Kate
Once she turned off the TV, Kate got through the rest of the day without incident. After the twins’ nap, she spent the requisite hour teaching them the alphabet and working through their flip-book so they’d be on track for the preschool they were already enrolled in for January. Then they played with their LEGOs scattered on the kitchen floor while Kate cooked. She ate dinner with the family—Andrea and, surprisingly, Rick, who looked tired and distracted, dark smudges emphasizing his light-blue eyes. She watched him as Andrea talked brightly about what she’d been up to that day. How the twins were progressing and, of course, Chicago. How sad it all was, and what must it be like for the families who still didn’t know for sure if they’d lost someone because they hadn’t found their r-e-m-a-i-n-s.
Rick nodded occasionally, not even always in the right places. He shoved the roasted chicken Kate had made into his mouth like he was starving. Maybe Andrea was right to worry. Rick had a look about him that Kate recognized. As if he was calculating the distance to the door. Whether he could simply get in his car and drive away.
Kate knew that look. She’d seen it on her own face more than once. Caught in the bathroom mirror in the morning or in her reflection in the glass behind the barista counter.
Could she escape? Was such a thing possible?
“And there was such a touching story about the people from that company,” Andrea said. “Oh, you know, the one that lost so many employees. Anyway, what an amazing group of people they were . . .”
As Andrea droned on about the virtues of the dead, Kate couldn’t help thinking that whenever more than five hundred people die together, odds are that at least some of them were assholes. It was the law of averages. And also: deep down, at least one person was probably glad when their wife, husband, lover, friend didn’t come home that day.
That was the law of averages, too.
Kate thought she was that person for a long time. The person no one would mind was gone. The one whose kids would be happier without her. The one whose hassled husband would sigh in relief when he was alone. It wasn’t that she blamed them. She’d done a lot of things she regretted over the course of her life, not the least of which was how she’d handled motherhood, her marriage—all the things that shouldn’t have been so challenging but somehow were. They’d be better off if she disappeared. Wouldn’t they?
Kate had fantasized about leaving off and on throughout her life. Whenever a tragedy occurred, she couldn’t help but wonder if someone had used the event as cover to escape, to start over. She thought about how she’d do it. Where she’d go. What she’d call herself. What would her new life look like? Racked with guilt or set free?
There were so many endless possibilities. So many new beginnings to contemplate. It became a constant she returned to. When things were bleak, mostly during those black autumns, she’d pick it up again. Modifying her plan, updating the technology involved, working through the details until she felt calm again.
She had it all planned out. If an opportunity arose, she was ready. And yet, she still couldn’t fully explain the way she’d acted on October tenth. How panicked she’d been feeling all morning. How she’d felt in the elevator as it raced toward the ground. The screech of the explosion, the sense of flying, then nothing. She’d woken moments later, thrown from the building as if it were as disgusted with her as her life. She’d stood on the shaking ground and then started jogging as fast as she could in her heels, joining the terrified crowd.
Two blocks later, she’d turned around and looked at the burning building. In an instant, she acknowledged the certain death of most of those within, though she was, somehow, alive. She loved some of those people; others she wished she’d never met. Some kind of miracle was at work here. Something that had let her walk away unscathed.
Because that’s what she’d done. Walked away.
No, that wasn’t quite right.
What she’d done was run.
Interview Transcript
TJ: I’d like to discuss the Compensation Initiative. What made you get involved?
FM: It came up at one of the support groups I was attending. They were asking for volunteers.
TJ: But you do more than volunteer. You’re the cochair.
FM: That’s right.
TJ: You actually ran for the position.
FM: What are you getting at?
TJ: Nothing, Franny, I’m just asking questions.
FM: They feel a bit funny.
TJ: I’m sorry about that. Do you want to stop for today? I know talking about all this can be difficult.
FM: No, that’s fine. Why did Cecily say she joined?
TJ: Why do you ask?
FM: Just curious.
TJ: Did something happen between you and Cecily?
FM: What makes you think that?
TJ: Your tone just now when you mentioned her.
FM: What about my tone?
TJ: I thought you were friends.
FM: We are, but sometimes I think . . . Well, I feel like she blames me.
TJ: Blames you for what?
FM: For my mother. And it’s not my fault, you know.
TJ: What’s not your fault?
FM: That my mother . . . that Kaitlyn never told her about me. That’s not my fault at all.
PART II
Cecily One of the things I thought about on October tenth as paper and plastic and a wet, tacky substance I couldn’t think about the origins of rained down around me like confetti was that I didn’t know how to react.
Maybe that seems obvious. Who knows how to react to watching life evaporate before your eyes, particularly when you’ve loved that life? But yet, all around me, people were reacting. Running, crying, screaming. I did none of those things. It wasn’t until Teo grabbed my hand and made me move that I did anything at all.
Then, hand in hand, we ran several blocks—from the “L” station I’d come out of to the stop before. There, a police officer held us up, directed us to the platform, and told us we’d be safer underground. It was chaos down there, medieval, but I wasn’t making the decisions, Teo was making them for me, and he obeyed, pulling me this way and that but never letting me go. We walked through a sea of bodies, their legs pulled up to their chins, hugging, tearful, shaking, until he found us a patch of concrete that was big enough for me and him and the camera slung around his back.
Teo pulled me down to the ground. It was cold, that concrete. Colder still because the cuts in my coat and the dress underneath meant my skin was in direct contact with it. In any other circumstance, I would’ve been horrified at the potential for a staph infection, but that never crossed my mind. The floor was dirty. It was cold. I was sitting on a dirty, cold floor surrounded by people I didn’t know still holding the hand of a strange man who hadn’t said a word to me in the hour we’d been together.
And then he did.
“What’s your name?”
I tried to speak, but my throat was full of dust.
“What’s your name?” he asked again.
I pointed to my neck and made a slashing motion. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a pad and pen. I took them, finally breaking contact to hold the pad steady against my bloody knee. My left hand had a gash on it that was scabbed over with pebbles and grime. I wrote my name in block letters and handed the pad back to him.
“Cecily?”
I nodded.
“I’m Teo.”
I reached for the hand he held out to me. It was the only warm thing in the cold, cold world.
“Do you want me to call anyone?”
I shook my head and put my free hand in my coat pocket. My phone was still there, and when I pulled it out, it had service. This surprised me, something normal in a world askew. How had it never occurred to me until then to reach out to my children? How long had it been since I stepped into the street? Where were they? Did they even know anything had happened? What—oh my God, what if this was happening everywhere?
I used my rattling thumb to text Cassie and Henry.