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9-26-01

Smoke

By Libby Garland

The Friday after the plane crashes, I turned on my laptop at 3:50 a.m.   The Microsoft icons came winking on in the dark living room of my South Brooklyn apartment and I tried to write.  “The city is filled with smoke,” I typed.  “I have never paid attention to which way the wind is blowing here, but now it is impossible not to know.  When it blows north, as it did yesterday, you can smell the smoke in midtown, where my office is. When it blows south, as it is doing now, as it did Tuesday, it comes in through my apartment windows, five miles away.  Three-thirty a.m. I woke up to it, a smell like burning rubber, and shut the windows.  There was lightning, too.  It has begun to rain.  I don’t know if this is good or bad for the rescue workers.  On the news, I have heard both.” 

Then I gave up, turned the computer off, went back to bed, tried to breathe in my smoke-stuffy bedroom, tried to fall asleep.  I have been only partly able to do anything; concentration eludes me.  I keep feeling I need to write.  I am supersaturated with the things I have seen and the stories I have been hearing and reading, through the official networks of National Public Radio, The New York Times, CNN.com, and through the unofficial ones, the friend who knows someone who knows someone who made cell phone calls from the burning roof, or the friend whose ex-boyfriend’s brother just happened to be speaking at a conference that was happening on the 102nd floor that day, or people talking on the subway or on cell phones as they walk down the street.  But mostly I just feel too exhausted—by the mass grief around me, by the scale of the devastation in this city of edge and energy, by the fear of what will be a week from now, a month from now—to write anything coherent at all.   In any case, there are already too many words out there, too many reports, too many analyses to absorb, even though it feels urgent to try.  But for the moment, I will give up on coherence, on a chronological narrative or analytical take, and try to put down some of the bits and pieces instead.  

When I finally get to work on the Tuesday morning of the crashes, everything is confusion.  Outside I run into a co-worker, who says they just hit the Pentagon, and I have no idea what the Pentagon could have to do with the smoke coming from downtown.  Upstairs, people are listening to radios and Internet broadcasts, until someone goes out and buys a television.  Then we alternate between watching the television and staring out the window at the crowds of people walking north along car-empty Park Avenue.  No one in the office is quite sure where to go.  The bridges and tunnels are closed; the trains and ferries are not running.  We become acutely aware that Manhattan is an island.  We keep hearing things: there are still four hijacked planes in the air; they have evacuated Rockefeller Center.  A lot of the day is spent trying to make phone calls; the lines are impossible.   Cell phones are not working.  It takes me three hours to reach my parents, at work, to let them know that I am all right.  Everyone is trying to check in with everyone else.   

And then the e-mails start, friends from all over the country and around the world e-mailing, wanting to know if I am okay, wanting to make contact, I think, somehow, with New York.  It is good to hear from people, including people I have not heard from in years, but I don’t know what to tell them.  I don’t know much more than they do, and at times I know less.  As the week goes on, people keep e-mailing and calling, and my friends tell me the people they know are doing the same.  We are grateful for the connection, but overwhelmed.  We can’t call back, in any case, because the phone just does a rapid Beep Beep Beep when you dial long distance.  

On Tuesday, a week after the plane crashes, I wake up with a nasty cold.   Instead of going to Rosh Hashanah services, I drag myself out into the beautiful sunny day to go to the Hong Kong market three blocks east to buy a chicken to make soup for myself.  My immigrant neighborhood, dense with people speaking Spanish, Chinese, and Arabic, has one American flag or more on every house, every car.  “America—love it or leave it,” people have written on paper flags like the ones K-mart printed in the newspaper with instructions to cut out and display.   On the industrial block before the market I pass a few of the neighborhood’s garment sweatshops where Chinese immigrant women work long, long hours every day of the week, sitting in front of the clacking sewing machines.   Then I pass some garages rented out for storage, and in front of one of them stands a large white guy, maybe sixtyish, in old plastic glasses and a grubby T-shirt.  He has a pile of tiny American flags he is carefully attaching to miniature metal flagpoles.  Where are those from? I ask him, because I have heard that it is hard to find flags anywhere right now and that they are sold out all over the country.   He tells me, in a voice that makes me think he is a lifelong Brooklynite, that he had them printed up during the Iran hostage crisis, in the ‘70s, and had stored them away in this garage ever since.  Were people buying lots of flags then? I ask him.  Not like now, he tells me.  And then he shows me something else he has pulled out of storage to serve what he predicts will be a sudden demand: a black metal gizmo that looks a little like a crazy old typewriter, but is, it turns out, a Civil War-era machine that prints metal identification tags.  He bought it in Atlanta years ago.  All these people, he says, bringing in their DNA samples, going crazy because they don’t know whose body is whose.  Metal tags, see, they could have come in handy. 

