
One
Survivors Story

My
name is Adam Mayblum. I am alive today. I am committing this to "paper"
so I never forget. SO WE NEVER FORGET. I am sure that this is one of thousands
of stories that will emerge over the next several days and weeks.
I arrived
as usual a little before 8am. My office was on the 87th floor of
1
World Trade Center, AKA: Tower 1, AKA: the North Tower. Most of my associates
were in by 8:30m. We were standing around, joking around, eating
breakfast, checking emails, and getting set for the day when the first
plane hit just a few stories above us. I must stress that we did not know
that it was a plane. The building lurched violently and shook as if it
were an earthquake. People screamed. I watched out my window as the building
seemed to move 10 to 20 feet in each direction. It rumbled and shook long
enough for me to get my wits about myself and grab a co-worker and seek
shelter under a doorway. Light fixtures and parts of the ceiling collapsed.
The kitchen was destroyed. We were certain that it was a bomb. We looked
out the windows. Reams of paper were flying everywhere, like a ticker tape
parade. I looked down at the street. I could see people in Battery Park
City looking up. Smoke started billowing in through the holes in the ceiling.
I believe that there were 13 of us.
We
did not panic. I can only assume that we thought that the worst was over.
The building was standing and we were shaken but alive. We checked the
halls. The smoke was thick and white and did not smell like I imagined
smoke should smell. Not like your BBQ or your fireplace or even a bonfire.
The phones were working. My wife had taken our 9 month old for his check
up. I called my nanny at home and told her to page my wife, tell her that
a bomb went off, I was ok, and on my way out. I grabbed my laptop. Took
off my tee shirt and ripped it into 3 pieces. Soaked it in water. Gave
2 pieces to my friends. Tied my piece around my face to act as an air filter.
And we all started moving to the staircase. One of my dearest friends said
that he was staying until the police or firemen came to get him. In the
halls there were tiny fires and sparks. The ceiling had collapsed in the
men's bathroom. It was gone along with anyone who may have been in there.
We did not go in to look. We missed the staircase on the first run and
had to double back. Once in the staircase we picked up fire extinguishers
just incase. On the 85th floor a brave associate of mine and I headed
back up to our office to drag out my partner who stayed behind. There was
no air, just white smoke. We made the rounds through the office calling
his name. No response. He must have succumbed to the smoke. We left defeated
in our efforts and made our way back to the stairwell. We proceeded to
the 78th floor where we had to change over to a different stairwell. 78
is the main junction to switch to the upper floors. I expected to see more
people. There were some 50 to 60 more. Not enough. Wires and fires all
over the place. Smoke too. A brave man was fighting a fire with the emergency
hose. I stopped with to friends to make sure that everyone from our office
was accounted for. We ushered them and confused people into the stairwell.
In retrospect, I recall seeing Harry, my head trader, doing the same several
yards behind me. I am only 35. I have known him for over 14 years.
I headed into the stairwell with 2 friends.
We
were moving down very orderly in Stair Case A. very slowly. No panic. At
least not overt panic. My legs could not stop shaking. My heart was pounding.
Some nervous jokes and laughter. I made a crack about ruining a brand
new pair of Merrells. Even still, they were right, my feet felt great.
We all laughed. We checked our cell phones. Surprisingly, there was a very
good signal, but the Sprint network was jammed. I heard that the Blackberry
2 way email devices worked perfectly. On the phones,
1
out of 20 dial attempts got through. I knew I could not reach my wife so
I called my parents. I told them what happened and that we were all okay
and on the way down. Soon, my sister in law reached me. I told her we were
fine and moving down. I believe that was about the 65th floor. We were
bored and nervous. I called my friend Angel in San Francisco. I knew he
would be watching. He was amazed I was on the phone. He told me to get
out that there was another plane on its way. I did not know what he was
talking about. By now the second plane had struck Tower 2. We were so deep
into the middle of our building that we did not hear or feel anything.
We had no idea what was really going on. We kept making way for wounded
to go down ahead of us. Not many of them, just a few. No one seemed seriously
wounded. Just some cuts and scrapes. Everyone cooperated. Everyone was
a hero yesterday. No questions asked. I had co-workers in another office
on the 77th floor. I tried dozens of times to get them on their cell phones
or office lines. It was futile. Later I found that they were alive. One
of the many miracles on a day of tragedy.
On
the 53rd floor we came across a very heavyset man sitting on the stairs.
I asked if he needed help or was he just resting. He needed help. I knew
I would have trouble carrying him because I have a very bad back. But my
friend and I offered anyway. We told him he could lean on us. He hesitated,
I don't know why. I said do you want to come or do you want us to send
help for you. He chose for help. I told him he was on the
53rd
floor in Stairwell A and that's what I would tell the rescue workers. He
said okay and we left.
