On their way home
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- A last-minute change of plans moved Rob Stewart’s
8:30 a.m. Tuesday meeting from one of the World Trade Center towers to a
nearby office building.
The Newport Beach resident was walking alone as he heard it crashing
to the ground, escaping death by mere minutes.
At the same moment, Newport Beach resident Lyle Davis was watching
America’s landscape crumble from across the Hudson.
And, still winded from running three blocks at the urging of police
officers, Newport Beach resident Scott Ramser saw the building come down
from a New York Starbucks.
At that indescribably horrible moment, none knew the others were
there. But through messages from their families, they found each other in
the wreckage. This morning, the otherwise stranded and separated
neighbors were scheduled to pile into Davis’ rented Nissan Altima to
begin the 3,000-mile journey home.
“It’s very nice to be able to drive home with a friend,†said Ramser,
41, who was without a way home until he learned Wednesday afternoon that
his friend Davis was in town.
As the three share driving duties, they will also be able to share an
experience that has changed each of their lives forever.
“It was the most horrific, horrendous thing I’ve ever seen in my
life,†said Davis, who had been in Newark on business since Sunday along
with associate Wes Morrissey of Laguna Beach, who will be the fourth
passenger on today’s trip home. “We watched the cloud envelope Manhattan
and the river. I’ll never forget it as long as I live.â€
Stewart, 35, had been even closer to the carnage. The first tower to
fall landed where he had been standing moments before.
“I had walked away because I couldn’t watch the people jumping or
falling out of the windows anymore,†said Stewart, a husband and father
in New York alone on business. “I turned and started walking away. I
knocked on a guy’s car window and asked him for a ride. When we were
about six or seven blocks away, the tower came down and there was nothing
visible but cloud behind us.â€
Ramsey, a married father of four, had been in his hotel room when a
loud blast and clouds of debris outside filled his senses. After
evacuating his hotel, he headed toward the State Street offices where he
was supposed to meet business associates. As he approached, he saw them
sitting in a Starbucks and joined the six or seven others. There, they
watched as chaos overran the city.
“It was like a horror movie,†he said.
People were running around screaming, covered with ash. After holing
up in an office building basement for 2 1/2 hours, Ramsey walked five
miles to Newark, where he found a hotel room. There, he received the call
from his friend Davis.
Without hope of traveling by plane, train or bus, and without a rental
car available anywhere in the city, Davis’ rental car, they decided, was
their only way home.
“We’re getting out of this city; we’re coming home,†Davis, a father
of four, said Wednesday afternoon. “I miss my family, I love them and I
hope to see them soon.â€
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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