We
were discussing one of the worst natural disasters in American
history when a funny topic arose. A thousand miles south of Fond du
Lac, Swinkle was reminiscing into his phone outside of a restaurant
in New Orleans.
“Willy
had ordered a hammock that was supposed to be delivered on the day
Katrina hit.”
“I
paid for it!” Willy said.
“It
was a standalone hammock, meant to replace his bed,” Swinkle said
in his thoughtful drawl. “He
couldn't get in touch with the company for the longest time. Then we
found out a month or two afterward that the company that took forever
to ship it to him was actually in New Orleans. So he was never going
to get his money back.”
“Think
about that,” Willy said. “It was taking them a while even though
we were in the same
city. And when I was supposed to finally get it, a hurricane took
them out... as well as the post office, the mayor's office, and any
chance of me getting my hammock.”
Ten
years after Hurricane Katrina—settled with a wife, two kids, and a
steady job, Willy has never realized his dream of sleeping in a
hammock every night. Later in our talk it was reiterated that there
are probably worse fates.
###
We
did the interview a half-hour later than planned. My iPhone couldn't
directly record the call with Swinkle because I guess that's illegal.
Willy had arrived at my apartment on time but forgot to bring his
digital recorder. My backup plan was a Microcassette relic with
playback that made me sound like a demon on Quaaludes. Willy called
an audible and we drove to his house for his Zoom Mic, then to his
mom and dad's, where his sister joined us in an upstairs bedroom.
When we belatedly got through to Swinkle at 8:30, I felt a tinge of
pressure to prove I was truly a pro.
“Uh...
So, Swinkle, you were born in the south. Right?”
“Yeah,
in New Orleans.”
I
nailed it! Swinkle elaborated.
“As
a kid, I took stuff like Mardis Gras for granted, but you also knew
it was kind of a magical place in the deep south, not like anywhere
else you'd ever been.”
In
the fall of 2001, Swinkle was lured upstream of the Mississippi River
by recurrent wanderlust, a love of music, and a mutual friend of
Willy's who played drums in their rock band Reveal. Willy and I had
been pals going back to the X-Men battles of our youth, and so I was
introduced to Swinkle shortly after he arrived in Wisconsin. We have
been triangulated ever since.
Treasured
memories, enduring kinships, and some good tunes notwithstanding, the
band ran its course, and on a much heavier note, Swinkle's father
passed away in August of 2004, prompting his return to the bayou to
be with family.
Willy
relocated in June of 2005 with no way of knowing his timing was to be
as bad as that of a certain hammock vendor. I asked him why he made
that move when he was 22.
“Because there was somebody who could set up a living situation
ahead of me,” Willy said. “And the main reason I moved there
wasn't necessarily New Orleans. It was to get out of Fond du Lac. It
wasn't exactly like running away. It was more, 'If I'm going to
understand where I'm from, I have to understand what it's like to not
be here.'”
Swinkle
summarized how they spent their summer.
“I
was working for AmeriCorps by day, and I'd lined up Willy with a job
working for a contractor,” he said, referring to Ronnie, a
born-again survivor of '80s decadence who had composed a dozen or so
odes to God. “And we were recording crappy Christian music at
night.”
(As a side-note, I visited them that summer, weeks before Katrina,
and witnessed a jam session in Ronnie's garage. A Ronnie line the
three of us have been known to quote can be found in his critique of
the material world: “I don't drink my coffee in a fancy can/ You
know that I'm a simple man!”)
“It
was his goal and he wanted help with it,” Willy explained. “And
it just made sense for us to keep playing music.”
Amen.
The time had come for me to ask about that despicable wet thing.
“Initially,
how serious did you take the warnings about the tropical storm that
became Katrina?”
“I'd
heard mention of it a day before we left,” Swinkle said. “The
truth is, you get so many hurricane warnings per season, and over 90%
of the time, it comes to the fruition of a bad rainstorm. Rarely did
we ever really get hit.”
A
number of false alarms had contributed to what Willy called
“desensitization.” We believe this to be a product of human
nature.
“What
was the definitive moment that made you realize the best plan was to
get out of the city?”
“When
Mayor (Ray) Nagin made a televised press conference, live, seriously
urging people to leave,” Swinkle said. “I had been working in
gardens until four or five when my boss told me the news. I got a
ride home and told Willy we probably had to get out of town.”
Evacuation
was the plan, but there was a daunting obstacle: Neither man had
access to a car. Weeks after it had made the trek from Wisconsin to
Louisiana with his belongings in tow, Willy sold his 1990 Ford
Escort. Swinkle's ride was being repaired at the shop; he had
borrowed his ex-girlfriend's car to get to work that Saturday
morning. She had since reclaimed it and fled the city. His plight
seemed compounded by the fact that he'd also lost his cellphone.
Swinkle recalled: “Willy started gathering valuables, clothes, stuff we wanted to bring along and preserve. And I was on the computer, trying to find any kind of a rental, flight, bus, or shuttle.”
Swinkle recalled: “Willy started gathering valuables, clothes, stuff we wanted to bring along and preserve. And I was on the computer, trying to find any kind of a rental, flight, bus, or shuttle.”
They
were focused but perhaps overmatched. Mercy interceded in the form of
a gracious ex.
“Luckily,” Swinkle went on, “My ex-girlfriend, who had my
phone, called Willy. I'd left my phone in her car. She'd been on the
road for about three hours, and was only about 15 miles out of town
because traffic was so bad. She turned around and came to return the
phone so I could have it, and she ended up helping us because we
didn't have any other options.”
