A hotel lobby. I am 951 miles from home, watching the news channels show hurricane footage taken from my hometown in Florida.
The video shows Hurricane Sally wrecking our villages, flooding our cities, and eating our shorelines. Some video looks to have been filmed a few miles behind my house. I’m sick to my stomach about it. I feel guilty for not being there.
Three businessmen sit in the lobby. I overhear them say they are from Washington D.C. They watch the lobby television, wearing surgical masks, sipping coffee, shaking their heads in mock amazement.
“Geez,” says one man, “you couldn’t pay me to live in Florida.”
“No kidding,” says the other. “There simply aren’t enough dollars in the world to make me live there.”
A piece of me wants to defend my homeland and tell these guys they are mistaken. After all, Washington D.C. is no day at Dollywood, either.
I’ve been to Washington. It’s full of high-powered young business professionals who wouldn’t hold the door open for the Queen of England toting an oxygen canister.
But I’m
not here to throw darts. Right now I’m worried about my people. I’ve been texting with friends and family since last night.
My mother still has no electricity. My sister’s family spent the night in a walk-in closet. My cousin got so stressed he started smoking again. The highways are submerged. Commercial barges are floating in places where they shouldn’t be.
I saw videos of my own backyard this morning. You could reenact historic naval battles back there.
The lobby TV makes an announcement. The newsperson tells us that today is the 16-year anniversary of Hurricane Ivan. And I am carried backward in time. I have to sit down for a moment.
Sixteen years. Has it really been that long? Oh, boy. Do I remember Ivan.
My wife and I were living in a ratty upstairs apartment. Our unit was located…