The Wind in the Heights
By Gerard Van der Leun
AmericanDigest.org
The wind at Ground Zero during the first memorial service, September 11,
2002
Who has seen the wind?
Neither you nor I.
But when the trees bow down their heads,
The wind is passing by.
-- Christina Rossetti
10,000 FEARED DEAD
-- Headline, New York Post, September 12,
2001
AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY I lived in Brooklyn Heights in, of course,
Brooklyn. The opening of the Brooklyn Bridge on May 24 of 1883 transformed
the high bluff just to the south of the bridge into America's first suburb.
It became possible for affluent businessmen from the tip of Manhattan which
lay just over the East River to commute across the bridge easily and build
their stately mansions and townhouses high above the slapdash docks below.
Growth and change would wash around the Heights in the 117 years that
followed, but secure on their bluff, on their high ground, the Heights would
remain a repository old and new money, power, and some of the finest
examples of 19th and early 20th century homes found in New York City.
When I moved to Brooklyn Heights from the suburbs of Westport,
Connecticut in the late 90s, it was a revelation to me that such a
neighborhood still existed. Small side streets and cul-de-sacs were shaded
over by large oaks and maple that made it cool even in the summer doldrums.
Street names such as Cranberry, Orange and Pineapple let you know you were
off the grid of numbered streets and avenues. Families were everywhere and
the streets on evenings and on weekends were full of the one thing you
rarely see in Manhattan, children.
Brooklyn Heights had looked down on Wall Street and the tip of Manhattan
from almost the beginning. It hosted the retreat of Washington from New York
City during the Battle of Long Island, the first major engagement of the
Revolutionary War. To be in the Heights was to hold the high ground and all
the advantages that position affords.
Brooklyn Heights today enjoys a kind of armed hamlet existence in New
York. Outside influences such as crime, poverty and ghetto life don't really
intrude. Since it has long been a neighborhood of the rich and the powerful
of the city, it has been spared some of the more doleful effects of city
life. It doesn't have walls that you can see, but they are there, strong,
high and well guarded.
Traffic, that bane of New York life, is controlled in the Heights. To the
west, the Brooklyn Queens Expressway, once planned to cut through the
Heights directly to the Brooklyn Bridge, was rerouted by a deft application
of money and power; placed below along the harbor. To the east, all traffic
coming off the Bridge is pushed along Cadman Plaza to Court Street and off
to Atlantic. This forms the eastern border of the Heights whose edge is
further delineated by the ramparts of Brooklyn City Hall, Courts of all
flavors and a rag-tag collection of government structures that exemplify the
Fascist Overbuilding movement of the early 70s when, expecting 'The
Revolution,' governments built towards gun-slits rather than windows. The
south of the Heights is sharply drawn with Atlantic Avenue, a street given
over to a long strip of fringe businesses and a corridor of Islamic-American
mosques and souks and restaurants. The north is quite simply the Brooklyn
Bridge and its approaches that shelter the now slowly evolving sector
devoted to overpriced raw loft spaces and bad art known as DUMBO, for "Down
Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass."
The best thing about the Heights is the Promenade. This is a long
pedestrian strolling area that runs from Remsen on the south to Cranberry on
the north end. It's a brick walk high on the bluff above the Expressway
below. Over the baroque railing you can see far out into the harbor, beyond
the Financial District and Wall Street on the tip of Manhattan, beyond the
Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island to the distant silhouettes of the cranes
and wharfs on the Jersey Shore. You can see north up the East River past the
Brooklyn Bridge and the Manhattan Bridge to, maybe, the merest wisp of the
Williamsburg Bridge. Across from the railings are a selection of gardens and
backyards with water fountains and shaded benches. It is one of those
hidden, off-to-the-side areas of respite that are secreted across all the
seven boroughs of the city. You discover it by being taken to it by someone
else who has already been there.
The Promenade is a fine place on any day but best on a Sunday afternoon
when the weather is clear. Then you can stroll with your fellow citizens and
catch a bit of the constant breeze or a bracing wind. Under most conditions,
this wind is one of the best elements of Brooklyn Heights. Usually you just
take it for granted -- as you do all the small mercies of life in New York
City.
When the wind came from the south off the harbor those who lived on the
Heights got to breathe the sea air first before the rest of the city had its
way with it. And it usually did blow from the south even if there were days
when it blew in from the west across the southern tip of Manhattan. At
least, I think that it did on numerous days even if I only remember it from
one.
I don't remember the wind from that day because it blew hard and long.
The winter, spring and fall brought many blizzards and storms to the Heights
with winds that would howl over the roofs and pulse in the chimney of my
parlor floor apartment. In winter it would slam against the stones of the
facade and rattle the windows while rolling snow so fine against the door
that a dusty drift would work its way through the weather stripping and into
the foyer by morning.
So if I think about the storms I can say they always came to the Heights
on the big shoulders of a bigger wind, but I don't really remember any one
of those winds. In my memory, I just assume they were there, a part of the
storm. Winds always are a part of any storm. Just as the French say "Never a
rose without a thorn," so "Never a storm without a wind."
Except once and then the storm came later. And even if that wind has now
become a faint foreign breeze moving over a distant landscape of sand and
rubble and blood, it rolls along still and will in time make its way back to
where it began.
The wind came when the pillar of fire became, in what seemed a moment
outside of time, a pillar of smoke. We had been standing on the Promenade
that morning in our thousands watching death rage at the center of a
beautiful September morning. It was a morning with a clear and washed blue
sky; the kind of rare New York morning when you can believe, again, that
anything is possible in that city of dreams that so often dissolve into
disappointment.
