The weekend came, and it made an entrance.
A handful of us decided to get dinner, maybe BBQ, after
work. It was Friday. We were paid on Tuesday. It seemed like the thing to do.
After dropping our bags and meeting up on the street, we
started making for one of our favorite places. We talked. We joked. Someone was
saying something inconsequential when I heard Lauren gasp.
Directly across the street, in the garage of a building (all
the buildings on our street are at least 10 stories high), there’s fire dripping
from the ceiling. Fire and sparks.
It was coming down in a line. Later we would say it might
have been running the line of a wire, but who knows. At the time it looks
though someone has spilled a corrosive liquid and it’s dripping through the
floor and into the garage below. Cars are getting a light shower of fire and
ash.
“Oh my god,” someone says.
“That’s a fire!” Someone exclaims dumbly.
And I felt dumb too. Maybe we all did. The foot traffic
flows steadily around 8 or so (right about now), and people are stopping on the
street and staring. Some have their phones out. I hope to God that they were
calling someone. 1-1-9 is the number for emergency services/dispatch here.
Looking back now I guess I should have been shaking the
three Korean guys with phones (I don’t cell service here) next to me and
getting them to do it. Looking back I should have been doing any number of
things. There were people in the building. I could see them sitting at desks.
All the light were on. It didn’t look as if any alarms were going off. There
were no screams or sirens or bells.
That’s the weirdest thing, maybe. No one screamed. No one
shouted. It was like every single one of us, all thirty some-odd people stopped
on the street was just looking on with our mouths open thinking, “Is this
really happening?”
I’m embarrassed by that now.
In hindsight I think that I should have been chucking rocks
at windows to alert the people inside. No less than five of them were staring
at computer screens. I should have been doing something.
Looking back on it now, it makes me wonder if that was of
THOSE moments. Those trying, tempering moments that test you or, worse, just
show you what color your blood is. I stood and watched with my gob open.
I’ll say in advance that no one was killed. Over 100 people
went to the hospital, but no more than 15 were listed with injuries.
Knowing that, I’ll look back on this and think that it might
have been one of those moments, or perhaps it was a rare dress rehearsal. I’m
not exactly sure what it is I should have done, but I can tell you that standing
there watching and doing nothing didn’t seem right. I can tell you that watching
the flames crawl across the ceiling and grow until they were roaring out of the
garage, and hoping to God that someone with a phone had called the fire dept. didn’t
feel right.
Within 45 seconds the fire was large enough that everyone
across the street was taking unconscious steps backwards. My face felt about
like it does when I’m standing about a foot from a campfire. Near-seared.
And God did it grow fast.
I had some Korean guy by the arm and was pulling him back.
Someone had my arm and was doing the same. The guy looked back at me, and I
realized what I was doing and dropped his arm.
Andrew said something about there being explosions. Maria
said something about the building being full of people (and it was).
We turned and walked quickly through the belly of the
building we were under and made for the interior square of the block. More people were streaming
past us going the other direction.
No one’s really talking, maybe under their breath, but
nothing consequential is being said. I guess we were in shock.
We exit into the square (which is mostly serene) and walk on
the way we were going, thinking I guess that if it blew we wanted to have a row
of buildings in between us and the blast. That seems a little Hollywood now,
having seen the fire, but what do I know about building sized fires?
Maria says she doesn’t want to see it, so she and I stay
down the street and around the corner from the fire. I can see a clear reflection
of it raging on though in the glass windows of a tall building on the next street
over (that’s on the complete opposite side of the block the fire is on, mind
you.) The flames are that tall.
High, orange flames waving like the arms of one of those
dancing balloon men you see in front of car dealerships. For me to see the fire
in the windows of the skyscraper means that the whole building had already gone
up.
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That might have taken two minutes from when I saw the flames dripping
in the garage. It was probably less. What the hell? Flames 10-15 stories high
and reaching up 15 feet more into the sky.
I could feel it. Around the corner and down the street I
could feel the heat.
Still there are no screams. No sirens. I’m new to cities,
and I’m new to fires, but you would think it would be louder, right?
We’re thinking, “Where are the firetrucks?” The entire
building is in flames, a building sized fire, and the street is pretty much
silent. It might not even be happening except that people are pooling in a wide
semi-circle in the street, staring at the flames like teenagers at a bon-fire.
Maria’s talking about the people
in the building. I’m not talking about much and just watching the flames in the
reflection of the skyscraper and wondering why it’s so damn quiet.
We walk down the street away from the fire some more. We
meet back up with our group of friends/co-workers. Those of us that are talking
are swearing and asking where the fire-department is.
Maybe thirty seconds later we hear the first sirens down the
street and a small firetruck wheels around the block. Then a police car. Then
an ambulance.
The flames have already died down so that I can’t see them
in the windows of the skyscraper. We walk around the corner to look down the
side of the block were the fire is and see that it’s largely died down on the initial
building and has caught the one next to it.
