REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK -- Deepa Bharath
- Share via
Sept. 8, 2001.
It was a bright and beautiful Saturday morning in New York City.
My husband and I opened the window of our hotel room in upper
Manhattan. There was no view except that of a fourth-floor balcony of
another building littered with candy wrappers and soda cans.
But we could still hear the sound of cars, buses and subway trains.
Even on a Saturday, the city was bustling. It seemed so full of life.
As we headed out close to noon, armed with bottled water, some
Tropicana orange juice and much-needed maps, we saw people pacing up and
down Broadway like they had some place to go at 11 a.m. on a Saturday.
My husband, Bharath, his cousin Arvind and I were engaged in a
discussion as we neared a bagel store. The subject of our conversation:
Do we go to the Empire State Building or to the World Trade Center?
We had time only for one. So which one was it going to be?
My vote was for the Empire State Building. It somehow seemed more
romantic. It seemed to stand with such elegance, such majesty. The World
Trade Center? Well, it was this very tall building that housed many, many
offices. But it didn’t really appeal to me.
But Bharath and Arvind were all for the World Trade Center. So,
pushover that I am, I gave in. We made our plans. We’d take the train to
Wall Street, walk around and then go all the way to the top of the tower.
And that’s what we did. The markets were closed, of course, but we
walked all the way down Wall Street, past the Starbucks, Brooks Brothers
and Taco Bell. It was a hot, humid day.
We went down by the water and tried to take a ferry to the Statue of
Liberty. I tried to make a case to go to Ellis Island instead of the
World Trade Center. But as luck would have it, the famed crown was closed
that day and the ferries were so crowded it would have taken us at least
four hours to get to the base of the statue and back.
So we retraced our steps, walked through Battery Park, took some
pictures outside the New York Stock Exchange and near the statue of a
raging bull -- an icon that symbolized what the neighborhood stood for.
Then we slowly walked up to the tower. I craned my head to see if I
could catch a glimpse of the building. I couldn’t. It was too high.
“It’s that steely building over there,” Arvind said pointing his
finger toward the tower.
As we came close by, I saw the gargantuan towers. Several tourists
with cameras slung on their shoulders and around their necks crowded
nearby.
We crossed one of the towers that has a mall in the first floor.
“Gosh, all these malls look alike,” I remarked. “They have the same
smell.
“Even the same music,” I added as I heard Kenny G playing on the
system.
We went to the main tower and bought tickets. As we neared the
entrance, we were asked by officials there to pose for a photo in front
of a facade that bore the cardboard skyline of the city.
We were amused and talked about how it was clearly something they did
for security purposes but made out to be some tourist stunt like they do
in the Jurassic Park or Splash Mountain rides.
We then took the elevator to the 107th floor, which was built like an
observatory. We spent an hour going around and around, looking at the
great city from a lot of different angles.
Suddenly, Bharath saw people coming down on escalators.
“Hey look!” he exclaimed. “We can go all the way up.”
So we took two escalators to reach the top. It had a breathtaking view
of the Empire State Building, the Statue of Liberty, New Jersey and the
rest of the city.
“I’m glad we decided to come here,” I told my husband.
We took some pictures again. Spent almost an hour there. It was much
cooler up there. And less humid.
There were at least 50 people up there on the roof. But nobody talked
that much. Everybody just seemed to take in the view.
It was beautiful.
Then we came down the escalators and the elevators and headed out of
the towers, took the subway train and never came back to the area. We
left New York on Sunday night.
Two mornings later, our television was on in our apartment.
And as we watched the repeated shot of an airplane fly through the
tower, it was like watching the devil piercing the heart of a strong and
powerful gladiator.
It was like seeing a real person, a good friend -- some stranger we
had gotten to know intimately barely two days before -- being tortured,
ravaged and blown to bits.
The small streets we had walked all over about two days before were
covered with ash, the air filled with smoke and untold sorrow.
The film that bore images from the magnificent tower still lay rolled
up in our camera.
And on Thursday, as I sat at my desk, still in disbelief, as my
fingertips tapped the keys of my computer, I didn’t know what I was
feeling.
Happy that I was one of the last people who got an opportunity to go
up that tower? Or sick to my stomach that the buildings that have assumed
personalities of their own for locals and tourists over the years had
been reduced to a mountain of concrete, glass and steel?
Ask me 50 years from now. And I still won’t know.
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.