Our backyard had three ancient willow trees that
always shed branches when it rained, so that’s where I was, cleaning up, when
my brother called the next morning.
Jane answered & Dave said, Are you watching
television?
No.
Turn it on. Now.
What channel?
It doesn’t matter.
I was on the phone with him when the North Tower fell.
On September
12th, back in the city, Dave & I rode our bicycles downtown to
see what we could see. On my way to meet him, I saw a car parked on West 77th
Street, covered in dust.
The cops had all traffic blocked at Houston Street,
but from years of running along the East River, I knew the little downtown
streets pretty well. Getting inside was easy.
Dave wanted to go back to his old apartment in the
West Village. Walking out of his front door every day, the first thing he would
see would be the towers. At Christopher & Washington, he got off his
bicycle in the middle of the intersection & let it drop. He stood in the
middle of the street, arms at his sides, staring up at the empty sky.
I took so many pictures that day, but I didn’t take
that one. I don’t know why.
We got within two or three blocks of The Pile. Everything
was covered in dust, sometimes ankledeep. Papers & shoes. Demolished cars & trucks,
towed just far enough away.
At some point I realized that we were serving no
useful purpose & had no acceptable reason for being there, taking pictures
of rescue workers with nobody to rescue. I thought about what was in the dust I was walking on & I felt
like a creep.
The fires burned for weeks. You could smell them from
30 miles away, or more.
In 2002, I worked the first Tribeca Film Festival.
Every time we stepped outside, day or night, we would see truckloads of debris being loaded onto barges for transport to labs, hoping to find something, for somebody.
Jane & I sold our house upstate a couple years
later. Dave died a few months after that. The 9/11 photograph I didn't take is the one that's stuck in my head.
All those people.
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