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Lifeboat 12

Page 3

by Susan Hood


  “They can’t hurt you now!” says Terry.

  “Here’s one.”

  Paul takes the twisted piece of metal,

  but when he turns it over

  a small ragged edge

  cuts his thumb.

  “Ow!”

  It falls

  and a small red drop oozes

  by his fingernail.

  “No thanks,” he says,

  as he stuffs his finger in his mouth

  and walks away.

  “Paul, wait!” I shout after him.

  But he doesn’t turn round.

  Runaways

  “Alan, let’s . . . ,” says Derek.

  But Alan is nowhere to be seen.

  We were so distracted by Paul

  and the shrapnel,

  we didn’t notice

  that the little boys slipped away.

  Again!

  “They’re round here somewhere,”

  I say. “I’ll help you look.”

  “Alan! Peter!” we call,

  jogging across the schoolyard.

  “Maybe they’re hiding. Look behind the wall.”

  No one there, except Paul,

  slumped on the ground, nursing his cut.

  “Paul, please help us,” I say.

  “Their brothers are missing.”

  Paul jumps up and follows.

  “Have you seen two little scamps? About five years old?”

  I ask a group of girls playing hopscotch.

  “No, sorry.”

  “Wha’ will I tell me maw

  if I cannae find Peter?” says Billy.

  “They’re probably just playing

  hide-and-seek with us,” says Derek.

  “Alan! The game is up.

  Come on out!”

  “Maybe they went inside.”

  We push open the orphanage door

  and peek in the classrooms.

  No one.

  “Could they have gone across the lawn?” asks Paul.

  We gaze across the grass

  leading to the open gate

  we entered last night on the bus.

  Cars speed down the road.

  I wince to think of five-year-olds

  crossing it.

  “We should tell the escorts,”

  says Paul.

  “But Maw trusted me to take care o’ Peter,”

  says Billy.

  And with that, he’s off toward the gate.

  “Billy, wait!” shouts Derek.

  Paul and I have no choice but to follow.

  Sanctuary

  Paul stops short.

  “I heard laughing,”

  he says, turning round and

  gesturing to a large willow tree.

  Pushing aside the leafy branches

  spilling to the ground,

  we peer inside.

  Peter and Alan are sitting

  on either side of one of the lady escorts.

  They lean on her shoulders,

  smiling up at her with adoring eyes.

  She’s telling them a story.

  “Hello, lads!” says the lady.

  “Want to join us?”

  “Derek! Billy!” I shout, motioning them over.

  “We found them!”

  We all creep under the covers

  of the branches,

  and listen to the story.

  It’s cozy inside.

  I close my eyes

  as the words run together

  and ripple over each other.

  I fall down,

  down,

  down

  into the story.

  I feel safe

  for the first time

  in a very long time. . . .

  Rude Awakening

  “Ken, wake up!” says Terry,

  shaking my shoulder.

  “You’ve been asleep forever!”

  I sit up, still groggy,

  yawning.

  “Where are the others?”

  “They’ve just gone in for tea.”

  Time to eat, yes,

  then I can go back to sleep.

  Too much excitement,

  too many strangers,

  too much unknown

  trigger a surprising feeling.

  I realize I’m longing for home—

  with all its warts—

  longing for my own bed.

  Sirens cut the evening calm.

  Escorts shout,

  “Run, children, run,”

  as they spill out of the classrooms.

  “Get your gas masks!”

  “Take cover!”

  Terry and I tumble

  inside the shelter

  with the others.

  I ask the escorts,

  “When are we leaving?

  When do we get on the boat?”

  “Soon, son, soon.”

  Another sleepless night jammed together—

  elbow to elbow,

  knee to knee.

  There’s no letup,

  no escape from the bombs,

  no matter how we try

  to get away.

  Bombs in the city,

  bombs on the coast.

  Is nowhere safe?

  Little John Snoad cries and cries.

  THURSDAY, 12 SEPTEMBER

  Inspections

  Morning dawns

  with medical inspections.

  “Line up, children,”

  says Father O’Sullivan.

  The doctor looks in my eyes,

  my ears, my throat.

  He listens to my heart

  and checks for

  sniffles, coughs, or rashes.

  “No diseases must be allowed

  to infiltrate the Dominion!”

  says Father with a smile.

  Terry whispers to me,

  “I heard them say

  if you don’t pass,

  you get sent home.”

  No way.

  I’m not going back!

  I’d just be a disappointment

  to my parents

  . . . again.

  I laugh and run about

  so there’s no doubt

  I’m ready for anything.

  I pass their tests.

  So do Terry and my other friends.

