Sunday, January 10, 1999

An Eventful Day at the Crafter's Mall



An Eventful Day at the Crafter's Mall
Saturday was an eventful day at the Mall. I had no customers - but that was because the parking lot, Salmon Harbor Drive and the right turn lane on Highway 101 were full of rescue vehicles.

I was working on taxes at the table when I heard the crash - no brakes - just the crunch. A small light colored car traveling south on Highway 101 hit a Chevy Blazer which was crossing the Highway from the Odyssey ATV place trying to get to our store to check out the ATV's over here that are available to rent. (I found all this out later).

What I saw was a "van" flying over the top of the hood of the small car – it rolled once in the air, hit the ground rolled into Salmon Harbor Drive and up onto the hill leading to our parking lot - the hill stopped it and it rolled back down to Salmon Harbor Drive on the passenger side of the vehicle - where it spun around a couple of times and ended up with the underside of the "van" facing our store. When I first saw it flying toward me – I thought they were going to end up in our store!!!

You know how when a crash happens in the movies everything slows down and you see every excruciating detail?  Yeah, well, that doesn't happen in real life.  At least not this time.  It was all over in a flash.

I ran for the phone and dialed 911. The owner of the grocery store next door, Chuck, ran for the cars. A friend who lives across the street, Willie, was home and he ran over also. There were several vehicles traveling on Salmon Harbor Drive and they all stopped and ran to help. Chuck started to run back to the store and I yelled at him that I had 911 on the phone and someone yelled at me to get an ambulance here NOW.

I told the operator about the accident - she asked how many vehicles were involved and I said one car and one van and that the van had flipped several times and they needed an ambulance. She got all the information she needed asked my name and said that she had my number so I could hang up. I did. There were plenty of people helping so I stayed where I was in case they called me back.

There were three people in that Blazer - father, mother and son (about 7 or 8 years old) - plus two large dogs. No one was hurt. Their airbags didn't deploy because all the stress was sideways - but their seatbelts kept them in place. They had a barrier to keep the dogs in the back of the Blazer - so the dogs rolled around in the back of the car - but stayed in place. Everyone who saw the wreck figured there would be mangled bodies inside.

A woman, who will be called Sally, because that's not her name (the name is changed to protect the guilty in this story), and her husband were just across the Highway in her brother's trailer. After the wreck they came outside to see what was going on then got into their van and drove across the highway to park near the accident.  By the time they arrived the family was out of the Blazer and the people who had stopped to help were getting the dogs and personal effects out of the vehicle.

There was a girl driving the small car and she got out of her car with help, walked around the car toward the store and collapsed on the steep bank leading from the highway to the store. She sat there with an elderly lady who had been in a car way behind hers.

Minutes after the accident vehicles started pulling into our parking lot - personal vehicles - cars and small pickups - belonging to the WB Fire Department Volunteers. They all had walkie-talkies and were talking on them when they arrived and had WBFPD license plates - so I could tell who they were.  This was several months before I would become one of "them."

They checked out all the victims - put out flares and cleared away traffic so the emergency vehicles could arrive. We ended up with a state police car, two county deputy cars, a green "Law enforcement" jeep, a yellow rescue vehicle, an ambulance, two fire trucks, and two Mast Bros. tow trucks.

The police spray painted where the two rigs ended up and took statements. They asked me but, I didn't have anything to say because I didn't see what caused the wreck.

I stayed at the store watching Sally and her husband. They weren't helping direct traffic or helping the victims - and I happen to know they are both thieves - so I was watching them. The people from the Blazer had a pile of belongings under the Pelican Market sign.

Sally gave a statement to every officer. She kept going over to the mother and putting her arms around her - which the lady didn't want.

A friend, Viki, stopped just after the accident happened and stayed with me in the store. She wanted to know what I was doing. (I would move to keep Sally and her husband in my line of sight - so I told her that there were two people out there who tended to take advantage of any situation and I was watching them. She knew who they were.)

Why Sally was making statements to the police I have no idea. I was sitting at the Craft Mall with a ring-side seat and didn't feel qualified to say what happened.

She was inside a trailer - even if she had been looking out the only window on that side of the trailer she would have been facing the wrong way - and by the time they came outside it was over.

The only people qualified to say what happened were in the car behind the girl victim and in the two cars heading north on Highway 101 - they were not involved in the accident because they were still on the hill when it happened. Fortunately there were no cars waiting at the stop sign on Salmon Harbor Drive.

