In the end, Rose left the hospital with baby Jack in her arms. She wasn't arrested, because all along, Cal just wanted Jack dead, and he got his wish. Joseph, Josephine and Martin were released, and Rose moved back to Los Angeles, where she and Jack planned to go. She scored an acting job as a moving picture actress and met a man named Michael Calvert, whom she married and had three more kids with. Rose never forgot Jack, and she saw him every time she looked at her son. Jack was so much like his father that Rose swore that when Jack had died, he became his son. They looked alike, they sounded alike, they even laughed about the same things.

Rose often visited Martin and his new wife, Florence. Together, they had a set of twins: a boy named John and a girl named Lynette. She and Martin often visited the cemetery near where they used to live in New York. In that cemetery were Jack, who had died a hero, and Lynette, who had died a loyal friend. Martin kept the restraunt and he kept the name, which Lynette had chosen. But the name was changed in 1959 by Corra, who later owned the restraunt.

Joseph died a rich man married to Josephine in his home of natural causes in 1952. He was buried in the plot that Rose had planned for her, her father and Jack to be buried in. Rose often visited him as well, thanking him for a life well lived, and for allowing her and Jack to live with him. She thanked Josephine for helping them as well. Josephine died in 1954 in her sleep.

Cal, on the other hand, married again. He didn't have any children which his wife, who divorced him in 1928. The next year, he lost his fortune in the Wall Street Crash in 1929. He'd put a pistol in his mouth, that year.

Rose grew old and was interviewed about the Titanic in 1997. The historians there were curious about the Heart of the Ocean, which she'd dropped in the harbor back in April of 1912. She died in her bed one night, and was reunited with Jack aboard the Titanic, her happy place.

"Welcome to heaven, my love," whispered Jack, kissing her hand. He looked the way he did the last time she saw him, and she looked the way she did aboard the Titanic.

"Oh, Jack! I've missed you terribly!" Rose exclaimed, and Jack wrapped his arms around her and brought her into a kiss. Before she died, Rose would hear the same song repeated in her ear every night before she went to bed.

Come Josephine, in my flying machine. Going up she goes, up she goes…..