A
Japanese Woman
“Bloody hell!” Mark
said, putting his hands flat on the table.
I felt the familiar pressure in
my stomach – the ship was listing. I watched my orange juice
shaking, and I grabbed the glass to prevent it from tipping over.
“That’s pretty bad,”
I said. “Something’s going on.”
I looked around the Windjammer
Café, seeing worried expressions on most passengers’
faces. Mark was staring at his plate, watching his knife and fork
vibrate gently. The whole deck seemed to be humming.
I felt the pressure ease in my
stomach, and watched Mark let out his breath.
Then we heard the announcement on
the public address system.
“Was that an Oscar?”
“It was,” I said. “It
was. Let’s go have a look.”
We went outside. The night was
black, and a healthy breeze buffeted the open deck. There were few
people – most passengers would have been at dinner or a show.
We rested our elbows on the
chest-high safety rail, and looked at the rolling sea fourteen
stories below.
“Have we stopped moving?”
Mark said.
“I can’t really tell.
Maybe.”
“Oscar?” he said,
shaking his head. “Nobody in their right mind would jump into
that.”
“Probably a false alarm,”
I said. “We’d better get back to work.”
I watched a boring game of
Roulette and chatted with Daniela, one of the casino supervisors.
“What was the nine o’clock
check?” I asked her.
“Tables are winning two
thousand,” she said. “The slots about eight.”
“Only two on the tables?”
“It’s been quiet,
Ben. Very quiet.”
One of the croupiers, Vicky,
returned from a break and started to tell us about the drama
upstairs.
“Really?” I asked
Vicky. “I was just up there fifteen minutes ago.”
“Yeah,” she said.
“There’s a helicopter and everything.”
“Well,” I said,
glancing around the almost-empty casino, “I think I’ll go
take another look. Give me a call if it gets busy, Daniela.”
I heard the helicopter as soon as
I stepped out of the elevator, passing through the sliding doors that
led onto open deck.
The scene had changed from
earlier; there were about one hundred people, passengers and crew
alike. They stood at the rails on either side of the ship, watching
events unfold. The helicopter hovered two hundred metres above the
water, away from the ship, its powerful searchlight scanning the
waves below.
Holding my
suit jacket closed against the wind, I found a spot at the safety
rail. Strong spotlights beamed from both sides of the ship, roaming
the water’s surface. The sea was very choppy, and a small
rescue boat rode the waves, ready to respond if any movement was
caught in the lights.
We’d sailed from Naples
only two hours before, but it felt like we were a long way from the
city; there was no land in sight, just a dark sky and a black sea
below.
I returned to work fifteen
minutes later, thinking that it was hopeless - how could you find
anybody in that?
Daniela assigned a croupier to a
Blackjack table, then turned to me.
“So it’s for real?”
“It looks like it,” I
said.
“And there’s a
helicopter up there?”
“Yeah. Italian coast guard,
I think.”
“Jesus!” she said.
“What?”
“What a way to go.”
Before I could answer, the chimes
of the public address system sounded, and another announcement began.
“Good evening, ladies and
gentleman. This is your Cruise Director speaking. Could I have your
attention for this very important announcement? At this time we would
like to ask all passengers to return to their cabins immediately,
allowing our trained personnel to conduct a mandatory head count.”
We looked at each other, puzzled,
as the message was repeated. The casino manager, Darren, came out of
his office and hurried to join us.
“OK, guys,” he said,
“we need to get the passengers out now. Finish whatever hand
they’re playing, then they need to get to their cabins.”
“OK,” I said. “I’ll
sort it.”
“And, Ben?”
“Yeah?”
“We need to get this done
quickly, but let’s not start a stampede.”
“No worries,” I said.
“Time to demonstrate my Crowd Management skills.”
It took a few minutes for Daniela
and me to empty the casino.
A couple of players made some
noise, as they were on a lucky streak at the time; I soothed them
with assurances that the casino would reopen when the head count was
concluded.
I went to the manager’s
office, where I found Darren typing away at his computer.
“What’s going on with
this head count?” I said, taking a seat next to him.
“One second,” he
said. He tapped at the keyboard a few times, then turned to me. “I
just talked to Amit.”
“Amit?”
“Chief Security,” he
said.
