Chapter no 33

Ground Zero

 

โ€ŒBrandon followed the sound of Woody Guthrieโ€™s โ€œThis Land Is Your Landโ€ through the darkness and found Richard trapped under part of a wall.โ€Œ

โ€œHelp me get him out of here!โ€ Brandon cried.

Together, Brandon, Pratik, and Gayle were able to lift the layers of drywall high enough for Richard to crawl out. When Richard was free, Brandon dropped to his knees and threw his arms around him.

โ€œBrandon!โ€ Richard cried, hugging him back. โ€œI couldnโ€™t hear and couldnโ€™t see. I thought Iโ€™d been blinded and deafened by the blast, so I just started singing. I couldnโ€™t even hear myself, but I hoped somebody else would. And you did. You saved my life, kid.โ€

โ€œNow weโ€™re even,โ€ Brandon said. He wasnโ€™t sure Richard heard him, but heโ€™d make sure he told him again later.

โ€œWe need to find one of the exits up onto the street,โ€ Pratik told them.

Brandon didnโ€™t want to move, didnโ€™t want to let Richard go, but he knew they had to get out of here. And heโ€™d kept the others waiting long enough.

Richard was wobbly and had to lean on Brandon to stand, but he could make it.

โ€œWhich way do we go? I still canโ€™t see a thing,โ€ Gayle said.

โ€œWhat if we walk right into a hole in the floor, and fall down into a subway tunnel?โ€ Pratik asked.

Somethingย crunchedย in the near distance, like rock shifting, and the ceiling groaned.

โ€œI donโ€™t think we have a lot of choice,โ€ Brandon said.

โ€œWe have to try,โ€ said Gayle. She took their hands. โ€œHuman chain.โ€

Brandon went first. He was closest to the ground and could feel his way as they went. Pratik was the biggest of them, and he took over helping Richard walk.

Brandon moved very slowly, pushing his waterlogged sneakers forward an inch. Then another inch. Then another. The darkness was total and complete. Pratik was right; the blast might have blown holes in the floor. Would he stumble into a hole and fall to his death? Walk straight into a broken window and slice himself into pieces? Brandon had to fight down his panic. The only way out of here was if they all kept their cool.

Brandon kicked things as he wentโ€”broken glass, pieces of drywall, wet clothes, soda cups, shoes, boxes with unknown things in them. He called out warnings about obstacles to the others when he could.

Without his sight, Brandon focused on his other senses. He reached out with his hands, but also listened for clues in the sound of the water at their feet and the creaking of the

building. He used his nose too. What was that smell? Something made him think of bananas and pink grapefruit, and he frowned. What in the mall would smell like that? He ran through the shop directory in his head. Was there a smoothie place here? No. There was a Ben & Jerryโ€™s and a yogurt place, but those were very different smells.

Suddenly he had it, and he stopped.

โ€œWeโ€™re going the wrong way!โ€ he told the others. โ€œHow do you know?โ€ Pratik asked.

โ€œSmell that? Bananas and pink grapefruit? Weโ€™re near the Body Shop! Thatโ€™s the smell of hair and hand stuff!โ€

โ€œOh my God, heโ€™s right,โ€ said Gayle. โ€œI can smell the ginger shampoo!โ€

Brandon turned the group around, following the map in his head. He moved more confidently now, and in his hurry he ran right into something shin-high. Gayle tried to hang onto him, but the thing was big and hard and hollow, and Brandon fell down face-first on top of it.

โ€œOw!โ€ Brandon cried. His shins screamed in pain, and his right hand where he was cut stung all over again.

โ€œBrandon! You okay?โ€ Richard called. โ€œYes,โ€ Brandon grunted.

A fuzzy wet furball bumped into his arm in the water, and Brandon jerked back in disgust.ย A rat!ย New York City was full of rats. There had to be a bunch of them down here right now, trying to survive like Brandon and the others. The thought horrified him, and he scrambled to get away. In his panic, his hand brushed another of the furballs, and he felt its big fingers.

Its big fingers?

Brandon put his hand back out in the darkness, afraid but curious, and felt for one of the furry things. It had arms and legs and big cloth eyes and teeth, and a tag sewn into the side. Brandon sagged with relief. He would have laughed if

he hadnโ€™t been so afraid. Heโ€™d been frightened by a harmless stuffed animal!

Gayle helped him back to his feet, and Brandon ran his hands over the big, hollow thing heโ€™d run into. It had all kinds of weird curves and contours, and was slick and cool and smooth, like fiberglass covered with a varnish. What was Brandon touching?

A very recent memory came back to him, and he turned excitedly to the others.