On the Thursday after the crashes, I return to work; the office has reopened after being closed Wednesday because the trains were so crazy.  Who knew who could get in to Manhattan from Brooklyn, Queens or Westchester?  My co-worker Daniel is not there that morning; he is a rabbi and has been volunteering as a chaplain with the Red Cross since Tuesday night, when he discovered there was no way he could reach his home in New Jersey.  Thursday afternoon he returns to the office, sweaty, exhausted, devastated. He has spent the morning at the Armory on Lexington and 25th, around the corner from where we work, in the unairconditioned space the city has set up as a centralized emergency information bureau for families of the missing.  Cops, clergy, counselors are there to sit down individually with thousands of desperate people, to try and guide them through the hospital lists and the seven page questionnaire the city has put together: Any distinguishing scars?  Tattoos?  Dental records?   It is from Daniel that we learn, before the media has reported it, that what they are finding are not bodies, but body parts, which get shipped in refrigerated trucks to somewhere where the seven page questionnaires will help in the identification process.   It is from Daniel that we learn that though many families have spent the past 48 hours trekking from hospital to hospital hoping to find whomever they are seeking among the unidentified, the hospitals have no John Does.  The few who have come into the hospitals have been identified.  Most were Dead On Arrival. 

Outside my office, and on bus shelters and parking signs and telephone booths all over the city, and especially on walls of hospitals, there are signs that look like the signs kids put up when their kittens have run away, with photos and handwritten pleas for information: this person worked on the 101st floor; this person has a heart tattoo over her left ankle; this person is from Ethiopia; this person was last heard from at 9:05 on his cell phone saying he was okay and that he had made it to the 78th floor.  I start to recognize the same pictures, happy smiling photos of people who become familiar as I see them again and again all over the city.  I see the guy who sits at the front desk of my office building saying “Good Morning, Sir” and “Goodnight, Miss” posting one of the pictures of the Missing on the bus stop sign in front of our building.  

I listen during the week almost nonstop to the radio news; I don’t have a television.  The reporters on WNYC, the city’s public radio station, sound exhausted, they stumble over their words.  President Bush is coming to crash the site, says one reporter, then corrects herself, I mean he is coming to view the crash site, she says, and I can’t help laughing. The station is broadcasting from National Public Radio’s offices.  Its own offices were at Ground Zero, its transmitter on top of the World Trade Center, and so the radio station has also had to flee.  I buy The New York Times when I can find it—it is sold out early everywhere—and read every article two or three times, so obsessed that one day I miss my subway stop and end up in the wrong part of Brooklyn because I am lost in the newspaper.  There is too much to think about all at once, the local disaster, the global implications: cells and Osama, infiltration and box cutters, rubble; anger and hope, grief and confusion, fear; the failing airline industry asking for money from Congress; the profiles of the terrorists and the profiles of those who died on the planes; which subway stops and lines aren’t in service; speculation about whether the era of the skyscraper is over; heated debates over letting national security trump civil liberties; reports from the local fire stations that have lost half their firefighters; press conferences with everybody, commentary from everybody.  Everything is bad.  

The tension, the jitteriness in the city are overwhelming.  In the Arab part of my neighborhood, police stand in front of the mosques, the stores.  Someone sends around an e-mail saying that there have been several attacks reported in this neighborhood already. On the subway on the Wednesday after the crashes, the woman next to me starts to cry as we go over the Manhattan Bridge, and the gray-white smoke rising above the ruins of the World Trade Center comes into view.  The young student-type on my other side tells me he is from Belarus, and was planning to stay in New York, but is now reconsidering.  The political situation in Belarus is very bad, he says, but so is this.   His mother, at home, was in hysterics on Tuesday, thought the whole city was on fire.   

The Thursday after the crashes there are ninety bomb scares around the city.   They evacuate Grand Central Station, Penn Station, the main branch of the public library and the building that holds the Swedish Massage Institute, as I am told by the young woman at the wine shop in Grand Central Station when I go there to pick up a bottle of Spanish red for a friend’s birthday dinner.   As I walk around, everything looks different, everything looks like a target.  Police have blocked off the street to the west of Grand Central.  When I get off the train at Pacific Street, Brooklyn’s main subway hub, there are about forty police officers lining the walls; later I learn that there was a bomb scare there, and a fight.  Four days later, the conductor on the W line announces that we won’t be stopping at Pacific, and as the train sails by, I see that they have cleared the platform of everyone but a few cops.   Another bomb scare, I assume.  I am jittery, too.  One morning at breakfast I knock over my grapefruit juice so that it goes everywhere, and I start to cry. 