“Right,” I said.
“And?”
“They’ve got cameras?
Up on deck fourteen?”
“Yeah. Most of the ship,
pretty much.”
“He told me they’ve
got footage of the woman who jumped.”
“Jesus! Who is it?”
“They can’t tell. The
cameras are old,” he said. “And it’s dark out
there. He said she looked Asian.”
“Shit!” I said. “So,
that’s why they’re doing the head count?”
“Yeah. Everybody goes back
to their cabin, and we see who’s missing.”
“I wonder if it’s one
of the Japanese group.”
“What?”
“You know,” I said.
“They’re always on the craps table.”
“Right, yeah. But aren’t
they mostly guys?”
“True,” I said.
“Could be one of their wives.”
“Well,” he said,
“we’ll find out soon enough.”
I sat at an empty Blackjack
table, chatting with a few croupiers.
“How long do you think this
head count will take, Ben?” one of them asked.
“I know what you’re
thinking,” I said. “You’re hoping we don’t
open back up, then you can all go to the crew bar and get drunk.”
They laughed, and I couldn’t
blame them; I thought the same when I was a croupier.
We were still gossiping when we
heard the announcement ten minutes later, the Cruise Director
informing us that the head count was finished.
“Right,” I said,
“we’d better start opening up again.”
They didn’t look too
pleased.
We reopened, but only a handful
of players trickled in. When Daniela returned from her break just
before midnight, I signed out for the evening.
I chatted briefly with Darren in
the office, but he had no further news on the jumper. I fancied a
drink, but before I headed to the crew bar I decided to take another
look outside.
The helicopter and the rescue
boat were still out there, and it was just as dark and windy as
earlier. There were a lot less people around, so I had plenty of room
at the safety rail.
I thought about the futility of
it. She’d have been in the water for three hours at this point
– if they hadn’t found her yet, they never would. I went
downstairs to my cabin, got changed and headed to the crew bar.
The music stopped at 2.00 a.m. in
the bar; Mark and I sat at a corner table, drinking beer and talking
about the jumper.
“An Asian woman?”
“Yeah”, I said,
“that’s what security told Darren.”
“They must know who it is
by now?”
“They probably do. And
we’ll find out tomorrow.”
He lit a cigarette, and said, “I
wonder why she did it.”
“Unhappy, I guess.”
“Yeah, but why?”
“Who knows? Money
troubles?”
“Maybe she had an affair,”
he said.
“Maybe her husband had an
affair.”
“Ha-ha. Yeah. Maybe.”
He took a drag on his cigarette, and blew out the smoke slowly.
“Maybe we’ll never find out why.”
Before my shift started the
following evening, I went to see Darren in his office.
“That’s the woman who
jumped,” he said, pointing at his computer screen.
I looked at the face on the
monitor. “Shit.”
“Did you see her in the
casino?”
“I think I did, yeah. I
don’t think she played,” I said, “she just chatted
with her husband a few times.”
He clicked on another screen, and
said, “Him?”
“Yeah, that’s him. He
plays on craps quite a bit.”
“Well, I don’t think
he’ll be playing much more now.”
The table games were very quiet;
I left Daniela in charge of the floor, while I retired to the office
and caught up on some paperwork.
I made some progress, but not as
much as I wanted to – my thoughts kept returning to the
Japanese woman. When had I last seen her? Last night? The night
before?
I didn’t remember speaking
to her, but maybe I’d made eye contact. Had she looked
suicidal? Jesus! Does anybody look suicidal?
I finished work just after
midnight, and took the elevator up to deck fourteen. There were no
helicopters or rescue boats, just the black night and a light breeze.
I leaned against the railing,
staring out to sea, wondering if she was still out there. Why did she
jump? Was it money troubles? An unhappy marriage? Something else?
And what goes through a person’s
mind, right at the end? Maybe there would never be any real answers.
You can look at all kinds of plausible explanations, and still never
really understand why.
And what a way to go. Jumping
from that height, maybe breaking bones on impact. Then the cold, dark
water. Held by the waves, watching the ship grow smaller as it sails
away. Then, finally, slipping under.
“Fuck!” I said. “I’m
glad it wasn’t me.”
I headed straight to the crew
bar, not even bothering to get changed out of my suit.
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