Anything, of course, except the two towers whose peaks were engulfed in
flames.
Anything, it would seem, but what we were seeing.
And it was a morning, as I recall, that had no wind at all. That was why
the flames and the smoke from the flames went almost straight up into the
sky, a long sooted streak that bisected one side of the blue sky from the
other.
It was, except for this one insane thing happening in the middle of our
panoramic view from the Promenade, a most beautiful day; made even more so
by the absence of any irritating noise from passenger jets overhead.
The last two jets into New York airspace that morning would be the last
for days to come. In New York you become so used to the sound of jets
overhead in New York that you don't really hear them. What you did hear on
that day was the silence of their absence. When the sound of jets came back
later that afternoon it was not the sound of passenger jets but of F-16
fighters, and we were glad to hear them.
But in that mid-morning all we could see and think about were the souls
trapped in the twin torches about a quarter of a mile away from us on the
other side of the East River.
At a certain point in that timeless time you noticed that specks were
arcing out from the sides of the buildings from just above or just below or
just within the part that was in flames. Looking again you saw that the
specks were people flying out from the building and plunging down the sides
to disappear behind the shorter buildings that ringed the towers. You tried
to imagine what must have been going on in the offices and rooms of that
building that made leaping from 100 floors or more above the ground the
"better" option, but you didn't have that kind of space left in your
imagination. And so you looked on and watched them leap and distantly,
silently fall, locked within that morning that had no time, in which all of
what you had known, believed, and trusted in came, at once and forever, to a
sudden frozen halt.
And then the first tower came down.
We've all seen, most of us on television, what happened next. We've all
seen the dropping of the top floors into the smoke and then the shuddering
impact and then the rolling and immense cloud of ash that exploded up the
island of Manhattan overtaking thousands running north and laying thick
slabs of ash over everything in its wake. The tape was played and replayed
until, by order or consensus, it stopped being played. World Trade Center
and north up the island -- center stage in death's carnival on that day.
That wasn't for me. I was part of the sideshow in Brooklyn Heights.
Lower Manhattan is a welter of thin 17th century streets lined with tall
19th and 20th century buildings. When you take the mass of two buildings the
size of the Twin Towers, heat it to the point that steel bends, and drop it
straight down into the center of this maze, it does not all go just one
direction even if that's where the video cameras are. It moves out radially
in all directions. Standing on the Promenade you are in front of many
different channels for this atomized mass and the plumes of smoke and what
it holds will come at you. And it did, very fast and very dark.
It seemed to come out of the streets that opened onto the South Street
Seaport like some Titan's grime clotted fingers, and roiled across the river
as if the distance was a few hundred feet rather than a few thousand yards.
You saw what was coming and you turned to flee from this black wind with no
storm, but there were thousands of others who had come to watch and they too
were turning to run out of the exits from the Promenade that had, moments
before seemed broad, but now impossibly narrow.
As the wind-driven cloud came over us and things became murky then dark,
panic began and shouts and screams could be heard inside the dense smoke.
Through some miracle, the crowd ordered itself and those who had brought
children with them were eased out in the sudden darkness and others followed
in a rapid order. The cloud lightened and then darkened again and the wind
rose and fell away and came back. It rippled your clothing, and the smoke
must have had a smell to it because it hurt the lungs when you breathed, but
I don't remember the smell only the sensation of small needles in my lungs
and the gray mucus that came up when I coughed.
The wind pummeled my back for the five minutes it took me to make my way
to my apartment, get inside and shut the windows. I stood there at the
windows and watched the others rush by, blurs in the smoke, and noticed
when, as suddenly as it had come up, the wind died away and the air was
almost still. The smoke and the ash still moved in the street outside and
high overhead. The day was still darkened but the initial violence of the
blast and the wind had passed.
In time, everyone had passed by as well and the street was empty except
for the settling smoke. I looked outside the window where a Japanese maple
grew and noticed that its wine-dark leaves were covered with small yellow
flecks. I looked down at the sill outside the windows and saw the yellow
flecks there as well.
At some point in the next few minutes it dawned on me that there would be
few bodies found in the incinerating rubble across the river. I knew then --
as certainly as I have even known anything -- that all those who had still
been in the towers had now gone into the flame and the smoke and that, in
some way, the gleaming bits of yellow ash were their tokens, were what they
had become in that plunging crematorium.
And I knew that all they had become had fallen upon us as we ran in the
smoke; that we had breathed them in when the wind reached us; that they were
covering the houses and the sills and the cars and the sidewalks and the
benches and the shrubs and the trees all about us.
What they had become was what the wind without a storm had left behind.
Now that the wind had passed everything was, again, silent and calm. The
blue sky above the houses on Pierrepont Street in Brooklyn Heights were
beginning to emerge from the fading smoke as the breeze of the harbor
shifted the plume away from us, moving it north, uptown, into Manhattan,
leaving the Heights again as an elite enclave, above and to the side of New
York City.
The yellow flecks remained, resting like small stars on the surface of
everything in the Heights for three days until the first rains came on a
late afternoon to wash them away. I walked out into that rain and back down
Pierrepont Street to the Promenade where for months yet to come the fires
would burn across the river.
The rain came straight down that day. There was no wind. As I walked down
the sidewalk I noticed the rainwater running off the trees and the buildings
and moving down the gutter to the drains that would take it on to the harbor
and on to the sea. And that water was, for only a minute or so before it ran
clear, gold.