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“We got very lucky, believe it or not, because the roof fell in right where we were at,” he said. “For everything not to come in on us, it was a miracle. Someone was looking out for us up there.”
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A few houses down Nimitz road, the straight path the tornado followed, Sharon Cross was crouched in a closet while her 16-year-old grandson, a friend of Bowling’s 16-year-old son, took cover under a desk.
“I got my rosary and my husband’s urn and just prayed. It was the awfullest feeling you could imagine. That house felt like it was being lifted off the foundation,” Cross said.
She heard people screaming and glass breaking, and then there was a calm, Cross said. It was hard to tell just how bad the damage was in the dark.
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“A little boy came running up the street, 16 years old, and he was holding his head screaming my house fell in, my house fell in…they had no roof, but everyone jumped in together to make sure everyone in this unit was okay,” she said.
Bowling and Thies immediately packed up as much as they could and moved it into storage and are staying with family members while they try to figure out a permanent replacement, but they also lost rugs, couches and many other items that were soaked in the rains following the storm.
“The man next door, his kitchen was pushed in, there was debris everywhere in his kitchen, and of course the man four units down lost everything….but all I had was a broken window, so I’m so thankful,” Cross said.
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