Friday, April 12, 1912
Katie and Paddy were strolling the deck under a black-velvet, star-studded sky when she decided to share her dream with him. She was mindful that he might laugh at her. But her thinking was, if he did, that would cure her forever of her foolish attraction to him and she’d be the better off for it. And if he didn’t laugh, she’d have someone to talk to about her high hopes for the new country.
He didn’t laugh. “Well, you’ve a fine voice, that’s certain. The people in steerage loved your singin’. But is there much call for stage work in Wisconsin, then?”
Katie stopped walking. The air was chilly, and she was wearing only a shawl around her shoulders. She had worn it partly because it reminded her of her ma, who had knit it for her, but also because the deep blue matched her eyes, or so people told her. Although Patrick Kelleher hadn’t seemed to notice. “Wisconsin? I wouldn’t know. Brian hasn’t said. But there’s stage work in New York, and that’s where I’ll be stayin’. I’m boardin’ with me uncle Malachy and his wife, Charlotte. Did you not know that, Paddy?”
He had stopped walking when she did, and now turned to face her. “What are you sayin’? Me brother is leavin’ you alone in a big city? For how long?”
Katie leaned against the rail, her back to the sea. Other couples and some families were strolling the deck as, she imagined, people must stroll the sidewalks of New York on a fine summer night, warmer than this one. “I won’t be alone. Didn’t I just tell you, I’ll be with Malachy and Lottie in Brooklyn. They’ve a fine apartment and I’m welcome there.”
He was frowning, as if he were trying to make sense of what she was saying. “Is Brian stayin’ with you there in New York, then? He’s changed his mind about farmin’?”
“No, acourse not. Farmin’ is all Bri ever wanted to do. Why would he change his mind?” Katie didn’t understand why Paddy seemed so confused. She had never once said she was on her way to Wisconsin, nor had Brian ever stated any intent to make his way in the city of New York. “Besides, Marta’s goin’ to be in Minnesota, and I think that’s not so far from Wisconsin.”
Paddy snorted in disgust. “Marta! She isn’t even Irish! Brian’s gone off his head, that’s what he’s done. I’m goin’ to have a talk with him, soon as I get back to our quarters.” He moved forward to lean against the railing, facing the sea, the ocean breeze blowing his dark hair back, away from his face.
Katie thought she had never seen anyone so fine-looking. If Paddy wished to be on the stage, as she did, she was certain he could. Women would pay just to look at him. But he wanted to be a writer. Pity. “I don’t see why you’re goin’ on so. Marta’s nice. She may not be Irish but she’s a lot like Brian. Solid. Dependable. And she wants to do farmwork, like him. I think your ma would take to her, even though she’s not of the faith. Me grandmother married out of the faith, and she wasn’t struck by lightning.” Katie laughed. “She found the only Protestant for miles around and married him. Acourse, the first thing she did was convert him. Quit frettin’. Brian can look out for himself.”
“It’s not Brian I’m frettin’ over,” he grumbled, keeping his eyes on the sea. “Seems to me you’re the one should be frettin’.” He did glance over at her then. “I guess you’ll be joinin’ him soon enough, but do your ma and da know Brian’s leavin’ you alone in the city of New York, even if it’s just for a time?”
She turned then to face forward, into the ocean breeze. Her elbow touched his, and a sharp electric tingle shot through her. She moved the elbow. “Of course they do. Me da knows Bri wants to farm until he has enough money to buy his own place. And I’m goin’ to be stayin’ with Malachy and his family. It’s all set-tied.”
Paddy nodded. “Ah, he’ll send for you then, when he has his own place? Bri?”
It struck Katie then what was going on. It wasn’t herself Paddy was troubling about. ’Twas his brother who was on his mind. Paddy didn’t want Brian living alone in a strange country, a strange town, without someone from home. Someone like her. He must have thought all along that the two of them would be together, and that had given him comfort. And with him so dead set against Marta, it wouldn’t do to remind him that it looked as if the Swedish girl might be keeping Brian company someday, way up there in Wisconsin. Paddy wouldn’t be comforted by the thought.
If it made him feel better to believe that Brian would be sharing any homestead he created in the north country with an Irish lass from home, what would it hurt to let him think it? What did it matter? Once the Titanic docked, they would all go their separate ways. Although Paddy, too, would be in New York, she didn’t expect to be seeing him there, such a big city it was. He’d have a hundred friends within a week of his arrival. Any remembrance of Katie Hanrahan from Ballyford would be erased like chalk on a blackboard at the end of a school day.
