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Authors: Robin Wells

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The doctor, a man with a gray fringe of hair around his balding head, jerked awake. He rose from his chair, along with the heavy scent of whiskey. “You are not supposed to be in here.”

“Those babies are dead!” I gasped.

“You are not to be in here,” he repeated.

“We are here to keep another baby from dying. This child is dehydrated.”

He looked at Lucia, rather than the child in her arms. “It looks like it's too late,” he said. “I have very few IVs left, and I have to save them.”

“For whom?”

“The—the crew. I can't run out of supplies.”

It was because Lucia was Italian. I instinctively knew it. I drew up to my tallest height. “If you don't give this child an IV, I'm going to the dining room and announcing that there are six dead babies in here, that the ship's doctor is drunk, and that you are withholding treatment that could save another baby. You will have six hundred women beating down your door to kill you.”

“It is not my fault!”

“If you don't want me to make an announcement, you will put an IV in this child immediately.”

I do not know where my authoritative tone came from, but it worked. The doctor fumed and harrumphed, but he told the nurse, in English, to get an IV and a baby cot for the hallway.

“And a chair,” I added, also in English. “The mother will stay here with her child tonight.”

Two Red Cross nurses came forward. “You must not say anything about what you saw,” said one who wore a Supervisor pin on her shirt.

“I will say whatever I want.”

“It will cause mass panic. We will dock tomorrow. The mothers will be better off learning the fate of their children when they are with their husbands.”

“They don't know?” My heart sank for the poor, unfortunate mothers of those poor, unfortunate babies. “What are you telling them in the meantime?”

“That the doctor is treating their children. That he's doing all he can and that they can't see them because they must be quarantined.”

“Do you have a plan for telling them?”

“Yes. We will call their husbands aboard so they will have support, then the chaplain will break the news.”

I weighed the consequences. There was no good way to handle this terrible problem; at least the plan seemed humane. “Very well. I will say nothing until I am off the ship. But Lucia will stay here with her baby tonight, and she will get the best treatment available. Furthermore, any other baby that comes in will automatically get an IV, as long as there is one single IV left. You will hold nothing back for the crew. Do we have a deal?”

“Yes,” the head nurse agreed.

Just to be sure, I sat with Lucia until midnight, then crawled into my bunk and fell heavily asleep beside my own sweet Elise.

45
AMÉLIE

1946

W
e're here! We're here!” Heloise rushed into the cabin the next morning. She had been on deck since before daybreak, watching as we neared New York. “Come, Amélie—you have to come see the Statue of Liberty!”

“I'll watch Elise,” Stephanie promised, looking at my sleeping child.

I tied a scarf over my head and grabbed my coat. I followed Heloise out the door and down the narrow hall, then clanged up the narrow metal stairway to the deck.

I had already been to the infirmary that morning. Lucia's baby had made it through the night and was showing signs of great improvement. I'd brought a bottle of formula—Stephanie's formula, made with water from my tea—and the child had eagerly gulped it all. The head nurse said that if she kept it down, the IV would be removed and she would be cleared to leave.

My heart ached for the women who were about to discover that the babies they'd given life to no longer lived.

The wind cut me, stealing my breath as I pushed through the heavy metal door and stepped onto the deck. Heloise and I were the only women outside. The rest were staying warm and, more importantly, protecting their hairstyles—most of us had rolled our hair the night before and were doing everything possible to look our best for our husbands. It was very difficult, with the bathroom situation as disgusting as is it was. With my short hair and natural curls, I was less worried than many of the others.

We sailed right past the Statue of Liberty. Oh, she was a beautiful sight, so large and stately and tall! I thought we were going to stop there—I had read that Ellis Island was the entry point for all immigrants—but we kept going and sailed straight into New York Harbor. As the wives of servicemen, we had special visas.

People were already milling around on the dock, waiting for the ship. Lots of men, a few middle-aged couples and some families—in-laws, no doubt, anxious to meet their new daughters-in-law. My heart turned over. Oh, how lucky these girls were, to have loving husbands eagerly waiting to welcome them to America!

“Do you see your husband?” Heloise asked me.

“No.” I didn't expect to—not until the afternoon, at any rate. The instructions had said that we would disembark some time after noon. “Do you see yours?”

“No. But I don't want to look yet. I want to get myself glammed up before he sees me.”

“And if you don't see him, he won't see you?”

She laughed. “Something like that.”

We hurried below deck and packed up the last of our things. We went to breakfast, but not many of us could eat. Seasickness still dogged many of us, and excitement had dampened the appetites of others.

The previous evening, we had been given instructions for disembarking.

“You are to gather in the dining hall,” a Red Cross official had told us. “We will use a loudspeaker to announce your names as your husbands arrive. No one will be allowed off the ship unless your husband or a family member is here.”