The two drivers couldn't even tell the officers what happened. The father in the Blazer never saw the small car and the girl driving the car didn't see the Blazer – she never touched her brakes until after she hit the other vehicle.

The accident happened around 1:15. Around 2:30 the rescue vehicles left. The girl in the small car was taken to the hospital to be checked because her neck hurt. Only one county deputy and the state cop stayed. And Mast Bros. began loading the vehicles. They put a chain on the Blazer and pulled it upright - I saw for the first time that it wasn't a van. Viki left. Everyone who lived in the area, and had run to help, left. Sally and hubby were still there.

I walked over to the mother and asked if she wanted to come into our store with her son where it was warm and they could sit down. She said that she couldn't leave the dogs and I told her to bring them with her. So the four of them came over to our store and I closed the door behind them to keep in the heat from the sun.

We had a pleasant visit, considering the circumstances. I let them lead the conversation. I got water for the dogs. The dad called AAA and found a car rental place in North Bend where they could get a car and be able to leave it at the Portland airport. They live in Vancouver, WA.  His wife called him Mike.  He called a taxi to take him to North Bend. I told him that his wife and son and dogs were welcome to stay with me while he did what he needed to do (rent a car and find a bank to get more money). We carried their stuff over to the store and piled it on the sidewalk. The taxi came and he left. So did Sally and hubby.

Mike got back around 4:30 and he offered me $20 for my trouble - I put my hands behind my back and said no thanks. Mike said that he'd read about small towns where people helped someone in need but had never experienced it himself until that day. He was really impressed and they would be back again. The boy said that it was too bad that Mike's job - he designs equipment for telecommunications - couldn't be in our town - because he thought it would be a great place to live. We loaded their stuff in the trunk of the car and I went back into the store to make sure they had everything.  Sally drove back across the highway into our parking lot, got out of her vehicle, and started talking to them back at the trunk of their car.

She said that after she'd helped to pull them out of their car (she must have gotten a funny look because she immediately changed the story to 'after my husband helped '. . . (all the people pulling them out of their car were men - the women stayed back and helped the boy and his mom after they got out – AND Sally and husband arrived AFTER the people had been pulled from the vehicles) she said that she went over to help the girl in the other car. She told them that the girl was moving her head around and that the girl had said that she was fine. And Sally told them she'd be glad to give them her name and address so they could use her testimony.

They said thanks but no thanks and that they were glad the girl had been taken to the hospital to make sure she was OK and that their insurance would take care of whatever happened. Then they walked away from Sally and came back to me. Sally drove away. The boy hugged me and told me I was a really nice lady, the parents shook my hand. Mike started to tell me what Sally said - but I just shook my head and Mike nodded (I think they must have smelled opportunist). They left.  The dogs were named Sarah (part shepherd and part Rottweiler) and Loki (black lab). I don't know the name of the mother or son - we didn't exchange names - I figured they wouldn't remember mine later anyway and there were other things that were more important.

The mother said that they had moved from Florida to Vancouver after Thanksgiving and had found a house and moved in. They'd decided to spend the weekend at the coast and had picked Winchester Bay.

The Blazer was her first brand new vehicle and was four years old - they'd just paid it off last year -1998. Most of the information came form the son. With the mother correcting when necessary. The top of the Blazer had been crunched in on her side and hit her head. She had a headache – took three aspirin. So, mostly needed some peace and quiet. I entertained the son and dogs so she could pace the store and burn off adrenaline. And go to the bathroom at the store to wash her face - she could feel splinters of glass.

Mostly they needed to feel safe while the Mike was getting their rental car.

When Sally showed up as they were leaving - she tried to give the mother some drugs that she takes for her headaches. No thanks.

I've seen cars go flying through the air in movies - but always figured they had to use charges to get the cars airborne. I never expected to see such a thing in real life and never hope to see it again. I still can't believe they weren't hurt.

Note: The woman named "Sally" in the above, worked with Jamie in the store.  There had been lots of thefts going on in the store, and with the help of a security camera and VCR they caught her on tape pocketing money from sales instead of ringing them up on the cash register. She was asked to leave the store.  After she left everyone took inventory and were shocked at the total amount of missing items.  Of course, she was not the only thief, but she did more than her "fair share" of damage.