On
the 44th floor my phone rang again. It was my parents. They were hysterical.
I said relax, I'm fine. My father said get out, there is third plane coming.
I still did not understand. I was kind of angry. What did my parents think?
Like I needed some other reason to get going? I couldn't move the thousand
people in front of me any faster. I know they love me, but no one inside
understood what the situation really was. My parents did. Starting around
this floor the firemen, policemen, WTC K-9 units without the dogs, anyone
with a badge, started coming up as we were heading down. I stopped a lot
of them and told them about the man on 53 and my friend on 87. I later
felt terrible about this. They headed up to find those people and met death
instead.
On
the 33rd floor I spoke with a man who somehow new most of the details.
He said 2 small planes hit the building. Now we all started talking about
which terrorist group it was. Was it an internal organization or an external
one? The overwhelming but uninformed opinion was Islamic Fanatics. Regardless,
we now knew that it was not a bomb and there were potentially more planes
coming. We understood.
On
the 3r floor the lights went out and we heard & felt this rumbling
coming towards us from above. I thought the staircase was collapsing upon
itself. It was 10am now and that was Tower
2 collapsing next door. We did not know that. Someone had a flashlight.
We passed it forward and left the stairwell and headed down a dark and
cramped corridor to an exit. We could not see at all. I recommended that
everyone place a hand on the shoulder of the person in front of them and
call out if they hit an obstacle so others would know to avoid it. They
did. It worked perfectly. We reached another stairwell and saw a female
officer emerge soaking wet and covered in soot. She said we could not go
that way it was blocked. Go up to 4 and use the other exit. Just as we
started up she said it was ok to go down instead. There was water everywhere.
I called out for hands on shoulders again and she said that was a great
idea. She stayed behind instructing people to do that. I do not know what
happened to her.
We
emerged into an enormous room. It was light but filled with smoke. I commented
to a friend that it must be under construction. Then we realized where
we were. It was the second floor. The one that overlooks the lobby. We
were ushered out into the courtyard, the one where the fountain used to
be. My first thought was of a TV movie I saw once about nuclear winter
and fallout. I could not understand where all of the debris came from.
There was at least five inches of this gray pasty dusty drywall soot on
the ground as well as a thickness of it in the air. Twisted steel and wires.
I heard there were bodies and body parts as well, but I did not look. It
was bad enough. We hid under the remaining overhangs and moved out to the
street. We were told to keep walking towards Houston Street. The odd thing
is that there were very few rescue workers around. Less than five. They
all must have been trapped under the debris when Tower 2 fell. We did not
know that and could not understand where all of that debris came from.
It was just my friend Kern and I now. We were hugging but sad. We felt
certain that most of our friends ahead of us died and we knew no one behind
us.
We
came upon a post office several blocks away. We stopped and looked up.
Our building, exactly where our office is (was), was engulfed in flame
and smoke. A postal worker said that Tower 2 had fallen down. I looked
again and sure enough it was gone. My heart was racing. We kept trying
to call our families. I could not get in touch with my wife. Finally I
got through to my parents. Relived is not the word to explain their feelings.
They got through to my wife, thank G-d and let her know I was alive.
We sat down. A girl on a bike offered us some water. Just as she took the
cap off her bottle we heard a rumble. We looked up and our building, Tower
1 collapsed. I did not note the time but I am told it was
10:30am.
We had been out less than 15 minutes.
We
were mourning our lost friends, particularly the one who stayed in the
office as we were now sure that he had perished. We started walking towards
Union Square. I was going to Beth Israel Medical Center to be looked at.
We stopped to hear the President speaking on the radio. My phone rang.
It was my wife. I think I fell to my knees crying when I heard her voice.
Then she told me the most incredible thing. My partner who had stayed behind
called her. He was alive and well. I guess we just lost him in the commotion.
We started jumping and hugging and shouting. I told my wife that my brother
had arranged for a hotel in midtown. He can be very resourceful in that
way. I told her I would call her from there. My brother and I managed to
get a gypsy cab to take us home to Westchester instead. I cried on my son
and held my wife until I fell asleep.
As
it turns out my partner, the one who I thought had stayed behind was behind
us with Harry Ramos, our head trader. This is now second hand information.
They came upon Victor, the heavyset man on the 53rd floor. They helped
him. He could barely move. My partner bravely/stupidly tested the elevator
on the 52nd floor. He rode it down to the sky lobby on
44.
The doors opened, it was fine. He rode it back up and got Harry and Victor.
