Boy, neighbor embrace after tornado
From the air, this suburb
outside Oklahoma City looked like flattened cardboard. On the ground,
homes were messes of splinters. Cars, thrown like toys, sat in
ridiculous places. Hunks of steel hung in trees -- the trees that were
left. Most were shaved down to gnarly apocalyptic wishbones.
When people were allowed
back on their street -- if emergency crews gave them the green light --
that's when the real trauma set in for many.
It's bizarre and
disorienting when every landmark and sign your eye knows is suddenly
gone and there's miles of nothing in its place.
"It's funny when you can't tell your own stuff when you get back and look at it like this," Mack James said,
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Moore has no power. Water is out and volunteers are handing out bottles. The twister is gone but the danger is still real.
"It was horrible," recalled one elderly woman,
sitting in a chair near piles of debris. "The thunder and the sound was
like a turning of the world. It was so bad but we were in the cellar
right out there. You could hear the thing just blowin', hear the
pounding.
"I can't even believe I'm still alive."
The realization of the loss of material things is just beginning. Photos are gone. Family heirlooms might not ever be found.
But there is worse. Rescue workers are still trying to find survivors, as reports keep coming in about those missing.
Wearing a thick red
hoodie, Zack Woodcock looked intensely worried and lost in thought as he
told a CNN reporter that a wrestler on his son's wrestling team was
missing.
"It's hard," he muttered, looking like he hasn't been to sleep.
The death toll was 24,
according to Oklahoma City Medical Examiner spokeswoman Amy Elliott.
Nine of the dead are children, she said.
Frantic kids and parents
On Monday evening, kids
screamed for their parents and parents hollered their children's names,
walking and searching in panic in a parking lot near Briarwood
Elementary.
"Caleb! Caleb!" one
woman could be heard screaming, as another woman, her face bloody,
walked zombie-like through the crowd, holding a young boy's hand.
"Step over the wire!"
someone shouted. Adults and children zigzagged past each other. One man
went to a little boy standing alone, whose face was just then cracking
into a full-out cry. The man put his arm around the child and they both
looked out into the chaotic parking lot, apparently searching for the
boy's parents.
One mother who spotted
her son sitting with his teacher on a curb gently grabbed the boy's
hands and stood him up and then learned her whole body over him, hugging
him. She cried and then laughed and cupped his face.
"He was so brave!" the teacher said.
The mother then embraced the teacher. "Thank you," she wept, "thank you."
Jim Routon, who showed
up to help at the school, held his arm up and shouted, "5th graders!"
But, of course, parents and kids continued to wander, desperate, scared.
It was a valiant effort though -- trying to offer order where none
could be found.
Three hours of emotional torture
Janna Ketchie was
trapped at work, unable to get on the road because of downed power
lines. She texted, desperate for news about her two boys at a day-care
center.
It was next to Briarwood Elementary, which Ketchie knew was badly damaged.
"Those three hours where
I didn't hear anything, they were the longest three hours of my life,"
she said. "Knowing I'd never see them again. No mother should ever have
to go through that."
But she did see them again, thanks to a teacher who covered her 3-year-old and 6-week-old with a mattress and her body.
Grayson Ketchie suffered a head wound and an ear injury. His baby brother? Unscathed.
"It's a miracle, an absolute miracle," said Rick Roberts, one of the boys' grandfathers.
A day after the 200-mph twister knocked down his building, Grayson was in a playful mood, happily reunited with his family.
When asked what happened to the day-care facility, he said, "Broke!"
No one at the center was killed, officials said.
An elementary school mourns
While Briarwood families
found their children, it was far worse for parents with kids at Plaza
Towers Elementary School. The building was reduced to just a few walls.
Monday night a father sat on a stool, tears in his eyes, as a firefighter tried to comfort him.
He awaited news of his son, a third-grader. At least seven children were killed at the school, police said.
Students who managed to escape said they hugged and clung to walls as the tornado passed through, according to CNN affiliate KFOR.
One teacher told KFOR that she lay on top of six students in the bathroom. They survived.
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Norma Bautista told CNN that when she arrived, she found her child and nieces and nephews and took them away.
"I am speechless as [to] how this happened, why it happened," she said. "How do we explain it to the kids?"
Her son, Julio, said teachers told students to crouch and cover their heads.
What's left behind
A tornado leaves intact
the most absurd things sometimes. A cardboard box of tax returns sat on a
pile of wood that was once someone's home.
One woman's bathroom was the only room untouched in her house, she said.
Though their home was obliterated, Kristina Daniel and her husband Donovan told a London Telegraph reporter that the only thing untouched in their home appeared to be an empty water bottle.
"You just wanna break down and cry," Steve Wilkerson told CNN, holding a laundry basket that contained the belongings he could find.
"But you know, that's how it goes," Wilkerson said, his voice shaking. "You gotta be strong and keep going."
He's lived in Oklahoma his whole life. He's seen tornadoes before, but nothing like this one.
"I still can't believe this is happening," he said. "You work 20 years, and then it's gone in 15 minutes."
Not far away, another
woman was joyous when she got a text from her son, Cody, who started
walking down a major street in Moore and saw his grandmother walking
dazed along the road with her Yorkie.
"Grandma is fine," her
son texted. "She is at my house. Mom, everything is gone. There is
nothing left, anywhere. All of the pictures, all grandma's stuff, all my
pictures, my letter jacket, my college degree from OU. There's nothing
left."
In another part of
Moore, Lando Hite was shirtless, his hair and body caked with mud, as he
described what happened at a horse and entertainment farm.
"It was just like the movie 'Twister,'" he told CNN affiliate KFOR. "There were horses and stuff flying around everywhere."
The tornado slammed into
the Orr Family Farm, which had about 80 horses. It damaged several
barns; Hite was worried that most of the animals had been killed.
"I tried to let some of the horses out of their stalls so that they would have a chance," said Hite.
The building he took shelter in moved about 100 feet, he said, when the twister hit.
A woman told CNN that she saw a horse after the twister. The animal was bleeding, but alive.
It's personal for National Guard
Tuesday morning, Lt. Gov. Todd Lamb spoke to CNN affiliate KOKI from a Dick's Sporting Goods parking lot.
"I'm not a pessimist and
I have a lot of faith and a lot of hope, but just with the enormity and
severity of this storm..." he trailed off.
At least 85 patients were at a local trauma center. Of those, roughly 60 are children, Lamb said.
But he insisted that Oklahomans stay positive.
"Let's focus on the good
news for a moment, the good news is that in the overnight hours, 101
survivors were found," he said. "I talked to a (National) Guardsman
early this morning. He told me he found three bodies overnight, but his
eyes got brighter as he said he found an elderly couple holding onto one
another in their shelter scared to death. But they're alive and well
today.
"So thank you to the men and women who are providing the search and rescue right now."
CNN spoke with several
guard members overnight. They live in and around Moore when they aren't
deployed. Like so many others, some of them were searching for their own
family members, too.
"You don't ever think
about it as much when you're at home," said Spc. Josh Gragert. "When you
see the devastation and people who are affected by it ... it really
hits hard."
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