  Little John Snoad hasn’t slept at all

  and now he has a bad cold.

  But for the first time in days

  he isn’t crying.

  He’s all smiles.

  “What’s he so happy about?” I ask Terry.

  “He got his wish,” says Terry.

  He’s going home.”

  SS City of Benares

  For the rest of us, it’s time!

  We board a bus

  and down to the docks we go,

  singing all the way.

  The bus rounds a corner and . . .

  “Blimey! Terry, look at that!” I say.

  “Is that our ship?”

  It’s the most beautiful thing

  I’ve ever seen—

  this mighty ocean liner

  called the City of Benares—

  longer than a football field,

  splendid in the sun.

  She’s not a destroyer,

  but a luxury cruise ship

  camouflaged in a new coat of gray paint.

  She looks stately, regal,

  far too important

  for poor blokes like us.

  “Is she the one?” I ask in disbelief.

  “Is she waiting for us?”

  “Yes, boy, that’s our ship,”

  says Father O’Sullivan.

  “She’s the pride of the Ellerman line,

  a British steamship

  fresh from India.

  And we will be joining her

  on her first voyage

  across the Atlantic.”

  “Blimey, Terry, look!” I say.

  “The size of it!” />
  The biggest things we’d seen

  till then were the old paddle steamers

  in the Thames.

  We all tumble out of the bus.

  Derek and his brother Alan stop short.

  “Cor!” says Derek. “She’s huge!”

  “Out of this world!”

  says a gap-toothed kid named Fred.

  “And if it weren’t for this,

  we’d never see anything like it.”

  “Gather round, boys!” calls Father O’Sullivan.

  We’re going to board soon.”

  Billy, his little brother Peter,

  and Paul get in line behind us.

  “How’s your finger, Paul?” I ask.

  “Better,” he says, surprised I remember.

  “Ready to go?”

  “Ready!”

  But for a moment

  we stand there

  at Princes Landing Stage

  just staring,

  breathing in the smells

  of soot, salt, seaweed, and steam,

  the smells of the docks,

  of adventure to come. . . .

  “Let’s go, boys,” says Father O’Sullivan.

  With a whoop

  we scoop up the five-year-olds

  and I lead the way,

  running

  down the docks,

  up the gangway

  to our ship—

  our new home,

  our ticket across the sea.

  Welcome, Young Sir!

  We boys and girls are met on deck

  by a gracious crew—

  most of them

  sailors from the East.

  I’ve seen men from India

  round London, of course,

  but never men like these—

  sailors decked out in

  black shiny shoes turned up at the toes,

  and white flowing uniforms,

  trimmed with a turquoise sash

  and topped with a turban.

  “We’re in good hands, children,”

  says Father O’Sullivan.

  “Lascars are some of the best sailors in the world.”

  We gather in a circle round them,

  some kids smiling,

  some hiding behind a friend,

  some nervously shifting from foot to foot.

  The one in charge,

  a self-assured young man,

  greets us each in turn

  with a friendly smile,

  “Welcome, young miss,

  welcome, young sir.

  My name is Ramjam Buxoo.

  Welcome to our ship.”

  Young sir?

  People have called me

  a lot of things before,

  but no one has ever called me “sir.”

  He makes me feel

  like an honored guest—

  ME—a poor bloke from Wembly.

  I step up and say,

  “Thank you, sir!”

  Mr. Buxoo smiles. “This way, please.”

  He gestures to the stairs

  and then leads the way

  to our cabins

  in the aft of the ship,

  down,

  down,

  down,

  to the fourth deck—

  46 boys to port

  44 girls to starboard.

  Cabin Mates

  “Fred Steels and Paul Shearing

  in here,” says Buxoo,

  pointing to the first cabin.

  “Derek and Alan Capel,

  you’re in this next one.”

  “Billy and Peter Short

  and Terrence Holmes,

  you’re down the hall.”

  “The rest of you boys, this way please.”

  I look back and wish

  I could be with my friends.

  “You four in here,” says Buxoo,

  pointing to me

  and three younger boys

  I haven’t yet met.

  They gaze up at me.

  One hangs on my sleeve.

  One has been crying

  and wipes his nose with

  the back of his hand.

  Another looks bewildered.

  I see why they put me

  in charge of these lads—

  they need someone older

  to take care of them.

  “Look at this, boys!” I say,

  trying to distract them.

  “Jolly good!

  “We each get our own bunk bed!”

  We gape at the beds

  laid with geometric quilts,

  the large double-door wardrobe,

  shiny white porcelain washbasins,

  the oversized mirror,

  the sturdy chair and desk,

  the striped rugs on the floor,

  the carafe of fresh water

  and the vase of sunny flowers—

  everything much finer

  than my things at home.