You can hear and see glass and things shattering and falling
to the street below.
It’s crazy how many people are on the street watching, and
how close they are.
The firefighters are hosing down both buildings. It’s good
that there’s only two buildings on fire because I can only see two streams of
water (and they look pitiful next to the mass of the buildings) arcing up to the
flames.
More trucks come. More ambulances.
Jerrica, a coworker of ours, lives in the building right
next to the one that is currently a black, smoldering husk. She was out
shopping when the fire started. She’s with us now and looking white as a sheet.
Things look like they’re getting better, and we see the flashlights
of the firefighters lancing around inside the building. I don’t guess they’re looking
for coats and watches.
More gawkers show up, including one teenage boy braying out
stupid laughter and yelling that “it’s a REAL fire!” He spoke pretty good
English and I don’t doubt that every one of us thought about giving him a tongue-lashing
(and maybe a little more), but he moved on towards the fire and we settled for
glares. I’ll add that to my list of things to regret in hindsight, as the juvenile
callousness of it strikes me raw still.
But then, what was I doing that was helping? I was standing on
the same street as the teen, more composed or not, and I was doing the people
in that building the exact same amount of good.
What’s more, I had been there when the fire was a shower of
flame and sparks in the garage. I might have had a chance to have done
something. What, I don’t know, but more than stand like an idiot in the street.
I didn’t want to be one of rubberneckers anymore. I wasn't helping anything, and it feels wrong at some point to watch a catastrophe – vulture-ish.
Sheep-ish. Whatever, it doesn’t feel good. It seemed that everyone felt the
same way, so we moved on.
A few seconds later, we’re making our way down the street, and
a family of three (a Mom and her two sons) are next to us. The boy is coughing like
he has a lung or two full of smoke and the mom is speaking to a nearby
policeman rapidly.
I’m thinking: How the heck did he get out, and in silence?
Where was the evacuation? Out the other side of the building?
The kid coughing is high school aged. Daniel gleans that the
building on fire (the initial one) was a math and engineering hagwan (private
school), not unlike the one we work at. It lets out late, so you can be sure it
was full of kids like the one coughing his face red in front of me.
It’s good to see that he’s unburnt. He seems shaken up, but
ok. I guess he’ll be one of the hundred or so to go the hospital and leave the
same night.
Lauren gets news on her phone that no one was killed (or so
we think).
I’m thinking it’s incredible that within thirty minutes we
can get a full casualty report via the internet. It can already be up on
someone’s wall getting emoticons and likes before yon coughing kid has made his
way to the next block.
That’s something.
So we walk on. No one’s really vocal about BBQ anymore. We
go for burgers.
On the street are oblivious passersby laughing with their mouths
open and having a good ole time on Friday night, and I guess why shouldn’t
they?
It’s a little weird, and no one knows what to say really.
The tavern we go to is warm and lively– it’s called Travelers,
and is known as a foreigner bar. Duh. They have a food challenge.
The challenge is a burger (a great burger) made up of four
half-pound beef patties (rare in Korea), 8 slices of bacon (also rare), and 4
slices of cheese (even rarer), next to a mound of potato wedges with chili
poured over them. There was a pickle involved too, if I remember correctly.
It might seem like a weird time to do the challenge, given
the context, but I think it was the right move. We knew then that no one had
been killed, but there was still an off-ness to things. I think we were all
unsettled. The challenge gave us something else to think about.
I could write a good deal about it (or play it up a great
deal, at least), but after writing about the fire, I don’t much feel like it.
Ask me about the burger in person sometime and I promise to ham it up proper. I’ll
spin you a yarn.
Suffice it to say that we handled it (Andrew, Daniel and I)
in short order.
We played a few games of darts afterwards and had some
drinks and laughs, and by the end of the night we were comparing food babies
and having a good time. Not that I doubt that everyone spent some time that
night thinking on what we had seen, especially when we finally got back to our
beds.
I certainly thought about it.
I guess it turned out as well as it could have, considering.
I’ll be reading up on what can be done in the future. What I’ve found pretty
much amounts to: 1. Call the fire department. 2. Get out of the way.
I don’t know what I was expecting to find.
It was a wild thing to see that building go up so fast. I
mean, SO fast. It was scary, yeah, but more so, it was shocking. The shock and
the feeling of helplessness – of not being able to do a single thing to help. I felt very young. I think that's what I’ll remember the most.
I’m just glad everyone is mostly ok.
I spoke to a Korean man in a store this morning about it. His
shop is directly across from the burnt buildings (both now black husks). He
didn’t say much. Just pursed his lips and shook his head. I guess that’s about
how I feel to.
Here's a video of the fire for those who care to see. I'm not sure who took it. Someone in the Facebook group for foreigners in this area. ttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhEXzeEBSo8
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| The original building Saturday morning |


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