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A Cop's Story
A Cop's Story From
Ground Zero
On duty at Ground Zero in the days after the World Trade Center attacks, NYPD
Officer Paul Mauro kept jotting down notes and stuffing them into his pockets.
He knew he would need to write about it someday. This is his
story...
A FEW nights after the Sept. 11 attacks, a woman on North Moore Street took
one look at me in my dirty uniform, started crying and silently handed me an
apple. It was a moment so charged with metaphor, I got confused; I
couldn't even thank her. I'm sure she thinks now I was an ungrateful
jerk.
You want to hear a strange truth? There's a part of the cop psyche
that's tremendously uncomfortable with such moments. Clutching that
apple, I couldn't help wondering: What happens when I go back to writing
tickets? What happens when the apple woman hears I took her brother in
on an old turnstile warrant? What happens when it's business
as usual again?
But that's the thing, this time. This one is so big, business as usual
may never fully return. Forget the public, that's not who I mean.
The real change had better be in us. If Osama bin Laden has reminded
America of who we are as a nation, he's reminded New York's cops of who we
are, as well.
LATE into that first night, when we've been standing on the same corner for 14
hours without being sure of what's to come or what day we'll finally get home
or how completely our lives might be changed, two studious-looking young women
tentatively approach us. On my lips is yet another demand that they get
back behind the police lines, but the words catch in my throat and my alarm
rises vaguely when I see one of them gingerly carrying a box.
She's on me before I can protest, right up to my partner, and me and she asks
if we're hungry. She and her roommate made peanut-butter-and-jelly
sandwiches for us, if we want them. Which we do, desperately.
Looking into the box, I see that inside each sandwich bag is a little note:
"Thank you for your bravery" and "God bless you."
And so I have the first of what will be many moments when I find it difficult
to speak.
AFTER four hours of attempted sleep, I'm back for the evening of Day 2,
assigned over by the river, where I discover that, when there is no
triage,there will be a morgue.
A group of eight or so professionals - medical examiner, Fire Department
paramedic, Police Department chaplains - hunch on folding chairs awaiting the
next arrival to the tent.
Then the call goes up outside the tent: "Heads up. Body coming!"
That a single rescue worker can carry the body bag gives some indication
of what's inside.
The worker lugs it onto a table made up of a sheet stretched over plywood. We
crowd around. Will it be a cop? A fireman? Will it be some
horror I will never forget?
The paramedic unzips the black plastic bag. This is human? That is
my first thought as her gloved hands sift the contents. But then I see.
Within a mat of gray dust and paper fragments, a latticework of ribs.
No blood or flesh, nothing that is not simply gray and woolly with ash.
Only occasionally is there more than this. One bag reveals a severed
human foot, the toenails painted a heartbreaking violet. And this is
what
shocks you, what sits you down with a nauseated, displaced feel of a world
spinning awry. Not the gore or the lack of it, but the small details
that
point tellingly to fragile lives caught in the maelstrom.
Those details are what I'm here for. I'm one of five cops tagging and bagging
anything that might be linked to one of the dead. It's far, far
tougher than viewing human remains.
A leather shoulder bag holds a management textbook and a notebook. The
textbook has a woman's name on the front in a graceful, feminine hand.
The notebook has her weekly classes written into the scheduling grid.
Little reminders are written beside the schedule: "Keep up with the
reading!"
You wonder: How could these things survive intact and their owners be so
completely erased?
WE'RE digging now, anybody who can. It's still only Day 3, and the
chances of finding somebody alive are, in theory, still real. It's a
cyclical
process; you pull carefully at the impossibly antagonistic tangle of metal and
concrete, until eventually, a major beam or girder is exposed. Then the
ironworkers hook a crane line to the girder and hoist it free.
There is something mythic in the sight of the cranes in operation. At
one point, I look up from the wreckage to see an ironworker descending from
the heavens, poised atop a huge metal hook at the end of a crane cable.
Behind him, the red arm of a derrick scrapes the sky.
A crane, off to my right, is noisily hoisting a half-melted girder free of the
rubble when a chorus of despair goes up. I turn in time to catch a
glimpse. It is a young woman, or rather the top-half of one, stuck to
the top of the beam. Her arm flaps free once, a disembodied wave; then
the torso falls free, disappearing anonymously back into the wreckage.
WHEN the first building came down, a sergeant from my precinct was on the
street outside. He's long and lanky, and when he dived under a car for
shelter, an arriving emergency vehicle ran over his legs. Another
sergeant dived under a fire truck, and later described the debris hitting the
truck as sounding like someone dropping Volkswagens from 50 stories. As
he lay there, he thought he heard gunshots, but dismissed the idea. But he was
right. Other cops were shooting out windows of buildings so they could
dive to safety inside. Those are what passed for success stories down
here.
IN THE weeks that follow the attacks, I will be handed a bottle of water by
Matthew Modine, drink beer with the New York Rangers, and be the
recipient of best wishes from Jason Alexander and Kevin Spacey.
For one night, Midtown becomes "celebrity Ground Zero." A
telethon is being held to benefit victims and their families. After
Billy Joel's rendition
of "New York State of Mind," I am deputized to drive him down
to greet the workers at Ground Zero.
Upon rounding a corner and taking in the panorama of the destruction, Joel
gets the "cannot speaks." The workers all know this feeling,
and they
happily ignore the fact that the star is openly weeping as he signs their hard
hats.
The city will eventually forget us. After all, we are just doing our
jobs. We'll be the enemy again soon enough. Which is fine, that's
the nature of
a contentious and complicated relationship.
But we, the cops, we had better remember - not what we've seen, but what we've
done. It's the way you remember the things you've done that make you who
you are.
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