Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

After 3 attacks, a holiday with 14 empty chairs

Victims were a cross section of America's ideals

- By Michael Wilson

NEW YORK ❯❯ A janitor working his shift at a Virginia Walmart. A 40-year-old woman returning home to Colorado Springs, Colorado, for the holidays. A young man at his girlfriend's side, watching her friend perform in a drag show.

Three college football players. A mother who worked to help foster children. One bartender who remembered your drink and another who danced.

White and Black, gay and straight, old and young. The collection of the newly dead from just three of this month's mass shootings are the very picture of the ideals — inclusivit­y, setting aside difference­s — that America prides itself on at this time each November. Fourteen people who did not know their last Thanksgivi­ng was already behind them.

Tuesday's rampage, in which six people were killed in a Walmart in Chesapeake, Virginia, was the 33rd mass shooting in November alone, and the nation's 606th this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

That shooting occurred after three students were killed at the University of Virginia on Nov. 13 and five people were killed Saturday night at a gay club in Colorado Springs. Wednesday, four teenagers were wounded in a shooting in Philadelph­ia just after classes were dismissed for the Thanksgivi­ng holiday.

Yesterday's parents, children and friends became Thursday's empty chairs.

“She was going to be at my house for Thanksgivi­ng,” Natalee Skye Bingham said of her friend, Kelly Loving, a Memphis, Tenn., native who promised a spread of Southern food — deviled eggs, collard greens and baked mac and cheese.

“She couldn't wait to cook for me,” Bingham said. “And I couldn't wait to cook for her.”

Instead, she was killed inside Club Q during a night meant to cheer her up.

“Now, it's one less person at my table,” Bingham said.

All three shootings were carried out at places that, for those within, felt warmly familiar. Safe.

Club Q was widely described as “family” to the LGBTQ and straight patrons alike who came there for a drink and a show. The University of Virginia athletes were shot on a bus returning from a play they had watched for a class. And now a Walmart store, a place instantly recognizab­le throughout America, this one located in a former colony older than the country itself. The Virginia state seal was created by a signer of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. Its motto: “Sic Semper Tyrannis.” Thus Always to Tyrants.

At the University of Virginia, the slain football players — Devin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr. and D'Sean Perry, “vibrant, beautiful young men” — were celebrated at a memorial service that drew some 9,000 people.

Fearsome on the field, the players were remembered as sweet young boys. Davis, a wide receiver on the team, had the number of the highway exit leading to his hometown, Ridgeville, South Carolina, tattooed on his arm, and he made it sound like “the biggest city in the world,” a teammate remembered.

His teammate, Perry, once dressed as a red Power Ranger for Halloween as a child, so taken with his costume that he didn't take it off until after Thanksgivi­ng. And Chandler's family still had a video of him at age 10, dancing with abandon in a parking lot.

“To my three young kings, I am eternally grateful for you,” their coach, Tony Elliott, said during the service. “Thank you for being a light to the world.”

Half the country away, in Club Q, with its bingo and karaoke nights and weekend drag shows, Derrick Rump and Daniel Aston were popular bartenders.

“Daniel had this smile that you would see from across the club,” said a friend and co-worker, Shadavia Green, 38, “and you would literally be like, `Let me find a reason to walk over there,' just to be closer to Daniel.”

Aston, a 28-year-old transgende­r man, loved performing at the shows.

 ?? DANIEL BRENNER THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mourners are seen at a candleligh­t vigil outside of Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colorado, earlier this week.
DANIEL BRENNER THE NEW YORK TIMES Mourners are seen at a candleligh­t vigil outside of Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colorado, earlier this week.

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