'd managed to say "Harriett" earlier.

  She would try. With effort she began. "Mrs. Jo—"

  "Her name is Miss Lydia Beaumont," the familiar voice sa
id.

  She didn't bother to look up. "No."

  "I need to let her know that a wire is being sent to her father."

  A wire? Her father?

  She managed to turn her head then and saw a wrinkled tuxedo and knew who wore it. Craven again.

  Struggling, she found her voice, although it sounded and felt like an enflamed throat. "He has to know I'm here. I'm not—"

  "Lydia, save your voice. Sip your tea, it will help." He sat in front of her. "You are listed as a passenger of the Titanic under the name Miss Lydia Beaumont. Do you want to give a different name, have everyone including your father think you're lost at sea? What do you think that would do to him?"

  What was she doing?

  What others had done during that awful night. Anything. Hope. Find just a bit of warmth. A bite of food. A swallow of fresh water. A reason to be floating for hours and hours, a lifetime in a . . . toy boat.

  What they were doing was called survival. That's why they refused to go back for those pleading and freezing in the ocean. Their boats might capsize.

  She took a sip of tea, and the swallowing wasn't quite so difficult. She looked over at him, handsome, calm. "How can you be so calm?"

  "Somebody has to."

  She stared at her cup. That was what the rower in her boat had said. "Stop your bickering, complaining, moving around, making demands. We have to keep our heads about us." He'd been quite adamant and had said even more harsh things and had used strong language. He'd done it through the night when people lost hope, wailed they might as well get into the ocean—he'd said go ahead. They didn't.

  Yes, someone had to keep their sanity.

  It would be easy to lose.

  30

  Monday, April 15, 1912, Halifax, Nova Scotia

  Since Armand had been awakened by that piercing telephone call early in the morning, chaos rose in his mind, spread to his office, moved over the entire city of Halifax, and, like a thick fog impossible to see through, was settling throughout the world.

  He considered himself an organized man. He chose to be an attorney who tried to make things right when there was a conflict. He liked to settle disputes, or questions of what was right and wrong, and to help solve problems, sometimes legally and sometimes with common sense, and always with God's help.

  But he was struggling to grasp the truth in what was being reported. He wouldn't go as far as some who said the Titanic couldn't have gone under because it was unsinkable. But it was . . . unthinkable.

  Another article came through.

  The gravity of the damage to the Titanic is apparent, but the important point is that she did not sink. . . . Man is the weakest and most formidable creature on the earth. . . . His brain has within it the spirit of the divine and he overcomes natural obstacles by thought, which is incomparably the greatest force in the universe.

  Wall Street Journal

  He didn't exactly care for the way the Journal reported the event, but at the moment he wanted to know what was happening, and what might be expected of Halifax. They could hardly prepare without proper information.

  However, headlines and articles in the New York papers were contradictory, as Jarvis had said. So were radio reports. It seemed reporters were trying to get a story and didn't care about accuracy.

  Another came.

  ALL SAVED FROM TITANIC AFTER COLLISON

  The Evening Sun

  THE NEW TITANIC STRIKES ICEBERG

  AND CALLS FOR AID

  VESSELS RUSH TO HER SIDE

  The Herald

  As the day grew brighter, the news became darker. Radio messages were delivered, not in professional voices, but in fearful ones, as if reporters couldn't believe what they were saying. Reports of a number of lives having been lost changed to reports of a great loss, and finally, a horrible loss.

  By mid-morning, the grim news was no longer rumor and speculation.

  The Virginian would not tow the Titanic to Halifax.

  "I regret to say that the Titanic sank at 2:20 this morning," came the official announcement from the White Star office in New York.

  A survivor list was posted on the front window of the White Star office and a copy relayed to Halifax. Several passengers from Nova Scotia, including the Marstons, were not on the list.

  The Carpathia was taking 675 survivors to New York.

  If the unthinkable were true, and only 675 had survived, then more than fifteen-hundred souls had perished.

  Reports were that thirty-thousand people lined the streets of New York. Many in Halifax gathered in respect and sympathy for them. Almost everyone knew someone who knew someone on that ship. They certainly knew about them, since many of the most prominent people of Halifax were, or had been, aboard that ship.

  The Carpathia reported no other information, except a revision when another name was removed from the survivor list.

