Lifeboat 12

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Lifeboat 12 Page 4

by Susan Hood


  sopping up every drop of sauce

  with his bread.

  We look at each other.

  I can tell we’re both wondering

  if we dare ask for seconds.

  We may never get this chance again.

  I ask, “Please, may I have some more?”

  “Of course you may!”

  We eat seconds.

  Paul asks for thirds!

  Then there’s dessert!

  Eight courses

  are capped with

  peaches,

  melon,

  pineapple—

  fruits we haven’t seen

  for months and months.

  There’s peach melba

  with a star of clotted cream

  piped on top.

  And OH! ICE CREAM!

  Ice cream of every

  flavor and color—

  rainbow hues of

  strawberry,

  apricot,

  chocolate,

  coffee,

  peach,

  coconut

  pistachio. . . .

  After the wartime food,

  there aren’t words to describe it.

  We’ve never eaten so much in our lives.

  Alarm Bells

  Just when I lean back,

  feeling fat and happy,

  alarm bells go off.

  I jump up

  knocking my plate to the floor.

  Paul sputters

  and Fred claps him on the back

  to keep him from choking.

  Billy grips my arm

  and everyone stops to listen,

  on edge, on alert.

  “What now? What’s wrong?”

  “Are they bombing us again?”

  “Keep calm.

  Nothing to worry about, children,”

  says an officer who strides into the room

  as the alarm bells stop.

  “I am Chief Officer Hetherington.

  Lunch is over and it is time for lifeboat drills.

  Come along now. Follow me.”

  It’s officer’s orders,

  so we all stand and fall in line,

  but not before

  Paul swallows a last spoonful of ice cream

  and Fred crams a roll in his pocket for later.

  Hetherington leads us

  to our muster station—

  the children’s playroom.

  “If you hear that alarm bell,

  you will meet here,” he says,

  “and await an officer’s orders.

  We will practice everything

  so you will know what to do.”

  I move a little closer

  to Hetherington to hear better.

  He hands each of us

  a navy blue kapok

  waistcoat life jacket.

  I put mine on

  and tighten the straps.

  It’s so bulky

  I can barely move.

  “How does it go?” asks Terry.

  “Here, like this,” I say.

  “You’re to wear these

  at all times,” Hetherington says,

  “even in bed,

  over your clothes.”

  “No pajamas?”

  asks one little chap.

  “No pajamas.”

  I don’t mind sleeping in my clothes,

  but how are we going to sleep

  in these things?

  Next, Hetherington hands us each

  a smaller white canvas life jacket.

  “Carry this with you

  at all times.

  When you go to bed,

  hang it on

  the end of your bunk

  beside your shoes and coats.”

  “Two life jackets?” I ask, incredulous.

  But Hetherington isn’t looking for debate.

  “Yes, young man. TWO!”

  To the Lifeboats

  “Now, everyone on deck!”

  Once there,

  Officer Hetherington assigns

  each of us

  to a lifeboat.

  I get Lifeboat 8.

  Hetherington has one boat

  lowered down and climbs inside.

  “Here, you boy,” he says,

  pointing to me. “Climb aboard.

  Show the others how.”

  I’m happy he chose me.

  Hetherington reaches down

  and opens the metal lockers.

  “You’ll see each boat has

  provisions stowed aboard.

  Over here is the Fleming gear.”

  “The what?” I ask.

  “The Fleming gear,”

  says a girl I don’t know.

  “You grab that handle

  and push and pull it

  back and forth

  to row the boat.”

  “How do you know?”

  “I was on the Volendam,” she says.

  “The Volendam!

  The ship that was torpedoed?”

  “Whoa!”

  “What?”

  “Torpedoed?”

  A murmur of astonished voices

  circles the deck.

  “That was the ship with hundreds

  of children onboard,” says Terry.

  “Three-hundred and twenty-one,” says the girl,

  “including me.”

  “And me!” says a boy standing next to her.

  “It’s okay, the Royal Navy saved us all.”

  “But my house had been bombed,” the boy

  continues. “My family was living in a shelter.”

  “Mine too,” says the girl. “So me and Michael

  were squeezed onto this next trip.”

  “The Navy saved you?”

  asks little Alan, eyes wide.

  “What’s your name?” asks Derek.

  “Patricia. Patricia Allen.

  And yes, they saved us

  because we did lifeboat drills

  and we knew what to do.”

  “Right! Thank you, Patricia and Michael,”

  says Hetherington. “Glad to have you aboard.

  Now let’s get back to our drill.”

  “Sir?” I ask. “Sir, what if we get torpedoed?”

  “Not likely, young man,” says Hetherington.