I don't yet know if anyone else joined them. Once on 44 they made their
way back into the stairwell. Someplace around the 39th to 36th floors they
felt the same rumble I felt on the 3rd floor. It was 10am and Tower 2 was
coming down. They had about 30 minutes to get out. Victor said he could
no longer move. They offered to have him lead on them. He said he couldn't
do it. My partner hollered at him to sit on his butt and schooch down the
steps. He said he was not capable of doing it. Harry told my partner to
go ahead of them. Harry had once had a heart attack and was worried about
this mans heart. It was his nature to be this way. He was/is one of the
kindest people I know. He would not leave a man behind. My partner went
ahead and made it out. He said he was out maybe 10 minutes before the building
came down. This means that Harry had maybe 25 minutes to move Victor 36
floors. I guess they moved 1 floor every 1.5 minutes. Just a guess. This
means Harry wad around the 20th floor when the building collapsed. As of
now
12
of 13 people are accounted for. As of 6pm yesterday his wife had not heard
from him. I fear that Harry is lost. However, a short while ago I heard
that he may be alive. Apparently there is a web site with survivor names
on it and his name appears there. Unfortunately, Ramos is not an uncommon
name in New York. Pray for him and all those like him.
With
regards to the firemen heading upstairs, I realize that they were going
up anyway. But, it hurts to know that I may have made them move quicker
to find my friend. Rationally, I know this is not true and that I am not
the responsible one. The responsible ones are in hiding somewhere on this
planet and damn them for making me feel like this. But they should know
that they failed in terrorizing us. We were calm. Those men and women that
went up were heroes in the face of it all. They must have known what was
going on and they did their jobs. Ordinary people were heroes too. Today
the images that people around the world equate with power and democracy
are gone but "America" is not an image it is a concept. That concept is
only strengthened by our pulling together as a team. If you want to kill
us, leave us alone because we will do it by ourselves. If you want to make
us stronger, attack and we unite. This is the ultimate failure of terrorism
against The United States and the ultimate price we pay to be free, to
decide where we want to work, what we want to eat, and when & where
we want to go on vacation. The very moment the first plane was hijacked,
democracy won
"Flexible
people don't get bent out of shape."
THE
DAY I FOUND I'D BEEN
EXPOSED
TO ANTHRAX
ENQUIRER
REPORTER'S OWN HORRIFYING STORY
"Your
blood test is positive — you've been exposed to anthrax."
Stunned,
I pushed back in my chair, watched intently across a conference table by
an FBI agent, a senior Florida detective and two doctors from the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Three
days earlier I'd wept at a memorial service for longtime friend Bob Stevens,
who died from anthrax. Now a nice young woman doctor from the CDC was telling
me, as gently as she could, that anthrax had touched me, too.
"Your
body has somehow 'seen' anthrax," she explained. "We know that because
there are antibodies in your blood that are doing their job and fighting
it."
I searched
my mind for anything that could explain why this had happened to me.
I suddenly
remembered I'd gone into Bob's office on the day he died — with the sad
task of interviewing one of his colleagues for an obituary story.
Could
I possibly have "seen" anthrax during that 15-minute chat?
After
Bob's death, our office in Boca Raton, Fla., was sealed by the FBI. Like
all my colleagues at American Media, I lined up for a nasal swab, antibiotics
and blood test.
And
in a temporary office I helped put out The ENQUIRER, working with a briefcase,
a cell phone and an electronic organizer balanced on a windowsill because
there were no desks or chairs.
The
CDC doctor, Carolyn Greene, and her colleague Dr. Pratima Raghunathan patiently
answered every question I had. I was one of five AMI employees whose blood
tests showed they had been exposed to anthrax.
The
doctors told me I was in no danger. I wasn't infectious. I had to continue
to take the antibiotic Cipro, which I'd been swallowing twice a day for
nearly a week, for a full 60 days.
And
I'd be enlisted in the CDC's detective work. Follow-up blood tests would
hopefully pinpoint the day I was exposed.
As
FBI agent Rita Hessel showed me out, my head still reeling and my heart
pounding, I was greeted by a colleague sitting in the waiting room. I knew
the shock he was in for.
When
we compared notes later, we shared a delicious moment of black humor.
He's
a superb journalist and he and I have covered disasters around the world
together. A gas explosion in Guadalajara, Mexico . . . a mudslide in Colombia,
where 30,000 people died and we spent harrowing days stepping over the
bloated bodies . . . the Mexico City earthquake, where 10,000 people died.
Somehow
we'd come back unscathed every time.
Now
we were two victims — in sedate Boca Raton, Fla!
By
David Wright
sent
to me by email
from
The
National Enquirer
Online

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