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Donna Jackson stares out the window as the early morning light washes over the Oklahoma landscape below. The red-eye flight from California back to her native state has been filled with
emotional conversations and bouts of tears. “I’m clear now on why I’m doing this,” says Jackson of her trip and efforts on behalf of Daina Bradley of Oklahoma City. “What moved me and made
me so sad was that anyone would want to hurt Daina . . . or anyone else.” Jackson, 42, had been traveling from her Laguna Beach home to a business seminar in La Jolla when she heard the
tragic news on her car radio the morning of April 19: A bomb blast had torn through the federal building in downtown Oklahoma City. Her nephew Chuck Jackson was in and out of that very
building every day as an attorney for the state of Oklahoma. In a panic, she “drove across five lanes of traffic in about five seconds,” Jackson says. After some frantic phone calls, she
learned that her nephew was en route to San Francisco on a business trip. But there was someone else at the Alfred P. Murrah Building that morning whose fate would deeply affect Donna
Jackson, would compel her to act. * Daina Bradley, 20, had gone to the federal building that day to register her 3-month-old son, Gabreon, for a Social Security card. Accompanying Bradley
and her son were her 3-year-old daughter, Peachlyn, her mother, Cheryl Hammons, and her sister, Falesha. “That day . . .” Bradley says nearly three months after the fact, “I thought it was
just a regular day. That day . . . I thought I’d be going home with my children.” Instead, the blast robbed Bradley of both children and her mother. Her sister lost an ear and suffered
severe inner-ear damage. And it took Bradley’s right leg, which rescuers amputated in order to free her from the rubble. A stunned nation watched as the death toll rose to 168, as the number
of injured was put at 500, as the stories of Bradley and the other innocents became known. “Oh, God, it just freaked me out,” Jackson recalls of the news unfolding. “I just wanted to be
there, picking up the rubble . . . anything. I couldn’t stand not being there, and I stayed awake all night wondering what to do . . . searching for something. When I heard about Daina, it
was real clear to me that helping her was the thing.” What Jackson did was establish a trust fund for Bradley at a Great Western Bank in Huntington Beach. “I had no idea how to do this,” she
says. “I just went to the bank and told them this is what I want to do, and they helped me.” Jackson put $100 into the fund to get it started and did all she could to publicize it. Within
several days, the balance grew as donations accompanied by cards and letters came pouring into the bank. Meanwhile, Jackson began to get acquainted with Bradley via telephone calls to the
Sabolich Prosthetic Research Center in Oklahoma City, where the young woman was being treated. When the Daina Bradley Fund topped $19,000 in early July, Jackson made plans for a trip to
Oklahoma. The two women could meet, and Jackson would be able set up transfer of the donated funds into a nonprofit foundation with specifications that the money be used exclusively for
Bradley’s prosthetic costs. The Sabolich center had already taken care of Bradley’s initial costs by offering one year of free treatment. However, continued care, including prosthetic
replacements, could involve a recurring cost of $35,000 or more every few years. As Jackson was preparing for her trip, she filled a box with cards and letters from donors, including one
from herself, and shipped the package to Bradley. “It was really important to me that Daina know I’m not just some woman behind a desk,” Jackson says. “I wanted Daina to know where I’m
coming from, where I’ve been.” Jackson told Bradley that she is a Native American, adopted at birth by parents who both died by the time she was 11. She told her that her adoptive father had
lost a leg during World War II, that she worked as a prosthetist, had endured an extended illness and had lost all her belongings two years ago, when the home she was living in burned to
the ground in the Laguna Beach fire. “I had little at the time,” Jackson said in her letter to Bradley, “and afterward I had less. But I learned how to rely on the kindness of strangers, and
it has helped me get through some things. “I’ve decided to help you, Daina, because I know it is hard to get beyond some things . . . but I want so much to see you go on, “ she wrote.
Jackson says that although she has spoken with Bradley by phone, the conversations have been fairly guarded. “And I really have no expectations,” Jackson says as the airplane taxis toward
the arrival gate. “I want the whole ball in Daina’s court. I feel I’m nothing more than a conduit through which all these other people are enabled to reach out to Daina and help.” Over the
past few months, Jackson’s main link to Bradley has been Carol Sorrels, spokeswoman for the Sabolich center. Sorrels is at the airport to meet Jackson. “It’s so good to finally see your
face,” Sorrels says as she embraces Jackson enthusiastically. “We’ve only talked on the phone about 150 times.” * In conjunction with Jackson’s visit, Bradley has agreed to speak at an
afternoon press conference at the center. Until now, Bradley has been unwilling to speak to the media at large. But today she is ready to step forward and talk about the tragedy. Bolstering
Bradley’s confidence is the promise that Jackson will be by her side. Jackson, accompanied by her nephews and a niece, arrives at the center to meet Bradley. “I don’t bite,” Bradley says
during an awkward moment when they first see one another. Jackson quickly steps forward to shake Bradley’s hand. With the ice now broken, the group gathers in a conference room to get
acquainted over a lunch of pizza and soda. Bradley is called away from lunch for her fitting with a new temporary custom prosthesis. For the next hour, she takes practice walks in the
treatment room and has her prosthesis fine-tuned. Moments before the conference begins, Bradley steps through the center’s hallways with Jackson and director John Sabolich as her coaches.
“I’m not a hero, and I don’t want to be anybody’s hero,” Bradley tells the press. “I thank people for all their donations . . . the cards and letters. But I hope you realize I’m really
hurting inside. I miss my mom. I really miss my children. I wish now I had tape-recorded them just so I could hear their voices again.” Jackson stands by Bradley’s side and fights to
maintain control of her emotions as Bradley speaks. In the audience, Bradley’s grandmother, aunt and sister sob quietly over their losses. When the conference is over, Jackson and Bradley
relax and decide to spend some time together. Accompanied by family and friends, they go to dinner, shop and play games at a video arcade. “Oh, what a grand, grand day,” Jackson exclaims
after bringing Bradley home to her small apartment on the city’s outskirts. When they say good night, it’s with the agreement that they will see each other again. * The next day, Jackson
will travel with her nephew to see the site of the now-leveled Alfred P. Murrah Building, to walk past the scene of the explosion that so irrevocably changed Daina Bradley’s life. As she
reflects on the emotional experience this trip has been for her, Jackson says one moment stands most sharply in her mind. “After the press conference, Daina’s grandmother came up to me and
hugged me . . . it was a really powerful embrace and made me feel so good to be in her presence. Then she whispered to me, ‘I love you.’ And I got what she meant. She really meant _ love_ .”
* _ The account established by Donna Jackson on behalf of Daina Bradley continues to accept contributions. Checks payable to Daina Bradley Trust Account, No. 098-822343-1, can be sent to
Great Western Bank, 16141 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach CA 92647._ MORE TO READ