  Best of all

  we have a porthole

  with a view of the sea,

  a window to what’s ahead.

  No more mats on the floor.

  No more rats.

  Compared to the orphanage,

  and even my room at home,

  these accommodations

  are first rate!

  We have our own cabin

  on a great fancy SHIP.

  Oi, it’s grand!

  I’m going to like it here.

  Time for a Tour

  We troop in a group

  to the children’s playroom,

  gawking at the baskets of new toys.

  “Where did they come from?” I ask.

  “They’re donations from people

  who wish you well

  and want to give you a big sendoff,”

  says Buxoo.

  I’ve never had new toys—

  couldn’t afford ’em.

  Things I played with came from

  the allotment field

  up the street.

  If you didn’t make your own toys,

  you didn’t get any.

  Here on the Benares,

  there are shiny new trucks and trains.

  Not one has a dent, scrape, or missing wheel.

  There’s even a child-sized convertible

  big enough to climb inside.

  Its spick-and-span chrome and paint

  puts my go-cart to shame.

  The little children gape at

  the teddy bears and baby dolls

  taking tea with china cups

  on a lace tablecloth.

  It’s a carnival world

  here in this playroom,

  full of fancy silliness

  we’ve never known.

  A fuzzy elephant rides a scooter.

  A doll perches atop a pull-toy puppy

  while a toy Beefeater stands guard.

  Life-size paintings of jesters

  and ballerinas dance round the walls.

  “Ooo! Look at this!”

  Some of the littles

  reach out to touch

  the enormous, finely carved

  red rocking horse.

  “It’s big enough for three of us!”

  What catches my eye

  are the model airplanes—

  mini replicas of the RAF planes

  I’ve seen fly over my house.

  I reach for one, but Buxoo stops me.

  “No time now.

  You must have lunch.”

  Paul has to pull me away.

  We continue down the halls,

  peering in posh shops,

  dazzling with spotlights, mirrors,

  chandeliers, and candelabras,

  golden statues and gilded signs

  that showcase furs, satins, silks.

  Paying passengers

  who boarded before us

  get a snip and a shave

  at the shipboard barber shop
<
br />   or sway to the music of the orchestra

  playing on the Verandah Café.

  We pass the bustling galley

  with aromas I remember

  from the time

  before rations.

  We enter the grand dining room

  with its paneled walls, vaulted ceilings,

  and tall vases of fresh flowers.

  Altogether it’s smashing!

  My family certainly never had money

  for a holiday like this!

  From what I’ve seen so far,

  this ship is like a first-class hotel,

  luxury I’ve never known.

  “It’s a floating palace

  is what it is!” I exclaim.

  Lunch

  “This way,” says Buxoo.

  “There is a special early seating

  just for you

  before the paying passengers eat.”

  I sit down on a soft brocade chair

  and stare at the menu card

  and three different kinds

  of knives and forks.

  I’m a little confused about

  what goes with what.

  But no matter.

  The menu says

  there’s chicken for lunch.

  “Chicken!” says Derek.

  “For as long as I can remember,

  we only get chicken

  for Christmas!”

  Stewards in white turbans,

  blue uniforms,

  white gloves,

  and napkins over their arms

  fuss over us.

  They pour our water,

  asking what we’d like to eat.

  “I’d like CHICKEN!” says Derek.

  Then he realizes he’s shouting

  and looks down, embarrassed.

  Quietly, he adds,

  “Please. Sir.”

  “May I have, um, um, bangers?”

  asks Fred. “Bangers and mash?”

  “Fish and chips is my favorite,” I say.

  “Do you have that? Please?”

  “Of course, young sir. Right away.”

  As the plates come out of the kitchen,

  I see food I haven’t seen

  for months—years—

  multiple courses of

  filet of beef,

  lobster,

  shrimp.

  And there’s fancy food

  I’ve never known.

  “Please, sir,” I ask a steward.

  “What is that?”

  “Caviar.”

  “And that?” asks Derek.

  “Foie gras.”

  “And that?” asks Fred.

  “Curry.”

  It’s all delivered

  on silver platters

  lined with lace doilies.

  No roly-poly here!

  In fact, nothing here

  reminds me of food at home

  where I have to work

  for every mouthful—

  hoeing and weeding vegetables

  in our Victory Garden,

  checking the chickens for eggs,

  and skinning and gutting rabbits for stew.

  Here you just ask and the food arrives.

  Whatever you fancy!

  It’s as though Father Christmas

  has set up shop

  in the kitchen.

  I clean my plate.

  Derek really tucks in,

 

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