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Lifeboat 12

Page 11

by Susan Hood


  WEDNESDAY, 25 SEPTEMBER

  1 DAY OF WATER LEFT

  Sunrise

  We should be happy

  on a day like this.

  The rising sun

  halos the eastern horizon,

  reflecting a long yellow path

  in the water

  that leads back home.

  Yes, we should be happy

  on a day like this.

  But we have one day of water left.

  What we need is rain.

  Running on Empty

  It’s Day 8,

  the day we should have reached Ireland,

  the day we run out of water.

  In a book,

  this would be the climax of our story—

  the point where all the drama happens,

  where all the problems are solved,

  where the happy ending begins.

  This would be the day we are rescued.

  I scan the horizon,

  but

  there is nothing,

  nothing to break

  the blues of sea and sky.

  Purvis says there are

  still stores of food.

  But who can swallow it

  without water

  to wash it down?

  He says the tank is low.

  There will be

  no

  water

  this lunch.

  Silence fills the boat

  as we drift,

  all of us

  blank and staring,

  vacant shells

  of the people we once were,

  still

  and empty as our tank.

  Islands Alone

  I look up

  and think of Earth

  floating in space.

  I think of England,

  my island home.

  Our lifeboat

  is my island now.

  And as

  it becomes

  harder to talk,

  each of us

  on the boat

  becomes

  an island

  unto ourselves,

  each of us alone

  in a great sea

  of silence.

  The Keys

  We need our story

  more than ever.

  “We’ll help you, Mary,”

  I say.

  “Bulldog and the boys

  need to visit the pub,”

  says Fred. “The Ship’s Pub . . .”

  “To find the keys,” says Paul.

  “Mary goes with Bulldog and the boys,

  pretending they’re a family,” I say.

  Mary wraps her arms

  around our shoulders

  and shares a weak smile

  with Father O’Sullivan.

  “We are a family, aren’t we,” she says.

  She sits up

  struggles to speak,

  and goes on . . .

  The family went to the pub for lunch. Cage, the owner, came out of the kitchen and asked what they’d like to order.

  “Fish and chips,” I say.

  “Bangers and mash,” says Fred.

  “Chicken,” says Derek.

  “Ice cream,” says Billy.

  Bulldog asked to use the telephone while the others ordered. He looked around the room. Keys, where would they find a set of keys?

  “What kind of keys?”

  asks Derek.

  “Automobile keys? House keys?

  Keys to a safe?”

  I look at Mary

  and have an idea:

  Ken tapped Bulldog on the shoulder

  and pointed to the piano in the corner

  of the room.

  “The piano,” says Mary.

  “Ah, brilliant, my boy.

  I can just see

  my piano at home.”

  The thought of her piano

  makes her sit up a bit.

  She stares at her hands,

  taps her fingers,

  and begins again.

  The keys were piano keys. But which ones? Bulldog nodded to Mary and she walked over to the piano.

  “Oi!” yelled Cage. “That piano is broken. Don’t touch it!”

  Bulldog held him back as Mary stared down at the keys and thought about the kidnapped pilots. They were being held prisoner somewhere. But where? She glanced at the owner. Ah!

  She played the keys C . . . A . . . G . . . E.

  Nothing happened.

  She thought again of those flying aces and stared at the notes on the keyboard. She played three more notes:  A . . . C . . . E.

  Nothing happened except Cage lunged to stop her. Bulldog held him in a firm grip.

  “You’re on to something, Mary,” said Bulldog. Then his gaze fell on four pictures hanging on the back wall. Inside each was a framed playing card: an ace of hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades.

  “Interesting artwork,” said Bulldog.

  “Four aces.

  Four ace pilots.

  Play that again, Mary. Play A . . . C . . . E. Play it four times.”

  And Mary did as Cage thrashed.

  This time a secret door in the back wall slid open.

  What was inside?

  “The four aces!” we all shout.

  “Right, you are,” said Mary.

  The boys freed the pilots and Bulldog hustled Cage off to the police. Peterson’s plan to sell the codes was foiled and thanks to those pilots, England wins the war. Another Bulldog Drummond case closed, all thanks to those marvelous boys.

  The End

  “But wait, Mary!” I say.

  “What happened to Peterson?

  Did he die in the fire?

  Did he get away?”

  Mary smiles weakly,

  closes her eyes,

  and says,

  “That, my dears,

  is a story

  for another day.”

  The End

  The story

  that was keeping us alive

  is over.

  We are all too weak to begin another.

  All that’s left is a boundless ocean,

  a bottomless thirst. . . .

  Hope of rescue is a small buoy left behind

  as each wave

  pushes us toward our unhappy end.

