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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) The city that once tallied Timothy
McVeigh's damage with a daily body count began counting down the
minutes Sunday to his last breath.
"Maybe it's almost a sigh of relief as much as anything,"
survivor Richard Williams said at the Oklahoma City National
Memorial, trying to envision how the city of McVeigh's destruction
might feel after the bomber's execution early Monday in Terre
Haute, Ind.
Williams has counted the stitches it took to put his body back
together after the bombing: 150. And the embedded shards of glass
that have since worried their way out of his skin: about 20.
As an assistant manager of the Alfred P. Murrah federal
building, he counted many friends among McVeigh's 168 victims.
"I think I'm ready," he said. "I'm ready for this part of the
journey to be over.
McVeigh's bomb weighed 7,000 pounds; his target stood nine
stories.
The explosion on April 19, 1995, rattled the barns at the
Oklahoma City horse track where Venga Cox worked. The horses on the
track went so wild "it looked like a rodeo," she recalled.
Cox now works in an apartment building a block from the bomb
site. She doesn't favor the death penalty, but wished away the
minutes Sunday to McVeigh's execution.
"They're dragging it out and it just keeps bringing it back and
bringing it back," she said.
It didn't take knowing the dead to sink this city of more than
506,000 into sadness. Funeral processions marked the highways for
weeks.
"It was just devastating," said Roger Ford, manager of a
funeral home that buried 21 of the dead.
Five blocks. That's all that separated Clif Thomas from
McVeigh's bomb. He can still remember how it rocked his pickup
truck so violently that he thought he had hit something.
Now a taxi driver, Thomas found himself outside the bomb site
Sunday. His fares talked anxiously of the execution.
"There's the general opinion it will put some finality to this,
that justice is done," he said. Then he pointed over his shoulder
to the tourists flowing to the memorial, "but it's never going to
rest. Just look."
Kimberley Ritchie stepped through the gates that frame the site
of the destruction. In her arms: Eighteen white roses for the
co-workers she lost in the Federal Employees Credit Union.
Outside the memorial, 42 teddy bears hung on one-half of the
memorial's fence, a reminder of the 19 children who died.
Two of the littlest survivors, Rebecca and Brandon Denny, ages 8
and 9, knelt inside with their mother and said a prayer. Rebecca
hugged one of the small empty chairs memorializing one of her
daycare playmates.
Rudy Guzman traveled with his parents from California to stand
once more on the site where his brother, Marine Capt. Randolph
Guzman, also is represented by an empty chair.
"There's no closure for me," he said. "To me, closure is
forgetting everything that has happened."
But he took solace in one thing. After McVeigh's execution, the
families of the 168 people who died won't have to listen to their
killer anymore.
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