“Pardon.” A bride I did not know raised a tentative hand. “What if a husband is delayed and he cannot send someone else? What happens to the bride?”

“I am sorry, but in that event, the woman must stay on the ship and return to France.”

Every woman moaned.

“I am afraid that will happen to me,” Stephanie murmured.

Surprised, I turned to her. Her eyes were wet with tears.

“The last time my husband wrote, he said perhaps we had made a mistake. I wrote to him, begging him to give us a chance. I told him things would be better in America, that I would be a good wife—but I fear he will not come.”

“Oh, you cannot seriously think this!” Heloise said.

“I do. I do, and . . . I'm afraid.”

“Why didn't you say anything?”

“I—I was ashamed. And I didn't know what else to do.”

“Do you know anyone in America?” I asked.

“I have a cousin in Florida.”

“Well, then—we must get you to her.”

“But first I have to get off the ship.” Tears rolled down her cheeks.

I handed her a handkerchief and helped her pack up her things. We pulled our suitcases and our belongings into the dining room, where we waited as name after name was called. The names were in random order—apparently they were called according to the order that the husbands signed in onshore.

“Mrs. Bradley.” The name resounded over the ship's loudspeaker. “Mrs. Ronald Bradley.”

“That's me! That's my Ronnie!” Heloise said excitedly.

I gave her a hug. “I'm going to go up and watch you join him.”

“Oh, me, too!” said Stephanie. All of the brides from our room, except for the stuck-up one who had not become any friendlier, did the same.

We went to the railing and watched. Heloise made her way down the gangplank. About halfway down, she apparently caught sight of her husband, for she waved, smiled madly, and began to trot, her hugely pregnant belly going before her.

“She better be careful or she's going to trip!” Stephanie said.

A man in a black suit and tie picked her up off her feet and swung her around, despite her size. He handed her flowers and kissed her, then picked her up again.

“She's a lucky devil,” sighed Stephanie. “No question her husband wants her here.”

“Yes.”

“What about you, Amélie? Do you see your husband?”

I looked out over the sea of people, my heart tight and anxious. I didn't want to say it, but I, too, had questions about whether or not Jack would come. His life would be far easier if he just did not show up.

But I was fairly sure, even though I had only seen him a few times, that Dr. Jack O'Connor was a man of his word. After all, he'd gone to a church to convey the confession of a dying man, hadn't he? And he'd provided Christmas gifts and other items for Elise. And he'd gone through with the marriage, hadn't he?

Yes, he would be here. I was certain of it.

But poor Stephanie! We went back inside and sat side by side, each of us trying to quiet our fussing babies, but the children seemed to pick up on our nervousness—especially her poor baby. He wailed and wailed inconsolably. Our wait was punctuated by going outside to see off the remainder of our roommates, then sitting again, on pins and needles, listening to the names being called.

We were down to about fifty brides remaining in the waiting room when, finally, around four-thirty in the afternoon, it came. “Mrs. O'Connor. Mrs. Jonathan O'Connor.”

“That's you!”

It took me a moment to recognize my name. I rose, picking up Elise. I hugged Lucia and Stephanie good-bye.

“I hope I'm not going back to France,” she said.

“I'll speak to Jack and see if we can do something to help,” I said.

I hurried down the gangplank, trying to see over the head of the sailor ahead of me, who was carrying someone's bags. As I neared the end of the slanted board, I saw him—tall and handsome, his dark hair freshly cut and shining in the sun.

I lifted my hand. He did the same. I rushed toward him, then stopped abruptly, suddenly unsure of how to greet him. We awkwardly exchanged la bise. He smelled like aftershave and starch, and the scent of him made my heart flutter. I reminded myself that he did not know I spoke English.

“Bonjour,” I said, feeling like a tongue-tied idiot.

“Bonjour.
Bienvenue aux États-Unis
.”

“Merci.” I was aware of how weirdly stilted and formal we were with each other, especially when surrounded by the effusive greetings of the other couples.

Jack gave Elise a wide smile. “Hello, little one,” he said in French.

She regarded him somberly, then broke into a wide smile. He smiled back.

“She remembers you,” I said.

“Do you think?”

“Yes.”

“Did you have a good trip?”

“Oh, Jack—it was . . .” My eyes suddenly filled with tears.

His forehead creased in concern. “Is something the matter?”

I didn't want my first words to be a complaint against his country's treatment of us. I shook my head. “It was very tiring.”

“I'm sure! I hear you ran into some bad weather. Is this the only bag you have?” He lifted my battered brown suitcase.

I nodded.

“Well, then, let's go.”

“Wait.” I put one hand on his arm, then quickly withdrew it. Touching him made me feel very self-conscious and nervous. “I'm worried that one of my roommates won't have anyone to meet her.”