Still, Katie was reluctant to lie. Instead, all she said was, “Hard to say what’s goin’ to happen in the New World. But you mustn’t trouble yourself over Brian, Paddy. He can take care of himself.”
He made no response to that. He seemed lost in thought. They stood in silence for a while, listening to the steady swish of the ship as it sliced its way through the dark water and to the faint sounds of music coming from inside. From behind them on the deck came occasional footsteps, voices, and laughter, but their own silence continued. Katie didn’t mind. It seemed not an anxious or nervous silence, but a companionable one. The lights cast a pale yellow sheen across the water below them, as if someone had dumped a bucket of melted butter into the sea. She was cold, but not painfully so. If she complained, or shivered, Paddy would take her inside, and she didn’t want to go, didn’t want to leave, didn’t want to move.
But the moment came, as it grew later and colder, when she couldn’t help it, and shivered involuntarily.
Paddy saw the movement, slight though it was, and insisted on taking her to her quarters. “’Tis late, anyway, and I don’t want to find Brian asleep when I get back. Can’t very well talk to him if he’s out cold, can I, then?”
“You’re not goin’ to pester him about Marta, are you? He won’t take kindly to that.” Katie didn’t want the brothers fighting now, when soon enough they would be separating, probably forever. ’Twould be a sore thing for their last words to be angry ones.
“Don’t be tellin’ me what to say to me own brother, Katie.” His tone was curt, almost brusque, as if he was angry. Katie couldn’t believe he was that angry about Marta.
Patrick Kelleher was acting strange, very strange indeed.
Maybe the sea air did affect the brain.
He didn’t come into the stern area with her. Instead, he told her a quick, curt, “Sleep well, then,” and left to seek out his brother.
She had been hoping he’d kiss her again, had known that he wouldn’t, what with him acting so strange and all. Still, she’d kept hoping right up until the very last minute. Foolish girl.
The pleasure of her time spent with Paddy evaporated, leaving disappointment in its place.
So when Eileen, already in bed, asked as Katie arrived, “Were you out walkin’ with your young man, then?” Katie snapped, “I haven’t a young man, nor do I want one! They’re nothin’ but trouble, and that’s the truth of it.”
“Not my Sean,” Eileen said dreamily, and drifted off to sleep.
It was an hour or more before Katie followed suit. When she did, she awoke shortly thereafter soaked in perspiration and shaking. In her dream, the Titanic had collided with an equally enormous ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Both had sunk clear to the bottom of the sea. In Katie’s nightmare, only she was aware of the tragedy. The other passengers went right on playing cards, dancing, smoking, and singing, as if they were still sailing along on the surface as they should have been. Brian was dancing with Marta, Paddy with Eileen. All four were laughing, and took no notice of Katie standing on the sidelines screaming at them that the ship was sinking.
It took her another hour to return to sleep. She awakened the following morning with a painful headache.
In his cabin, Max Whittaker mused over the puzzle that was Elizabeth Farr. He lay on his bed, still fully clothed, the porthole over his head partially opened to the chilly night air, his arms behind his head as he studied the ceiling. He had apologized after the kiss, said he was sorry, that he hadn’t meant it, that he hoped he hadn’t offended her, but the only honest portion of that was the part about hoping he hadn’t offended her. He was pretty sure he hadn’t. She had kissed him back, that much he was sure of.
He had said the other things because that was what you were supposed to do when you kissed a girl you didn’t know all that well. There were rules, rules that he’d had drummed into his head since he was old enough to understand the language. He knew those rules by heart, every one of them. Most of them had to do with “appearances,” how what you did or said or wore in public was received by other people. His mother constantly said, “But how would it look!”
The friends he’d made in Paris had expressed contempt for those rules, asking him why it was he didn’t make his own rules.
Max closed his eyes. He didn’t have to figure everything out tonight. Elizabeth lived in New York, too. Her parents knew his parents. Their relationship didn’t have to end, like most shipboard friendships did, the minute the ship docked. If he was careful not to offend the Farrs he could see her again, in New York, if he wanted to.
He wanted to. There were many things Max Whittaker didn’t know yet, but whether or not he wanted to see more of Elizabeth Farr wasn’t one of them.
The question was, would she want to see him again, once they’d docked? Especially if he struck out on his own and didn’t have two nickles to rub together. How would Elizabeth feel about him then?
That was one of the many things that Max Whittaker didn’t know. It kept him awake for a long time.