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Lifeboat 12

Page 7

by Susan Hood

salty blue water

  as far as the eye can see,

  and only now

  does that line

  make sense.

  Calculations

  A rescue ship will come.

  We know it will.

  BUT

  if it doesn’t

  in a day,

  the officers say

  we will sail for Ireland.

  Officer Cooper looks at his watch,

  studies the sun,

  consults the other officers,

  calculates the distance to land.

  I feel the wind blowing;

  today, it feels like a friend.

  The officers are hushed,

  but catching my eye,

  Cooper smiles at me

  and gives a thumbs up.

  He’s not giving up hope,

  so neither will I.

  “This southwesterly wind

  will keep us moving east,”

  Cooper tells us.

  Mr. Nagorski works his way

  to the stern

  to talk with the officers.

  He returns to the bow to confirm

  we’re about six hundred miles from land,

  about eight days’ sail.

  It’s far,

  but maybe we can make it.

  If their guess is right.

  Water Rations

  What’s the least amount of water

  we need to survive each day?

  I see Steward Purvis count

  the people aboard

  and do the calculations.

  He announces, “We will each be allowed

  two small dippers of water a day,

  one at noon,

  one at night.

  That way we’ll have

  enough for about eight days.”

  But I wonder,

  are we six hundred miles from land?

  Is eight days of water enough?

  First Lunch

  “Time to eat,”

  says Steward Purvis,

  taking charge of our first meal—

  one hard ship’s biscuit the length of my finger,

  one slice of corned beef on top,

  one dipperful of water.

  Each bit of food is passed down

  from the stern,

  hand by hand,

  first to us children,

  then to Buxoo’s crewmen,

  and finally to the British staff

  until all forty-six are served.

  The process takes forever,

  nearly three-quarters of an hour!

  Then Purvis dips the thumb-sized metal cup

  into the water tank and

  sends it down the line.

  No one is allowed to sip slowly.

  The little cup must be

  passed back right away

  so others may drink.

  When it’s my turn,

  I see the cup holds just a few mouthfuls.

  I tip it to my lips

  and pass the cup back.

  I hold the water

  in my mouth for a moment.

  I roll it over

  my cheeks and tongue—

  a cool bath

  that douses the fire

  of that devil thirst.

  Then the water

  slides down my throat

  and is gone.

  “Please! Just one more drink?”

  Paul begs, no longer shy.

  “It’s nae enough,” says Billy.

  “Please, Georgy Porgy!” says Derek

  with a twinkle in his eye. “Puddin’ and pie!”

  Georgy Porgy flashes a smile of affection

  but is firm with our food rations,

  unmoved by

  pleas, complaints,

  glares, or groans.

  I’m still hungry.

  Still thirsty.

  But it will have to be enough

  to last eight days.

  In eight days we’ll be saved.

  If their guess is right.

  If Only . . .

  If only I could

  move a little,

  stretch my stiff legs.

  “Ooch! Jings!” says Billy,

  when I kick his shin by mistake.

  “Sorry.”

  With forty-six people

  there are elbows in your back,

  knees in your side,

  feet in your face.

  There’s no room to move

  from your little space.

  I shift in my seat

  and think of my bike

  back home.

  How I loved to ride that bike!

  Pedals pumping,

  coasting—

  it felt like freedom.

  Dad got it for me

  at the allotment field.

  One of the wheels had buckled,

  so someone chucked it.

  Dad said, “Here, you can mend that.”

  And I did.

  We kids made our own fun

  or we didn’t have any.

  I made my go-cart

  out of old pram wheels.

  Terry and I would fly down the street

  past the rag-and-bone man.

  If only Terry were here. . . .

  If only I knew where he was,

  whether he was safe. . . .

  Do my parents know what’s happened?

  Is anyone thinking of me?

  I remember Terry’s drawing of me

  staring happily out to sea.

  Was that really just six days ago?

  Barriers

  Different languages

  and our seating arrangements

  form three islands in the boat:

  British staff in the stern,

  Lascars in the center,

  Father O’Sullivan, Mary Cornish, and Mr. Nagorski

  sitting with us children

  in the bow.

  Two men are bridges

  between us—

  only Gunner Harry Peard

  and Ramjam Buxoo

  are nimble enough

  to move carefully

  about the boat,

  knowledgeable enough

  to translate

  the different

  languages aboard.

  Buxoo and Peard act as ambassadors,

  messengers, negotiators.

  “Blast!” explodes Peard.

  “Hurry that food along, Purvis.

  These poor little blighters are half starved!”

  Ambassador yes,

  but unlike Buxoo,

  Peard is no diplomat.