“What?”

“She said . . . her husband seems to have had a change of heart. The last note she got from him, he said he thought their marriage was a mistake.”

“And she came anyway?”

“Yes. She has a baby, and she didn't know what else to do. But the Red Cross told us that if a husband or the husband's family doesn't show up to meet one of us, well, then that bride won't be allowed to get off the boat. So, Jack—do you have a friend here? Someone who could pretend to be her husband?”

His eyes widened. “You want me to ask a friend to lie?”

“Jack, you have no idea of the conditions.”

“I know it's bad in France, but . . .”

“I don't mean in France. I mean on that ship.” The words came tumbling out. “Jack, the toilets didn't work after the first week. There was human waste all over the floor. There was no ballast on the boat and everyone was seasick. There weren't enough buckets for the vomit. And the babies who drank formula—oh, Jack, I saw six of them dead.”

“What?”

“In the infirmary. I took a friend whose child was nearly dead from dehydration. The doctor was drunk, and I saw six dead babies on ice, lying in coolers under pillowcases . . .”

He looked at me as if I were mad. “That ship is operated by the U.S. military. Do you realize how ludicrous this sounds?”

“Yes, yes, I know, but it is the truth. I fear my roommate's baby would not survive the trip back. Do you have a friend who can say he is her husband?”

“No!” His eyes flashed with indignation. “And if I did, I would never ask anyone to commit that kind of deception.”

“Well, then, perhaps you can say you are her husband's cousin. She has a cousin Florida. If we can just get her off that boat . . .”

“Attention, please,” came a woman's voice through the loudspeaker. “We have a few women who as yet have not had family claim them. Is anyone here for Mrs. Nat Spencer, Mrs. Cyril Freud, Mrs. Arthur Smith, Mrs. Jules Tervot, or Mrs. Sherman Rolls?”

“That's her! Mrs. Sherman Rolls. Stephanie Rolls. You must help her.”

“I will not lie. And frankly, Amélie, I'm appalled that you'd ask that of me.”

I realized I had made a grave error in judgment, but I didn't know what to do. “Well, we can't just leave her and her baby on the ship.”

“This is a matter for the officials to handle.”

“She needs our help. Please, Jack.”

He blew out an exasperated sigh, then turned and stared at the ship. “Take Elise into the terminal and get her warm,” he said. “I'll see what I can do.”

I headed into the terminal. From the window, I watched him talk to the Red Cross worker on the gangplank. She would not let him aboard, but she signaled a crewmember, said something to him, and the
crewmember went inside the ship. I waited an hour, alternately sitting on my suitcase and walking Elise. I watched Jack talk to a ship's officer. I left my perch at the window once to go change Elise's diaper, and when I came back, I saw Jack talking to yet another Red Cross worker.

At length Jack returned, threading his way through the thinning crowd in the terminal.

“Well?”

“Your friend's husband came and collected her.”

“Oh, how wonderful!”

“Apparently he'd had a case of cold feet, but he got over it. They were billing and cooing like a pair of turtle doves.”

“I'm so relieved!”

“I suspect she might be in for a tough time, though. He had a black eye, and he reeked of whiskey.”

“Well, at least he came for her, and she's off that ship. That's the important thing.”

His blue eyes regarded me somberly. “I have to say, Amélie, I'm shocked that you asked me to lie like that.”

“Jack, if you had seen the conditions on the boat, you would have done anything to get her off it.”

“I asked the Red Cross representative about sanitation on the boat, and she said everything was shipshape.”

“Of course she did! They won't want it known how badly they bungled things.”

“I asked to speak to a ship's officer, and the bursar came down and talked to me. He said things got a bit bumpy during the storm and there was a lot of seasickness. He also said that several of the foreign women didn't have the best hygiene, and that their children fell ill because of it.”

“It was not the hygiene of the women! He is lying to you!”

“He knew nothing of any dead babies.”

“I saw them, Jack!”

Jack blew out a hard sigh. “Well, if what you say is true, it will come out soon enough.” There was an iciness to his voice that had not been there before, and it filled me with grim foreboding.

He didn't believe me. The irony of it all—that he had believed my lies, but not my truth—left a bitter taste in my mouth. “I suppose it will.”

He picked up my bag. “Well, let's get going.”

Elise cried at the shock of the cold wind and the loud noises of traffic as we left the terminal. I held her close as Jack hailed a cab.

“What is the address of your aunt's home?”

“It's 1926 Fairster Street. I believe it's in an area called the Bronx.”

Jack gave the address to the cabdriver in English, and the taxi pulled away from the curb.

—

New York had much more traffic than Paris, and the city seemed to go on forever. The skyscrapers were so tall that they made the streets seem like canyons. I gazed out the window in awe, then turned my attention to Jack.

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