Senator Jack
Vendor
- Messages
- 2,845
I was on the Grand Central Parkway by LaGuardia airport when a fellow driver starts honking at me, indicating that I should roll down my window. He then proceeds to ask me if I have the radio on. 'Another nut,' I think, but then he tells me about the plane crash, while we're both driving, and I'm thinking it must be something like a piper cub. The news report cleared that up for me.
I had an appointment to keep with a client, and when I got there, I was told that the first tower just fell and they're suspecting terrorist attack. So I get back in my car and head back to Queens where I live. By this time phone service is disrupted and I can't get through to my girlfriend, and as I head west it starts to finally sink in. Off there in the distance is the blackest cloud I had ever seen in my life - it was covering the entire south of Manhattan. When I finally pulled up to my girlfriend's door she ran out to me with relief because I have clients on Wall Street and she didn't know where I was that day.
I think the following days were more harrowing than the first because I live near the airport and the only planes we heard over the next few days were military jets. In the middle of the night I was waking up to the sound of their scrambling, thinking this is it, they've somehow got a dirty bomb into the city. By the time the weekend had come, my girlfriend had persuaded me to drive up to Vermont for a few days.
When I returned, I had to attend to a couple of those clients down on Wall Street, which is just a few blocks from ground zero. Electricity had come back up and they needed to get their systems back up and running. Even with all that had already happened, I wasn't prepared for what I was about to see. Soot and wreckage everywhere, and everyone with masks on their faces. Soldiers roaming about with machine guns, which is something I had never seen in the States before. Over the next few days, I packed up my apartment, thinking I had just about had it with New York. It's hard enough to live here, who needs the constant threat of terrorist attacks?
Well, obviously I stuck it out and I'm still here, though I don't think any of us doesn't wonder when the next attack will be. It seems inevitable, but I hope to God I'm wrong about that.
Regards,
Senator Jack
I had an appointment to keep with a client, and when I got there, I was told that the first tower just fell and they're suspecting terrorist attack. So I get back in my car and head back to Queens where I live. By this time phone service is disrupted and I can't get through to my girlfriend, and as I head west it starts to finally sink in. Off there in the distance is the blackest cloud I had ever seen in my life - it was covering the entire south of Manhattan. When I finally pulled up to my girlfriend's door she ran out to me with relief because I have clients on Wall Street and she didn't know where I was that day.
I think the following days were more harrowing than the first because I live near the airport and the only planes we heard over the next few days were military jets. In the middle of the night I was waking up to the sound of their scrambling, thinking this is it, they've somehow got a dirty bomb into the city. By the time the weekend had come, my girlfriend had persuaded me to drive up to Vermont for a few days.
When I returned, I had to attend to a couple of those clients down on Wall Street, which is just a few blocks from ground zero. Electricity had come back up and they needed to get their systems back up and running. Even with all that had already happened, I wasn't prepared for what I was about to see. Soot and wreckage everywhere, and everyone with masks on their faces. Soldiers roaming about with machine guns, which is something I had never seen in the States before. Over the next few days, I packed up my apartment, thinking I had just about had it with New York. It's hard enough to live here, who needs the constant threat of terrorist attacks?
Well, obviously I stuck it out and I'm still here, though I don't think any of us doesn't wonder when the next attack will be. It seems inevitable, but I hope to God I'm wrong about that.
Regards,
Senator Jack