โ€œItโ€™s the statue of Bugs Bunny!โ€ Brandon said. โ€œWeโ€™re at the Warner Bros. Store! Weโ€™re going in the right direction!โ€

They couldnโ€™t get past the debris near the Sunglass Hut, but Brandon knew there was another way around, past the FILA store with its sportswear and sneakers. That would take them right to the exit to Vesey Street, next to the Duane Reade. They could get out there!

Brandon told the others the plan, and they were off again. Brandon went slowly. Achingly slowly. But he wasnโ€™t eager to repeat his Bugs Bunny collision with something that could be a lot more dangerousโ€”like the railing to the PATH escalators.

Deet-deet-deet-doot. De-de-deet-doot.

The sound of a cell phone ringing out in the darkness made them all jump, then stop in their tracks.

โ€œItโ€™s a Nokia,โ€ said Pratik. โ€œMy wife has one just like it.

Sheโ€™s not here, thank God,โ€ he added.

Deet-deet-deet-doot. De-de-deet-doot.

The phone kept ringing.

โ€œWhat do we do?โ€ Brandon asked.

โ€œSee if you can get to it,โ€ Richard told him.

Deet-deet-deet-doot. De-de-deet-doot.

Brandon changed course, veering slightly off to the left. He got closer, closerโ€”and then the ringing stopped. He froze and waited.

โ€œDo weโ€”โ€ he started to ask, and thenโ€”

Deet-deet-deet-doot. De-de-deet-doot.

The phone started ringing again. Brandon homed in on it in the darkness, leading the human chain closer and closer, inch by inch, until his foot ran into something big and hard. He put his hands out and felt around, and Gayle and the others did the same.

Deet-deet-deet-doot. De-de-deet-doot.

The phone was buried under a pile of rubble. Along with whoever had been carrying it.

โ€œI think I found a part of the ceiling, but I canโ€™t lift it,โ€ Pratik said, straining.

โ€œI canโ€™t even see what to lift,โ€ said Richard.

โ€œWe have to leave them for the rescue workers when they get here,โ€ Gayle said quietly.

Ifย they get here, Brandon added in his head. From the way no one spoke, he wondered if they were all thinking the same thing.

They came together again in their human chain, and Brandon led them away while the phone continued to ring behind them:ย Deet-deet-deet-doot. De-de-deet-doot.ย Somebody somewhere outside the towers, desperately dialing a number again and again that would never be answered.

A few minutes later, Brandon found the corner of what he guessed was the FILA store. When he made the turn into the next hallway, he saw a small fire in one of the restaurants down the way. It was the Sbarro! Brandon had taken them the right way!

โ€œWeโ€™re almost there!โ€ Brandon told his friends.

They inched closer. The fire wasnโ€™t big, but it was a beacon in the darkness.ย Probably a grease fire, Brandon thought, like the one heโ€™d seen that morning in Windows on the World. The last time heโ€™d seen his dad. He swallowed

the memory. He had to focus on getting out, leading his friends to safety.

A pile of debris blocked the exit up to Vesey Street, but there was enough light from the fire in the Sbarro to pick their way up and over the rubble. When they were on the other side, they could see daylight at the top of the escalator.

โ€œWe made it!โ€ Pratik cried.

Brandon wanted to sink to his knees in thanks and exhaustion, but they couldnโ€™t stop yet. Not when they were so close.

Still holding hands, they hurried up the stairs toward the sunlight at the top. They came out on Vesey Street, right across from the post office, and laughed and cried and hugged each other.

They wereย out. Out of the mall, out of the Twin Towers, out of danger. They had survived!

But something was wrongโ€”very, very wrong. Soon they all began to notice it and stopped celebrating.

A thick, heavy smoke cloud hung over Lower Manhattan. Outside had looked bright when they were underground, but now that they were up on the street, the sky was so dim it felt like twilight.

It looked too like somebody had driven a tank through the city. Trash cans and cars were crushed, lampposts were bent, bus stops were broken, and trees were shattered. Andย everythingย was covered with a fine, light gray dust. A fire truck and an ambulance parked in the middle of Vesey Street were coated in the same stuff, their red lights still flashing underneath the thin layer of gray. The dust reminded Brandon of snow. Not just the way it blanketed everything, but how it made things quiet too. Muffled the sounds of the city. Manhattan was never quietโ€”not even at

night. But now it felt as quiet and still as the underground mall had been after the blast.

Something else was wrong too.

โ€œWhere are all the people?โ€ Gayle whispered.

There were footprints in the dust, but the streets were empty. There were always people in Manhattan. Millions of them. Now there were none.

Pratik turned and took a step back. โ€œOh my God,โ€ he whispered.

Brandon looked up. It took his brain a long moment to process what he was seeingโ€”or what heย wasnโ€™tย seeing. What wasย supposed to beย in the big empty slice of the Manhattan skyline but wasnโ€™t there anymore.

The South Tower of the World Trade Center was gone. The whole 107-floor skyscraper had collapsed.

You'll Also Like