Saturday, September 11, 2010

September 12th Sunrise

The sound of him shuffling up the stairs was surreal. I didn't know when, and for a few hours, if he was coming home. Such a long and horrific day had passed between us. He stumbled up the stairs much like I had stumbled numbly through my day with our two small children. And yet there he stood. His eyes were blood red, and his body slumped and drained, but he was home.

John wasn't supposed to be home. His orders were to remain in quarters until morning relief. He had uncharacteristically disregarded orders because he needed to be home, if only for an hour. There were no rules for a while after that day, chaos calls for that.

So he sat on the couch after we hugged and cried and told me his story. My "simple kind of man" that night was a poet. He cited all the names of his buddies that died with such reverence and honor. I sat next to him and watched in awe, because to me that day he was almost a ghost.

As always, and September 11th was no exception, John called. The first call came with a flush of relief. I was not a widow. The calls that followed were sometimes just strangers saying, "You're husband is okay, he asked me to call." Angels with cell phones. Later in the day he called, from an undisclosed location, which generously offered free "soft drinks" to all firemen, cops and survivors.

I've often wondered how different John might be had he not come home that night. What horrors might he have held inside? What walls might he have put up? It was all so raw... I needed to see him and he needed to see me... nothing else mattered, nothing else should.

About an hour after John got home we received a call from his officer. He had to report back to the firehouse that night. I was beyond furious. It felt as if we were at the center of a bulls eye and I couldn't bear being alone.

Over the weeks that followed I began to hate the fire department, the city, the country and I just wanted to get out. I didn't need anyone to tell me to prepare a go bag. I had a plan, a bag, our necessary documents and an intense desire to leave Brooklyn for the mainland within days after September 11th. I was a cynical, life long New Yorker, and I sincerely believed we could simply be written off. If anything else should happen, the bridges would be closed and we would be on our own. Two years later I hardly looked back, when we crossed the Hudson River with our three children bound for our new home in the Hudson Valley.

Before John came home that night, while light was still in the sky, I had read to our children before bed. I recall that being of great comfort to me. The mundane was a safe and comfortable place in a shifting and scary world. During the night there was a thunderstorm... it seemed fitting, and somehow cleansing.

To me the sunrise of September 12th was a miracle. The day before everything had fallen apart, the seams had ripped, the veils had torn... and yet the sun, the blessed Sun still rose. That morning I had a visceral understanding of why people worshipped the Sun... and in my heart I felt hope.

1 comment:

  1. I remember I was sitting on the toilet at the Georgian Motel in Quitman, GA, where I lived and worked, when my husband called out to me from our bedroom, "Deb, come quick, you have to see this! A plane just crashed into one of the twin towers buildings in New York". I quickly got off the toilet (as fast as humanly possible) and ran to the bedroom. As I watched the news, family and friends passed through my head like a flash of lightning. In a matter of a couple seconds you and John were on my mind.
    Then the moment came when we all found out it was not just an accident but a terrorist attack on our country, the second plane hit. I could barely see the TV through the tears falling from my eyes. Trying to dial the phone was very hard that day, and actually getting through was even harder. Lines were tied up and all I kept getting was a busy signal. Frustration, fear, sadness, anger, and agony filled my heart for all.
    Finally, sometime that day word came in that those closest to my heart were spared. My brother Dennis was due to be in Tower that day, but by miracle, his boss told him to go to the office first and he was saved from the fate that so many others had to endure. My other brother David was in the city that day working and he could not leave the city to go home to Brooklyn.
    My eyes stayed glued to the TV, and I worried about John and you. I remember thinking to myself how I wished I was there with you, to hold your hand, to cry with you, to hold you, and to comfort you. I knew in my heart you needed a friend and I could not be there. I am sorry.
    When I think about that day, the images still run through my mind and tears flow like rain down my face, forming puddles where they land.

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