“Oh law! I heard Irene is about to whup up on New York. Do you have a place to go?” My friend JL was texting me from the Carolinas.
“Yes,” I answered, “my favorite bar.”
“Be careful,” he warned.
I realized that my out of state friends were concerned about what they were seeing on the news, so I put aside the jovial remarks to assure them that the storm would probably do the most damage on the other side of town, and in low laying areas that were already being evacuated.
JL was relieved.
“Oh no! Don’t mess with Ms. Irene,” he texted, “she was one of our neighbors in the projects. Nobody walked in her yard or bothered her after she had her gin. She chewed tobacco too. She wasn’t like my great grandmother or the other ladies who chewed snuff.”
Point taken. Ms. Irene was on her way, and she was in a mood.
One by one, the businesses had begun to close, to allow employees to get home to their families before the weather worsened. The owner of one local store was offering the services of his own car to get his workers home. The MTA had stopped running at noon that day. New York City was shutting down.
Well, almost. Being the city that never sleeps, there was the deli on the corner of 9th and 46th that remained open, and bars and restaurants that kept regular hours. Hurricane parties sprung up around the neighborhood where, of course, they were serving Hurricane cocktails.
We ended up at House of Brews on 46th Street, a regular hang out. There was a group of us from the neighborhood. Most of us lived there, while the rest worked in the neighborhood, but had no easy way to get home. They would be staying with friends in the area, or at the hotel across the street. We drank, we danced and we sang, as the rain began to run from the sky and the water gathered on the sidewalk.
I was the first to leave the festivities. I was tired, and I was hungry. I wasn’t in the mood to prepare anything myself. So, I decided to walk to Galaxy Diner, where I found no one but the tiny people in the television that had been left on. Undaunted, I walked on. This was 9th Avenue. Surely someone was serving something, somewhere.
Smiler’s 24 hour Deli was also closing. I didn’t even know Smiler’s had a gate. Although my beloved Galaxy was out of commission, Westway Diner was a trouper. I quickly texted my compadres back at the bar that they had a food option, before ordering up some comfort food –Cheeseburger and fries. Vacations and natural disasters cancel diets every time. Once again, I put my head down, and shoulder to the rain and made it home with my treasure. In such a downpour, an umbrella was sometimes a mere gesture. I popped in a DVD and settled in for the night. In the morning, I awakened to a very wet city, but one that was, for the most part, still intact.
9th Avenue NYC after the storm
I sent JL a message, “Although I had much fun at the hurricane party, this side of town didn’t get much hurricane.”
“Ms. Irene was drunk!” He answered. “She got lost.”
I took a walk around the quiet neighborhood. The usual Sunday Brunchers were missing. Today, businesses were still closed and only a few stragglers, like me, roamed the empty streets. Most New Yorkers depended on the MTA, which would not be up and running until the next day, following inspection of the rails and equipment. This meant that workers living in the outer boroughs would find transportation difficult.
Plans for urban search and rescue were put into play. According to early field reports, some areas indeed suffered extreme flooding and wash outs. Travel was impossible in some places.
Although Ms. Irene had downgraded to a tropical storm by the time she hit New York City, she’d still left some major damage to the tri state area. Ms. Irene had transitioned into what the New Jersey mayor called a “major flooding incident.”
By the time the water dried, there would be over 45 estimated casualties, and about 9 million people left in the dark. Damages reached an estimated $1 billion in the state of New York alone. Irene was declared a federal disaster.
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