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Part II: Disease > It’s Not the Dying - Pg. 117

7 It's not the dying Few New Yorkers asked the fundamental questions of 9/11's after- math--"Why me and not him?" or "Why him and not me?"--more often or with more apprehension than Marty and Dave Fullam. Both brothers were veterans of the FDNY on 9/11, and both had responded to the disaster; spent plenty of time on and around the pile; smelled the raw, penetrating, inescapable odor of burning flesh that they couldn't shake for weeks afterward; and went back to their homes doused in fine gray grit that clung to every exposed inch of their skin except the moons around their eyes. Both thought nothing in this world was nobler than being part of the fire brotherhood. One brother came out of the fire scarred but whole. The other nearly died and will spend every day of the rest of his life taking a medicine cabinet of medications, keeping track of what he eats, keep- ing score of what he can no longer do, and hoping against hope that, with a new lung and a team of doctors who care, he can watch his three daughters grow into fine young women. The youngest of those three girls, sweet little Emma, was born just five weeks before the September 11 attacks, but she knows the story by heart of how her daddy, firefighter Martin Fullam, Ladder Company #87, loaded nine fellow firemen into the cab and the bed of his red Chevrolet Silverado Z71 that morning and drove them as fast as he could to the muster point where they boarded buses that took them to the Staten Island Ferry. She has seen photographs of the truck, and she's heard her father retell the story of that day many times over. On the Saturday morning when Lieutenant Fullam recounted for me in painful detail what had happened to him, Emma stuck close by, frequently hanging on his wheelchair, at other times 117