They packed into her sedan a military Duffel bag full of clothes, two
acoustic guitars, some recording equipment, and most legendarily,
nine lighters. Anything they couldn't stow on a plane was to
be destroyed.
“I
had just inherited my late father's furniture. His couches, his
records. I had that material connection with my dad,” Swinkle said.
“I thought, 'I can take care of his stuff now.' Then it's gone.”
Katrina would deprive Willy of a brand-new mandolin. “She was a good girl,” he eulogized. When
asked if he had christened her with a name, he deadpanned, “Amanda
Lynn.”
There was no use pining over
possessions as they drove to the airport where Swinkle had made
reservations for a rental car. They waited in line for over two
hours. Swinkle noted that “people were definitely frustrated and a
little freaked out, but they were civil at that point.” When at
long last the trio got to the counter, their fortune waned.
“Because my ex was not yet
25 and paying for it, they couldn't release a car to us.”
What
a hassle. “Big Easy,” my ass. Furthering her sterling reputation,
Swinkle's ex agreed to let the guys tag along on her journey three
states east to Albany, Georgia, where she had family. Willy and
Swinkle crashed on the couches of total strangers in the wee hours of
Sunday, August 28th,
2005. Later that morning, they emptied their funds for plane tickets.
In a deluge of nasty rain that foretold Katrina, the pilot of a "small puddle-jumper” worked up the nerve to fly them to Atlanta. It
was the last flight the plane was to hazard that day. From Atlanta
they were flown to Milwaukee's Mitchell Airport. Willy's family was
there to drive them home to Fond du Lac.
That night and Monday morning,
we gathered around the TV watching the news, sipping coffee, somber
and shocked. This was more than a “bad rainstorm.” Katrina was
the malevolent payback for all those false alarms. With winds upwards
of 175 miles per hour, Katrina was a rare and ferocious category 5
hurricane. Exterior levees had been built to withstand the magnitude
of a category 3. Interior floodwalls like that of the 17th
Street Canal were undermined by faulty engineering. The death toll
exceeded a thousand in New Orleans alone. Overall damage to property
is a scarcely comprehensible figure: $108 billion. New Orleans'
burden was exacerbated by its geography; the city exist in a bowl
with elevation dipping seven-to-ten feet below sea level. Flooding
continued after the storm had passed. When the levees failed, the
effects were catastrophic. By Tuesday, over three-quarters of the
city was submerged. The Upper and Lower 9th Wards were
especially decimated.
We watched images of desperate
souls on rooftops or floating on mattresses from our living rooms. We
saw the Superdome embroiled in a doomsday struggle from far, far
away. I didn't say the obvious to my friends. “That could have been
you.”
“We weren't the only people
who wanted to evacuate but had very little means to do so,” Swinkle
said.
“We're very lucky,” Willy
agreed.
In a town of about 43,000 at
the foot of Lake Winnebago, they roomed together in a spare bedroom
at Willy's sister's house. Within two weeks, they realized they
couldn't return to New Orleans anytime soon. They got day jobs.
Swinkle in particular began to loathe the news reports, the
inevitable inquiries. People called them the lucky ones even though
they had lost everything. I had to wonder if there was more to the
story than luck.
“Do you think you benefited
from divine intervention or simply good fortune?”
Willy's answer was immediate.
“Before we had any knowledge
of the hurricane, I remember stressing out. Thinking about how I
wasn't going to be able to continue at that pace, as far as bills and
income were coming along. It was a mountain of obstacles to overcome.
And I had a moment of asking for divine intervention, getting on my
knees and praying to God, saying that I can't do this without some
help, and I will do whatever it takes.
“When
I look at all the circumstances, I can't help but feel a little bit
of hair standing up on end,” he continued. “I specifically asked
for help. Then Swinkle left his phone in her car—and that helped
us. My last paycheck, all my money, was almost the exact
amount that I needed for a plane ticket. We got the last flight... I
asked for divine intervention, and I think I got it.”
As a brief editorial, an
answered prayer like that could speak volumes about the madness of
the world in which we live. I don't think faith or science will ever
solve the ongoing mystery and it's hard to be at peace with that.
I questioned Swinkle about the
city's efforts to revitalize.
“Being part of the
rebuilding with AmeriCorps, I respect the resilience. The resilience
resulted in a tighter sense of community. Not only that, but the huge
outpouring of support nationally... We had college groups, church
groups every week. Buses full of people taking weeks off their lives
to come down and help us rebuild, and they didn't get a dime.”
“The worst nature sometimes
brings out the best in people,” I said.
We were on our way to an
optimistic conclusion. From Fond du Lac, Willy had his faith intact
and I had an upbeat ending to an otherwise morose tale. (Maybe I
could mix in a few more jokes! I thought selfishly.) Swinkle
believed New Orleans was toughened and united by hardship... But he
also had something to add.
“Well, initially, Nick, it
was horrible. You know, with the Superdome. One of the girls I worked
with had to identify her boyfriend-of-four-years' body after he was
murdered, shot point blank in the back of the head. The military and
police that were established were gone. Anybody in a position of
authority had bailed. The building just got taken over. So, this girl
came back from the coroner's office with a dry face and told me
exactly what it was like to identify her boyfriend's body, but she
couldn't open up about the Superdome. Ever.”
We were left with sunken hearts and I was all out of questions. There were no jokes to lighten
the mood as we changed the subject and said our goodbyes.
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