Last week I told you hurricane season spawns storms of a different variety in my house because I start plotting the Whatley course of action long before a storm nears land. Jeff prefers the wait-and-see method. I also mentioned his storm plan calls for removing himself from the path of Hurricane Natalie. You’ll never guess where he goes.
Thirteen years ago we purchased a home boasting 33 windows (it’s not a typo); Jeff started buying plywood here and there as the budget allowed. Piece by piece and over the course of years, every window received its own custom-cut cover spray painted with a number correlative to a meticulously drawn diagram. It was a massive undertaking, and took time an approaching storm wouldn’t allow.
With the approach of Rita on the heels of Katrina in 2005, the dear man in my life didn’t sleep for at least three days. After fulfilling his duties at Bayer, he jumped right on the task of boarding up our home. It was brutally hot that day, and I was worried sick as I watched him haul large, heavy pieces up a ladder to the second-floor windows. He looked like death, and wouldn’t even stop to eat. The City of Baytown was considering an evacuation, and I was to pack as we’d be leaving ahead of the mass exodus.
Given all the Hurricane Katrina coverage, I was having a difficult time as weather forecasters were predicting Rita would bring similar devastation to our area. Just prior to leaving, Jeff found me crying in our bedroom. I knew we had to leave, but my heart wanted to stay and go down with the ship. He looked straight into my watery eyes and said, “We’re going to be just fine.”
We left 12 hours before Baytown was officially called to evacuate. The gridlock was a nightmare to say the least. After 31 hours on the road, and no fuel to be had, we had a decision to make: spend another dangerous night (people were getting desperate) on Highway 59, or take our chances returning home. The distance traveled on our road trip to Hades was only a 45-minute return.
Hours after arriving home, the storm turned. We’d have some nasty weather to endure, but it wasn’t going to be catastrophic to Baytown. Since hurricane-force winds were still expected, we decided to bunker down in the living room of our boarded-up fortress.
Jeff, completely spent, fell asleep on the way down to our queen-sized air mattress. The kids slept as well, while the dog and I kept vigil, prayed no large trees would fall on our home, and that the roof held. All night I listened to large chunks of natural debris slam into the plywood covering the many windows. Given all the crazy circumstances of Rita, I was as safe as I could possibly be.
I poked a little fun at Jeff last week, but I know he’s removed from my path because he becomes the clear, calm eye at the center of Hurricane Natalie. He’s told me, “we’re going to be just fine”, more times than I can count. He’s by far more accurate than the weatherpersons I watch.
© 2008 Natalie Whatley