  I Wonder

  Lying back,

  I stare

  up to the blue. . . .

  We saved the pilots,

  but where is Peterson?

  Is evil alive

  in a U-boat?

  In a bomber?

  Our water is almost gone.

  I stare

  up to the cloudless sky,

  up to heaven.

  My mum is there,

  the one I never knew,

  my mum who died

  when I was just a baby.

  I wonder

  what is it like up there,

  to float up there,

  to stay up there forever

  with my mum. . . .

  Out of the Blue

  I blink.

  There’s a speck in my eye.

  NO!

  It’s a speck in the sky

  growing

  bigger,

  blacker,

  brighter.

  I sit up,

  stand up,

  and point.

  “Look, an airplane!” I shout.

  “It’s a plane,

  a plane,

  a PLANE!”

  Everyone stares at me

  and looks where I’m pointing.

  They don’t believe me.

  “It can’t be.”

  “It’s just a seagull.”

  “It’s just a cloud.”

  “It’s just a mirage.”

  We’ve seen gulls and clouds and smoke and ships before.

  They all vanished,

  wisps in the wind.

  But this time I know!

  “NO, I t
ell you! It’s a plane.”

  I pull off my pajama top and use it

  to wave and wave and wave.

  IT’S A PLANE!!!

  A German Plane?

  “Ken’s right,” cries Cooper. “It’s a plane!”

  “Everyone down!”

  WHAT? What is he doing?

  “It could be a German plane. We don’t know.”

  “I know!”

  I’ve read about it

  a million times.

  I traced its shape

  and memorized its name

  and the sound of its engines.

  “It’s a Sunderland—

  a Flying Boat.”

  On Our Feet

  Now they believe me.

  Everyone is standing,

  calling, waving,

  flashing our milk tins

  in the sun.

  But will it see us?

  “Boys, we must pray,” says Father O’Sullivan.

  “We must pray harder than ever.”

  The sailors continue to shout and wave,

  but I pray like I’ve never prayed before.

  “We pray that the plane will come

  close enough to see us, and bring us help.”

  It is almost too much to hope.

  But we saved the pilots with Bulldog,

  remember?

  And now this pilot will save us.

  “Please, God, hear our prayer.

  Please, God, let that pilot see us. . . .”

  And He Does

  The plane drops down.

  We hear its drone.

  We spot the British roundels

  as the wings pass overhead.

  It IS a Sunderland!

  The pilot zooms down,

  swoops around,

  and WAVES!

  Oh, heaven,

  he’s seen us!

  “HE’S COMING!” I shout.

  “He is, my boy, he is,” says Cooper.

  The officers whoop and

  the crewmen point and shout at the sky.

  Signalman Mayhew

  says, “We need flags!”

  Buxoo shouts to some of his men,

  who quickly unwind their turbans.

  Mayhew stands,

  holding his makeshift flags,

  out,

  down,

  right,

  up,

  overhead,

  left.

  It’s a code.

  I learned the signals

  in the Army Cadets

  last year when I was twelve—

  each stance spells

  a letter of the alphabet:

  C

  I

  T

  Y

  Slowly the words come together:

  C-I-T-Y

  O-F

  B-E-N-A-R-E-S.

  The plane circles two, three times.

  Its Aldis lamp

  flashes a code.

  “Lower the sail,” says Cooper.

  Mary looks up and asks,

  “Am I dreaming?”

  “It’s no dream, Auntie Mary!”

  I say. “We are saved!”

  Clang! Clang! Clang!

  We boys grab our milk tins,

  banging them together

  noisemakers,

  merrymakers.

  We’re giddy

  with hilarity and hugs.

  “Oh boy,” cries Howard.

  “We’re going to fly home!”

  “Thanks be to God,”

  says Father, who reaches up to heaven

  and then lays a hand on

  each of our heads,

  blessing us all.

  Too Rough to Land

  The pilot’s lamp

  winks and blinks a message:

  low on fuel,

  radioing for help,

  dropping food.

  Splash!

  There it is!

  But the bag of food

  falls too far from us

  and is swept away.

  The plane soars off,

  growing smaller

  and smaller

  as it flies east.

  Then it’s gone.

  “WAIT!” Derek shouts.

  “Come back!” yells Fred.

  “It’s all right!” I say.

  “He’s getting help.”

  I have a question,

  but I keep it to myself.

  How will they ever find us again?

  Limbo

  The minutes tick by

  as we continue

  to search the sky.

  Five minutes,

  ten,

  fifteen,

  but there! Listen!

  A hum thrums above.

  A second plane

  appears to cheers!