  The Carpathia would steam toward New York for three more days. Survivors would be in great sorrow. Have great needs.

  Was there nothing Halifax could do?

  Rev. Oliveera isolated himself in an office to phone other pastors, wanting to make sure those in the U. S. knew Halifax would assist in any way. Prayer meetings would be set up throughout the city.

  Armand didn't know which was whiter, the face of Jarvis or the paper he handed to him. When Armand read it, he understood.

  There was something Halifax could do, after all.

  The request put the face of reality on the nightmare. This was not something anyone was going to forget soon, if ever.

  The request had been made and confirmed. The words had been printed and accepted. The chore that lay ahead of those fulfilling the request involved an unspeakable horror.

  31

  Captain Rostron had first-aid sections set up with doctors and nurses. Some survivors had obvious cuts and bruises. Lydia passed the examination within a few moments. Her limbs had thawed and now moved adequately. She answered a few questions and was apparently deemed normal.

  Normal?

  So many things made her want to laugh. Not that anything was funny. Just ironic.

  Madeleine and two other women were assigned to the captain's quarters. Many first-class passengers gave up their rooms and suites. When Lydia was taken to the room, she saw an adjoining door and didn't have to ask who would be on the other side.

  A knock sounded. The stewardess stepped aside to allow a young woman to enter. A maid accompanying her held an armload of clothes.

  The young woman introduced herself as Kathryn, on the way to New York with her parents to visit relatives. "You look about my size, Miss Beaumont. Choose any you like."

  Lydia sat on the bed. "Just anything. I appreciate this."

  "Oh. I want to help." Kathryn looked tearful and turned to show another dress. "They don't compare with what you're wearing."

  "They're lovely." How different this was from when Harriett presented her originals.

  She reached out to take the blue day dress but drew back her hand. She might be wearing it for a couple of days and should take one that wouldn't as easily show wear. "The brown one, if you don't mind."

  The girl nodded. "I'll leave the blue one too." The maid put them in the empty closet. Lydia didn't ask where the girl and her parents were staying. They would know that if they'd been so fortunate as to have traveled on the Titanic, they could be on this side of things.

  "Do you want my maid?" the girl asked tentatively.

  "No. I'll be fine. Thank you."

  "Bye. Oh, here's a nightdress."

  Lydia bathed, aware that she'd washed her hair only yesterday. Less than twenty-four hours ago. And yet, a lifetime.

  Soon, she stared into the mirror at the brown dress with delicate fawn lace designed to enhance one's feminine charms. But she was wearing a stranger's dress and Caroline's wedding band. She couldn't use the name of the man who'd given her the happiest day of her life. And inside her, she carried the child of her husband, who was . . . where?

&n
bsp; She faced . . . what?

  She didn't know what to do. But a meal was announced. Which one?

  She left the room and saw Caroline, Bess, and the children coming from their suite. Immediately they were joined by her . . . escort?

  There was hushed conversation at dinner. She was glad to return to the room, get into the nightdress, and take one of the sedatives the doctor had given her.

  She crawled between the sheets that had probably been slept in before and then laundered. The ones on the Titanic had been slept on by only her. Now they were wet.

  These would be too, because she cried herself to sleep.

  She awoke in the night, freezing and terrified, and repeated the cycle.

  32

  Henry wanted to sleep with his sister. He wanted to hold the package in bed, but there wasn't room.

  "We can put it on the table, and you can watch it," Phoebe said. "Hold my teddy bear."

  He lay on his side with eyes wide until he could keep them open no longer. He clutched the teddy bear while Phoebe kept her arms around him and soothed him in the night when he awakened screaming for her.

  Caroline knew his little ears had heard it all. His little heart beat with as much fear as a grownup's. She could not grasp the immensity of what had happened. How could a child's tender mind even know what to ask?

  Finally the children slept, and so did Caroline. But they were all awake before breakfast was announced. She and Bess dressed the children in clothes other passengers had given them.

  Caroline saved Lydia and Craven a seat in the dining room. When Craven ushered her in, she noticed how delicate and young Lydia looked. Last night—was it only last night?—she had been gorgeous. Now, she wore the brown dress, no makeup, and her hair stuck out in unruly curls. She was undoubtedly the most beautiful creature in that natural state that Caroline had ever seen.

 

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