  “We’re to sail in a convoy of eighteen ships

  escorted by a destroyer and two corvettes.

  Don’t worry. Just make sure

  you pay attention

  to our lifeboat drills.”

  I listen hard so,

  like Patricia and Michael,

  I’ll know what to do.

  Mischief

  After our drills,

  we have free time

  to lark about and run the decks.

  Terry and I go exploring,

  peeking in secret places

  we aren’t meant to be.

  A heavy hand claps me on the shoulder.

  “Caught you!” says a gruff voice.

  We turn, knowing we’re in trouble.

  “Scared you, didn’t I?” laughs Fred,

  the funny kid we met on the docks

  with the missing tooth.

  “Yes!” says Terry.

  “Whatcha doin’?” says Fred

  with a mischievous smile.

  “Playing spies?”

  “No!” I say, getting an idea.

  “Let’s be stowaways.

  Quick! Before they nab us,

  back to the lifeboats

  where we can hide!”

  We dash down the deck.

  Glancing round to make sure

  we’re not being watched,

  we climb the davits

  and jump into a lifeboat.

  Ducking down, we can hear

  the conversations of people

  passing by.

  “Sweetheart, of course I love you!

  But don’t kiss me here!

  It’
s not proper!”

  “Oi!” says Terry, his eyes bugging out.

  He laughs and starts to make kissy faces at us.

  He’s ten, but so immature about girls.

  “Shhh!” I say. “We don’t want to get caught.”

  Too late.

  We hear a harsh voice say,

  “Signalman Mayhew,

  those kids are

  in a restricted area.

  Strictly off limits!

  See to it immediately.”

  “Aye, aye, sir!”

  A sailor climbs up and

  peers down at us.

  We’re in for it now.

  “At ease, boys,”

  says Mayhew, helping us down from the boat.

  “Steady, now.

  I see you’re getting your sea legs.”

  “I’m from a whole family of sailors, sir!”

  says Fred. “Got the sea in my blood!”

  “Is that so? I . . .”

  But he’s interrupted by a senior officer

  calling the passengers to assemble on deck.

  “Attention!” the officer says.

  “Attention, all passengers.”

  We hurry over to hear

  what he has to say.

  “We have reports that

  the Luftwaffe dropped mines

  at the mouth of the Mersey last night.

  Our departure will be delayed

  until tomorrow.”

  Groans echo around the deck.

  Fun’s over.

  No Safe Harbor

  That night

  bombs rain down

  round the ship,

  now moored

  in the middle of the river.

  There’s nowhere to run,

  no place to take cover.

  We’re more trapped than ever,

  like fish in a barrel.

  Will we survive this night?

  FRIDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER

  Bad Luck

  A nasty day dawns with wet weather.

  Derek, Alan, and I go on deck,

  rain splattering our faces.

  We crawl under a stairway

  and peer out at the black clouds,

  ominous with a growl of thunder.

  CRASH!

  “I don’t like it!” cries Alan,

  covering his ears.

  “It’s okay, we’ll go back inside,” says Derek.

  “Coming, Ken?”

  “No, I’ll stay here a bit.”

  There’s no wind.

  The flags sag

  by their posts.

  I stare out at the water—

  my way out of this war.

  I hope.

  A group of sailors stop nearby,

  not noticing me

  under the stairs.

  “We won’t sail today,” says one.

  “It’s Friday the 13th!

  Every sailor knows that’s bad luck.”

  “No choice, chap,” says another.

  “Our destroyer has to meet

  an incoming convoy

  from Canada in five days.

  It’s carrying war supplies

  and the war won’t wait.”

  Bad luck?

  They sound worried.

  A lone foghorn warns of danger.

  Chief Officer Hetherington

  comes through the door

  and the sailors straighten up and salute.

  “Captain Nicoll advises

  the mines have been cleared

  from the channel,” says Hetherington.

  “We leave today.”

  It’s Time

  At last, at long last!

  I feel like a wind-up toy

  whose key has been

  twisted and tightened

  for too long,

  and now they’re finally letting go!

  It’s 6:15 pm on Friday the 13th

  when the City of Benares

  and Convoy OB 213

  steam out in the steady rain.

  “I think it’s a jolly good sign,” says Derek.

  “Thirteen is my lucky number!”

  “Mine, too!” says little Alan.

  Despite the darkening skies,

  despite the rain turning to sleet,

  I’m lit up with relief to get away,

  eager for all that’s to come.

  I close my eyes

  and the fresh breeze

  blows all my troubles behind me

  like the black smoke

  billowing back from the stacks.

  The ship picks up speed,

  slicing a path through the water,

  leaving my sorry past in our wake.