  Understanding

  I notice one of the younger Lascars,

  with the start of a mustache I envy,

  sitting just on the other side

  of Miss Cornish.

  He talks and talks to his mates,

  but I can’t understand

  what he’s saying.

  He notices me, looking at him.

  I notice he looks thirsty, tired, and cold.

  I smile at him. It means, “Me, too.”

  He smiles back.

  We can’t talk to each other,

  but we both understand.

  Already Heroes

  Up in the bow,

  we tell stories to pass the time.

  “I was trapped in my cabin

  after the torpedo hit,”

  says Father O’Sullivan.

  “Derek and Billy pulled me out.

  You boys are already heroes!”

  But Derek and Billy

  hardly smile.

  All they talk about

  are their little brothers.

  “Did anyone see Peter?”

  asks Billy.

  “Or Alan?” asks Derek.

  “They were in the infirmary

  when the torpedo hit.

  We don’t know

  what happened to them.”

  “I’m sure they’re all
right,” says Father.

  “The nurses probably got them

  into another lifeboat,” I say.

  “We promised our parents

  we would look after ’em,”

  says Billy, swiping his eye

  with the back of his hand.

  Everyone says Derek and Billy

  are heroes for saving Father O’Sullivan.

  But they don’t think so.

  Heroes don’t lose their little brothers.

  Bail, Matey, Bail!

  No matter what we do,

  we’re sitting in water most of the time.

  “Bail with your hands, like this,” I say.

  “Cup ’em and toss the water overboard.”

  “Oo, it’s so cold,” says Derek,

  clamping his hands under his arms.

  “May we have the bucket?” I ask.

  “Chaps, everyone lean to this side.”

  The grown-ups join in.

  We tilt the boat a bit,

  and pool the water

  into the bucket,

  and toss it overboard.

  There!

  It’s working!

  We’ve almost got it all.

  Then a big wave slops over the side—

  WHOOSH!—

  and drenched to the bone,

  we have to start again.

  Our Poor Feet

  The salt water eats at our feet.

  Derek, Billy, and I are

  lucky to have shoes.

  Paul’s in sandals;

  Fred and Howard are barefoot.

  My feet are cramped with cold,

  but theirs turn white,

  then red,

  then blue.

  They shrivel as they do

  with too much time

  in the bath.

  “Look at these boys!”

  yells Gunner Peard,

  picking his way down the boat.

  “Poor little rotters!”

  Shouting and cursing

  about women who don’t know about children

  and men who pray too much,

  Peard wraps a blanket

  around Paul’s, Fred’s, and Howard’s feet.

  They gaze up at him, astonished.

  Peard is bad-mannered and bossy,

  but he gets the job done.

  Passing the Time

  “Did you want to go?”

  Paul asks.

  “I jolly well did!” says Howard, a proper London lad.

  “My parents warned me about torpedoes,

  but I wanted to see a ship

  and meet real Navy men.”

  Huh. No one warned me about torpedoes.

  “I was over the moon to go,” says Fred.

  “I couldn’t wait to ship out

  but my mum kept hanging on to me.

  It was like trying to get away

  from an octopus.

  Even my Dad

  had a few tears in his eyes.

  But I couldn’t wait. . . .”

  No octopus hugs for me.

  “My mum said we had to go

  because we are part Jewish,”

  says Derek.

  “One of my great-grandmothers

  ran off with a Jewish sailor, I think.

  The Germans hate anyone

  with a Jewish connection, you know.

  Don’t know why.

  Mum cried

  when we said good-bye. . . .”

  No tears from mine. . . .

  “My parents made me go,” I say.

  “My stepmum finally figured out

  a way to get rid of me. . . .”

  The boys look up, startled,

  searching for something to say.

  I change the subject.

  “What about you, Paul?

  Did you want to go?”

  “I begged my parents

  to go to Canada,” he says,

  “to get away from

  the bullies at school.

  I got the application myself

  and had my sister

  talk my mother into it.

  My brother was going to go, too,

  but he chickened out.

  I say, why stop in Canada?

  Why not sail the world?”

  “You want to live on a ship?” I ask.

  “I don’t think so!” says Fred.

  “Remember when

  we were seasick on the ship?

  Remember when

  the torpedo hit, Paul?

  I had to wake you up!

  He sleeps through anything.”

  Paul looks down and studies the cut on his foot.

  A Tender Touch

  I look up at the sky

  and wonder

  if my mum who died

  is there in heaven

  watching over us.

  My hands and legs

  start to tingle with pain,

  numb from cramped quarters

  and the cold.