On the Tuesday of the crashes, after leaving the office to try to give blood—though I give up on this when I see that thousands of people are milling around the hospital trying to do the same—I look up when I hear the roar of a plane.  It is an F-16, which I know because I have seen them on TV, a smooth-flying bat, large, triangular and loud.  On Wednesday I go downtown, to Houston Street, a half hour before 7 World Trade Center collapses.  The streets are blocked off to regular traffic and people are everywhere.  Some wear surgical masks to keep out the soot, some sit at cafes, some wander around with flags or cameras; news crews are there with their vans and microphones.   City buses with “Out of Service” on their foreheads drive by filled with firefighters.  Trucks and trucks and trucks filled with what look like construction supplies are parked along Houston; more trucks whiz by with police escorts, sirens.  Police have barricades all along the street and let no one south of Houston without identification proving that they live there.   

The next day, on the city’s West Side, I see soldiers in green camouflage, and matching camouflage trucks.  This reminds me, bizarrely, of walking with a friend across the plaza in front of downtown Brooklyn’s courthouse about three years ago, and seeing trucks exactly like these, and then realizing they were part of a movie set.  What are you filming here? we asked a guy winding cable around his arm.  Oh, something with Denzel Washington, Bruce Willis, he said.   Arab terrorists bomb New York.  I also don’t quite believe it when I start to see the T-shirts—I Survived the Attack.  Or when I go by Madame Tussaud’s wax museum on 42nd Street, and see they have placed their George W. Bush figure on the sidewalk in front of the American flag, behind a sign with a quote from a speech he made asserting the beauty of freedom and the evil of terrorism.  People are lining up to get their picture taken with the wax President and the flag and the sign with the quote.

The Saturday after the crashes I try again to volunteer, this time at the New York Waterway bus depot, where the main task is to sort the vast amount of stuff that has been pouring in from across the city and the country: water, canned goods, dog food for the rescue dogs, batteries, towels, sweatpants, Tampax.  This is not even the central volunteer site, it is nowhere in the newspapers—people have just found out about it by word of mouth.  At other sites there are more people, thousands, trying to do something to help.  There are too many people here, too, college students, and men who have turned up with shovels and hard hats and rope, hoping to go dig downtown.  I help move bottles of water for a while—I think all of us like to pretend that we are moving rubble—and then get assigned to standing at the door turning people away: the trucker who arrives in an 18-wheeler that says Bananas and Produce, the college guys who have driven in from Philadelphia.  Suddenly I realize that the tough-looking man sitting there silently, in the sun, on an upturned bucket, has not moved since I arrived.  He looks dazed.  Are you okay? I ask him, not knowing whether he has been digging downtown, whether he knows people who have died, or whether he is just exhausted and sad.  He looks up and says Yeah, thanks. I ask him if he wants some water and he says No, thanks, and gives me a small smile, and goes on sitting.

After I leave the bus depot I go downtown, wander around Wall Street, turning every time I come to a police barricade.  I have never known this part of town very well; now I am totally disoriented, just turning left and then right.  Other people seem to be doing the same, most with cameras.  Everywhere, on the ground, on the buildings up to the second or third floor, there is the gray dust I have been seeing on the boots and pants of exhausted, red-eyed rescue workers around town.  Some people wear surgical masks, some wear gas masks.  I look through the window of a locked Chase Manhattan Bank branch, and see, sitting on the counter where people fill out deposit and withdrawal slips, an open newspaper, and a half-eaten bagel and cream cheese.  The newspaper’s date is Tuesday, September 11.  Though it makes me cough, I root around in the dust next to another building, looking at the papers that fluttered down when the buildings collapsed. Health insurance forms from Cantor Fitzgerald, which lost 700 employees; a half-burnt page of a Manhattan phone book; fax forms from the Port Authority. Later, I try to go to a meeting someone told me about—lefty, progressive groups from around town meeting to talk about antiwar actions.  I get there late, and the meeting is so crowded there is no more room left.  I leave my name and e-mail, and over the next few days my e-mail overflows with even more announcements, forwarded petitions, links to articles.

The Tuesday morning of the attack I was a little late leaving for work, and so transferred to the express train, hoping that would get me to midtown quicker than the train that went under the World Trade Center, the one that crawled through lower Manhattan.  I was frustrated when the express kept stopping in the tunnel, and saw other people muttering in that grumpy way New Yorkers do when they are inconvenienced.  Then the train pulled out onto the Manhattan Bridge and stopped.  The conductor’s voice came over the public address: You can see the flames from here, he said.  Everyone looked out.  Someone said Jesus Christ and other people just sucked in their breath.  The first thing I saw: smoke, puffed clouds of it so big I thought the fire was right nearby, in Brooklyn.  Then I saw the red gashes high, high up in the towers.  What the hell is that? someone said.  A woman on the train who had gotten on at the last stop said she had heard on the television that a plane crashed into the building.  People speculated.   Someone said Maybe it hit one tower and then went into the other.  Planes don’t fly there, said a guy who was standing up and leaning against the window.  If that was a plane it wasn’t an accident.  Even though we didn’t know what had happened, or how, it looked horrible, lethal, a nightmare.  Through the train windows it seemed both impossibly near, and impossibly far away.   We were able to do nothing but watch.


    

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