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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-28-09 03:23 PM
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Three Minutes to Fort Totten
Three Minutes to Fort Totten

A chaplain from Walter Reed. A doctor from Walter Reed. The owner of a new hair salon. An architect. On a Metro train, in one terrifying instant and its aftermath, their lives became forever intertwined. This is their story.

By Eli Saslow
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 28, 2009


He heard the familiar whine of a Metro train approaching the platform, and Tom Baker decided to run for it. The next train was scheduled to arrive at Takoma Station in two minutes, another in six minutes and yet another in 10. But it was the first Monday of summer, and Baker had left work early with a weightlifting routine to complete and an overgrown garden to tend. A doctor at Walter Reed with an emergency pager affixed to his waist, Baker had learned to schedule and protect every minute of his free time. This was his train.

Baker, 47, bounded up the escalator, two steps at once, until he reached the empty platform. The train idled on his left, its doors still open. The operator, a 42-year-old named Jeanice McMillan, stuck her head out the window and watched Baker run toward her. She was an hour into her final shift of the week, seven loops on the Red Line away from going home to a son who just had returned from college. But she smiled and held open the door, and that was how the final passenger made it onto Car 1079, the first car of Metro Train 112, headed south toward downtown Washington.

An automated voice greeted Baker as he slid into a seat directly behind the operator.

"Doors closing."

Train 112: a nondescript Metro train, six cars in all. Car 1079: at least 16 people scattered across 68 seats, lost in their own worlds late on a Monday afternoon. Baker stood up again. If he walked to the rear of the car, he would be closer to his exit at Fort Totten. He would shave nine seconds off his commute home. That seemed important.

Baker tossed his blue backpack over his shoulder and walked the full 75 feet to the back of the car, passing all the other passengers on his way. There was a dentist reading a book about golf; a college student closing his eyes after the fourth day of an internship; a young architect fiddling with his cellphone; a 17-year-old checking her makeup in a small mirror before applying extra lip gloss.

Near the front of the train, a 23-year-old named LaVonda King was on her daily trip to pick up two young sons from day care. She had just finished a cellphone conversation with her mother, who suggested that King print advertising fliers for her new hair salon. A good idea, King agreed. She already had the keys to the shop and a name she had daydreamed about since high school: "LaVonda's House of Beauty."

In the far rear of the car, Dave Bottoms listened to an iPod. A chaplain who had just finished his first day on the pastoral staff at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Bottoms, 39, felt scattered from the stress of a new job. Wasn't today his dog's seventh birthday? Did his new BlackBerry work? Were there any leftovers in the fridge for a quick dinner? Bottoms reached into his backpack and grabbed a photocopy of a homily by St. Irenaeus. Maybe, Bottoms thought, a little reading would quiet his mind.

more...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/27/AR2009062702417.html?hpid=topnews
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dgibby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-28-09 03:45 PM
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1. Haunting. n/t
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Faygo Kid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-28-09 04:00 PM
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2. Excellent. I ride that every work day, and we all ignore one another.
Yet there are interesting lives there, all of them.

Amazing.
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elleng Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-28-09 04:43 PM
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3. I'm thinking of sending something by mail
instead of taking Metro this week; my 'stop' is Glenmont. Have you been riding? I'd like to avoid 'drama,' and my heart is beating a bit faster than usual just thinking about it.
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