  It drops a parachute bag

  attached to a life preserver

  to keep it afloat.

  This time,

  it lands a few feet away.

  Inside are flares

  and a feast of canned peaches and pears,

  soups, fish, and beans.

  Still no water,

  but we open the cans

  and suck down the fruit juices

  and other liquids inside.

  Best of all,

  there’s a handwritten note:

  “Rescue vessel

  40 miles away.”

  A ship—

  A SHIP—

  is coming!

  At Last

  At 4:30 pm

  on Wednesday, September 25,

  Day 8—

  the day our water would run out—

  the Royal Navy has come for us.

  At last.

  Mayhew fires off the flares

  the plane dropped

  as the ship pulls into view.

  We wave and wave and wave

  and toast each other

  with the last of our water.

  As the ship approaches,

  I grin at my Indian friend

  and yell, “Huzzah!”

  He looks at me quizzically

  and repeats, “Huzzah?”

  I point to the ship. “Huzzah!”

  He looks and says, “Ah, Hurrē!”

  “Hurrē!” I shout.

  Then, in the dazzling sun,

  the A-class destroyer

  HMS Anthony—

  Anthony,

  the name of the patron saint

  of the lost—

  pulls up by our side.

  We are safe.

  Safe at last.

  RESCUE

  Salvation

  We work the Fleming gear

  to row the short distance

  to the ship.

  “Ahoy, young mates!”

  say the grinning sailors.

  They toss nets

  over the side of the ship

  and say, “Right! Up you come.”

  I can’t move!

  My muscles and joints

  are too weak.

  The sailors scramble down

  and hoist us boys up

  above their shoulders.

  Others lean down to pull us

  onto the destroyer.

  Sick Bay

  On deck,

  I hobble,

  just like the others,

  suffering

  from trench foot

  and frostbite.

  Paul can’t walk at all,

  his legs are really gone.

  It’s a little terrifying

  to realize I can’t walk,

  let alone run as I used to.

  Still a boy of thirteen,

  I limp like an old man,

  an ancient mariner. . . .

  The sailors speak in hushed tones

  as they usher us

  into the sick bay.

  I hear one doctor say

  none have suffered more

  than the crew:

  “Fingers and
toes came off

  in the dressings.”

  Still, we are alive.

  Doctor’s Orders

  “You’ll be all right, boys,”

  says the doctor,

  examining me with the others.

  “Just give it a little time.”

  “When can we eat, sir?” asks Fred.

  “No solid food for now,” he says.

  “Liquids are what you need.”

  He gives us water

  and a little thin gruel.

  “Come with us, chaps,” say the sailors.

  They help us below deck

  to take warm baths

  and towel ourselves dry.

  One picks up my wet,

  salt-encrusted pajamas.

  “Out with these!” he says.

  “Don’t throw out my overcoat!

  I promised my mum

  I’d take care of it.”

  The sailor shakes his head and smiles.

  “Very well, but put these on,” he says,

  offering me one of his uniforms instead.

  It’s much too big.

  I laugh when I see my friends again—

  we’re a funny lot,

  in saggy, baggy sailor suits

  with the legs and sleeves rolled up.

  “Hats off to you, boys!” says one sailor,

  giving me his cap.

  His friends hoist us up

  on their shoulders,

  jolly us up

  on piggyback rides

  all around the ship,

  to the engine room,

  the gun deck,

  up, down, and everywhere.

  They make us feel like royalty.

  There is nothing they don’t do for us.

  “To the mess hall!” shouts one,

  and we parade inside

  where we disobey doctor’s orders.

  “Here, Ken, try this,” says one,

  feeding me soft fruit—

  lush spoonfuls of

  peaches, pears, and apricots,

  all covered in cream,

  sweet, silky mouthfuls.

  I can’t get enough.

  But it’s too much.

  “Where is the loo?” I ask in a hurry.

  “I’ve got to go too!” says Derek.

  We’re nipping off

  to the toilets again,

  right as rain.

  THURSDAY, 26 SEPTEMBER

  Real Food

  The next day the doctor says

  we can eat again.

  Real, honest-to-goodness food.

  I’ve never had sandwiches so thick—

  a tin of salmon between two slices of bread

  an inch wide. Gorgeous!

  And hot sweet tea to revive us.

  Lucky 13

  It’s early evening

  when HMS Anthony

  steams into Princes Pier,

  Gourock, Scotland.

  We line the ship’s rails,

  waving to throngs

  of weeping people

  and press who have come to greet us.

  “Remember the day we shipped out?” asks Derek.

  I think of leaving Liverpool

  a lifetime ago,

  then realize something with a shock.

  “It was just thirteen days ago.”

 

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