The cable guy came by today. He was installing equipment. He waltzed inside to test our cable box. He wore boots and a tool belt and had prodigious tattoos on his forearms.
He removed my new remote from the plastic package. The television flickered to life.
The first thing we saw was a news channel. The text on the screen read: MASS SHOOTING.
The TV showed a subway platform filled with weeping New Yorkers. Some were limping. Some were crying. Others were bleeding. Police officers were everywhere.
Flashing blue lights. Sirens. Ambulances. Screaming. Badges. Stretchers. Crime-scene barricades. News cameras.
The news anchor appeared on the screen and spoke in an adrenal primetime voice:
“...In Brooklyn, a gunman in a gas mask and construction vest set off a smoke canister on a rush-hour subway train and then opened fire, shooting at least 10 people, at least 29 are believed to be injured or wounded… ”
The cable guy and I watched the madness within America’s most famous borough, happening 965.4 miles away from us.
The cable
guy said, “My sister lives in Brooklyn, man.”
His mood changed completely. He quickly removed his phone and fired off a few texts. He told me he was texting his sister to see if she was okay. I told him I understood.
He waited for her text-responses, but none came.
He was anxious. The kid was supposed to be demonstrating the capabilities of my new cable box, but clearly his head wasn’t in it. And frankly, neither was mine.
“Are you from New York?” I asked.
“New Jersey,” he said. “But I have family and friends in Brooklyn.”
He kept scrolling channels. He landed on another news station. The correspondent was reporting from Ukraine. She was wearing a bullet proof vest.
“...Many, many bodies have been exhumed from the rubble on the outskirts of Kyiv, among the bodies was a Ukrainian soldier. Many others of…