  “Oi, it prickles and burns!”

  “Ken dear, let me rub your hands and feet,”

  says Miss Cornish with a kind smile.

  “It will help get

  your circulation going.”

  I stiffen and blush with awkwardness

  at her touch,

  this lady I barely know,

  but she’s so gentle,

  and her hands so warm.

  I soon feel better.

  She moves on to the next boy.

  Her eyes look tired,

  but she keeps working

  to make sure we’re all okay.

  Miss Cornish doesn’t have any children,

  but she would make a good mother.

  Chins Up, Everyone!

  Harry Peard

  has seen enough of

  sadness and hurt.

  He picks his way

  to the bow,

  belting out naughty sea chanteys

  to make us laugh.

  Miss Cornish scowls

  in disapproval,

  but Peard gives us a grin.

  “No use sulking, boys!” he shouts,

  standing up,

  stripping down to his shorts.

  Miss Cornish turns away.

  With a stretch and a leap,

  he’s over the side!

  He’s down, he’s gone!

  With a gasp,

  we grasp the rails

  and lean over,

  looking for him.

  “Where’d he go?” I shout.

  His head pops up,

  sputtering, laughing.

  He’s gone for a swim!

  “Why are you going swimming, mister?”

  asks Howard.

  “To keep in practice,

  in case we get torpedoed again,”

  says Peard with a wink.

  “He’s a proper screwball, he is!”

  says Fred with delight.

  “Come on in, lads,” he calls.

  “I love swimming!” I say.

  “Ignore the man,” says Miss Cornish.

  I can tell the adults

  think Peard is mad.

  He climbs aboard, laughing,

  rocking the boat.

  I think he’s grand,

  simply grand.

  Tension

  Mary Cornish frowns

  at Harry Peard,

  dripping water in the boat.

  He glances at us and scowls back at her.

  “I hear you’re just a piano teacher,” he says.

  “Now my wife,

  she’s got a way with kids, she has.

  Keeps ’em fit as fleas,

  and stands no nonsense neither.”

  I look at Miss Cornish.

  Uh-oh. I see her pull herself up,

  but Peard won’t stop.

  “What do you know about kids?

  Got none of your own,

  nor likely to have either.”

  “You’r
e right on both counts,” says Miss Cornish,

  staring back with her wise brown eyes,

  tucking her dark hair back

  with her slender white hands.

  “And what of it?”

  They stare at each other

  for a few seconds.

  “No offense, of course,”

  says Peard, finding his way

  back to his seat.

  We boys look at each other,

  surprised to hear adults having a row,

  allowing children to hear.

  Harry mutters about Miss Cornish,

  but she rubs our cold feet,

  asks us questions,

  suggests a song. . . .

  “There’ll Always Be an England,” says Derek.

  And we sing that there will be.

  “Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag,” I say.

  It does us all good singing

  to pass the time.

  “What’s the use of worrying,

  it never was worthwhile.

  So pack up your troubles in your old kit bag,

  and smile, smile, smile.”

  Yes, Peard calls Mary “spinster”

  under his breath,

  with scorn in his voice,

  but we boys call her Auntie Mary

  because she takes care of us.

  The Loo

  What do you do

  when there is no loo?

  No privacy

  and nothing to do

  but pee over the side.

  I learn the shipboard wisdom

  of not pissing into the wind.

  And there is a bucket

  passed down from hand to hand.

  “Who needs it now?”

  ask the sailors,

  busy with bailing.

  “Memsahib!” say the crewmen.

  We boys circle Auntie Mary,

  facing away,

  when it is her turn.

  She takes care of us

  and we take care of her.

  Raise a Flag

  “We need a flag,” Cooper says,

  “in case we see a ship or a plane.

  We need something to wave,

  to send a signal,

  to save us all.”

  There is no flag.

  Auntie Mary turns,

  slips inside her jacket

  and thin silk blouse,

  and pulls out her chemise.

  “Use this,” she says.

  The boys and I stifle snorts

  and the men turn as pink

  as our new flag,

  but Signalman Mayhew

  shinnies up the mast

  and ties it to the top.

  Rally round the flag, boys!

  Our small pink flag!

  Harry Peard’s open mouth closes.

  “Well, I’ll be . . . ,” he says.

  Sardines?

  At six o’clock,

  our first supper

  of our long day one

  comes down the line—

  another ship’s biscuit,

  a sardine,

  another dipperful of water,

  a tin of condensed milk

  shared by six.

  The milk is sweet,

  but it makes us thirstier.

  And I hate sardines.

  Yech!

  But I’m hungry.

 

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