  I wonder what’s ahead. . . .

  Terry, by my side,

  leans out over the rail

  and shouts to the sailors

  and dockside workers

  waving ashore.

  “Good-bye! Good-bye!”

  I clap him on the back

  and he grins.

  Someone starts singing

  and we all join in:

  “Wish me luck

  as you wave me good-bye. . . .”

  Faces beam as the wind picks up,

  the port flags

  snap to attention,

  and the horns bellow farewell.

  Liverpool disappears

  in a mist of fog

  as we leave the war behind

  and head west toward the sun.

  Reinforcements

  We lean over the rail to watch

  our Royal Navy convoy

  assemble round us.

  I count eighteen ships

  sailing in formation—

  nine columns, two ships in each,

  surging west.

  We steam up the center,

  taking our place

  as the flagship.

  In the distance, miles ahead,

  I can see our destroyer

  and two corvettes

  leading the way,

  the arrowhead of

  our defense—

  with a seaplane

  keeping watch from above.

  “That’s a Sunderland,”

  I yell to my friends,

  pointing up at the plane.

  “They call it a flying boat.”

  “How do you know?” asks Derek.

  “Planes were my hobby back home.

  I know all of them.”

  “He does, too,” says Terry.

  “And I know all the ships.”

  Terry gets out his sketch pad,

  drawing the liners, freighters,

  tankers, and smaller boats

  that stretch as far as the eye can see.

  He draws quickly,

  giving the ships line,

  shadow,

  substance.

  I wish I could do that,

  make something from nothing.

  I look out to the horizon.

  What can I do?

  What’s to become of me?

  When I look back,

  Terry has drawn me—

  a boy at the rail,

  surrounded by strong ships,

  leading the way

  to a new life.

  This is really happening!

  The engines throb

  as we make our way

  through the dark.

  Our First Night

  Down to bed at 8 pm,

  but no one can sleep.

  My stomach rolls

  to the pitch of the sea

  and after all that food—oof!

  I crawl into bed

  in the pitch black,

  but one of the little boys calls out.

  “Ken, will you tuck me in?”

  “Me too.”

  “I miss my mummy,” says another.

  I stand up to try to comfort them

  but the ship tilts

  and wham!

  I slam into the bedp
ost.

  Oww!

  I hear coughing

  as someone gets sick

  over the side of the bed.

  I gag at the smell.

  Turning on the light for a minute,

  I try to clean up the mess

  as best I can.

  “Close your eyes now

  and I’ll tell you a story,” I say.

  “Once there was a brave boy

  named Wart who met a wizard

  named Merlyn. . . .”

  We’re all in need of a little magic right now.

  SATURDAY, 14 SEPTEMBER

  Storms

  Come morning

  I stagger to the porthole

  to see if our luck has changed.

  High swells and more sleet

  batter the boat.

  The boys in my cabin

  wake up whimpering—

  seasick,

  homesick.

  “I’ll go get help,”

  I say. “I’ll be right back.”

  I knock on Father O’Sullivan’s door.

  A weak voice answers, “Come in.”

  Father’s in bed, pale and coughing.

  “I’m not feeling well,” he says.

  “Don’t come too close.”

  “The boys are all seasick and

  I don’t know what to do.”

  “Go ask the galley for a

  bit of barley sugar water,” he says.

  “It will help.”

  I retrieve the sugar water

  and head back.

  The ship rolls

  and I’m thrown

  against an officer on deck.

  “Whoa, boy!” he says.

  “Where are you going?

  What’s your name?”

  “Ken, sir,” I say. “Ken Sparks.”

  “Steady there,” he says.

  “I’m Fourth Officer Cooper.

  Ronnie Cooper.

  Let’s get you back below.

  A German bomber

  has been sighted.

  Best to take cover.”

  “Yes, sir. Yes, Officer Cooper.”

  Even here at sea,

  we’re not out of the woods.

  SUNDAY, 15 SEPTEMBER

  Steady as She Goes

  Even before I open my eyes

  Sunday morning

  I feel something has changed.

  Heat and light pour into the cabin

  through the porthole.

  The incessant rolling

  has stopped.

  “Lads, get up!” I say.

  The sun is out!”

  At the top of the stairs,

  I stop short,

  squinting,

  as blinding sparkles dimple the sea,

  sky and water

  reflecting blue on blue.

  Fresh salt air

  makes me breathe deeply

  and as the escorts gather

  us for prayers,

  the sun warms my face,

  like a blessing,

  a congratulation.

  Calmness and peace

  lap like little waves.

  A Different War, A Different Fight

  Soon the decks echo

  with shouting—

  the good kind—

  the sounds of kids having fun.

 

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