The first half of
Futility introduces the
Titan, described as the longest and fastest ship in the world that is also considered unsinkable, and the hero John Rowland, a disgraced former
US Navy officer who was dismissed from the service. Now an alcoholic, he works as a
deckhand on the
Titan. One night, while sailing between America and Ireland, the
Titan crashes into a smaller ship at full speed in fog, splitting it in half. Rowland, who witnessed the collision while on lookout, is offered a bribe by the captain for his silence, but refuses and vows to expose the deed once in port. The captain and the officers attempt to discredit Rowland's testimony by drugging him. The next night, the ship hits an iceberg and capsizes, and only 13 people survive. Rowland saves the young daughter of a former lover by jumping onto the iceberg with her. The pair find a lifeboat washed up on the iceberg, and Rowland also fights and kills an attacking polar bear. They are rescued eventually by a passing ship and brought back to England. Back in England, Rowland tells of the events of the voyage, including the destruction of the smaller ship, the attempted cover-up and drugging by the captain and officers (who have also survived) and the ordeal on the iceberg to an insurance underwriter responsible for insuring both ships. Rowland refuses to testify before court and instead goes to New York with the girl. Once there, the girl is recovered by her mother and Rowland is arrested for her kidnapping. A sympathetic
magistrate discharges him and rebukes the mother for being unsympathetic to her daughter's savior. Rowland then begins living alone. In a brief final chapter covering several years, Rowland progresses from a homeless and largely anonymous fisherman to a desk job and finally, two years after passing a civil service exam, to "a lucrative position under the Government". The second edition of 1912, included a follow-up alternative ending: Rowland receives a letter from the mother (who congratulates him and pleads for him to visit her) and from the girl. ==Similarities to the
Titanic==