It was about 1:30 PM, twenty years ago, my lunchtime,
and I sat at my desk in an office looking toward The Tower and the Thames, at 1
Undershaft, near St. Mary Axe, in London.
“Hold on a minute,” she said. “Something’s happening on the television.”
I don’t remember if she was watching CNN or NY1, but she
typed back: “Something’s going on downtown. It looks like there’s an accident
at the World Trade Center.”
We typed back and forth a few more times until she had to
go, and she said I should look at a television.
I walked down the hall to the managing partner’s office,
another American ex-pat, and told him something was happening.
We set-up a television in a small conference room and watched
the first tower ablaze. We decided to start contacting New Yorkers. It was about 8:45 AM and only a few people
were in the NY office, which officially opened at 9:30, and most people were
still commuting. I was sitting at my desk on the phone and various chat
applications when I heard yells that a plane had hit the other tower.
We knew this wasn’t an accident.
We started monitoring local news, and the City of London Police announcements,
awaiting guidance. There were concerns that London and other European cities might be next.
My wife was working a few blocks away at the old London Stock
Exchange, and we decided to sit tight until we heard something from our employers
or the authorities. London is a city that has experienced a lot of terrorism, and
I knew that there would be guidance about what to do, how to proceed, etc. My English
colleagues were upset and concerned but had a certain calm, a stoicism that was
reassuring to me. My thought was that we would get the next plane home.
We had televisions in the conference rooms and most staff
were gathered on the 18th floor. I joined them. I think I was the only American
in that room, the only New Yorker, when the first tower came down. I just
looked at everyone in the room with my mouth agape and said: “No! No!” I bolted
from the room, ran back to my office and tried to call friends back home. It wasn’t
long before the second tower came down.
We had friends and acquaintances who worked downtown, in and
around the towers. There was no way to know if they were OK. Nobody in NYC
answered their phone, NYC friends were no longer on chat services or listservs.
We could see video from the news services but couldn’t talk to anyone.
I let my siblings in Boston know I was OK in London. That
was the first time I felt angry that I was in London. I wanted to be in NYC, I
wanted to be in my city with my friends and my colleagues, I wanted to help. I felt
helpless, useless.
I started calling the parents of some NYC friends, but they
had no contact with them either. They couldn’t reach anybody in NYC. We didn’t
know yet that most of the phone companies, landline and mobile alike, ran their
primary transmissions from the Towers. With the towers compromised, there was no phone service.
Eventually it was announced that the City was closing and everyone should make their way home. My wife’s company told her to call a car service and go home. I left my office, met her and we made our way back to our flat.
We lived in a busy neighborhood near Westbourne Grove and Notting Hill Gate, and like the City, it was noticeably quite.
The ensuing hours were painfully void of information. The television
kept showing the same horrific videos over and over again.
I stopped calling NYC and sat helplessly in front of the
television. There was nothing to do except sit and wait.
It was a very long day in a far away place.