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Buried Alive
Author's
name withheld upon request.
If
ever he needed help, it was when the hole caved in on his son who
was eight feet down.
Home Early
I don't remember arriving home from work before
6:00pm in many years. If I'm home before 7:00, my wife is surprised.
But this Monday, February 27, 1995 was somehow different. In retrospect,
I know it was a prompting from the Holy Ghost that moved me to head
home early, but at the time, going home just seemed like the thing
to do. I couldn't have realized that my family was about to embark
on a crisis, and they needed me there. I was home at 4:30, wondering
why.
Since I was a boy, I have loved that brief respite
from winter February occasionally brings us in Utah. It's the season
when all of the snow melts, the temperatures increase, yet winter
is far from over. Meteorologists may have a name for it, but for
those who have been cooped up for months with winter, it is just
nameless, wonderful, new life. That February we had been experiencing
quite a few days of that unseasonably warm weather. The snow was
gone, children were riding their bicycles, neighbors were washing
their cars and our son Devin, and three of his 12 and 13 year-old
friends decided it would be a great time to build forts in the hillside
above our home.
The idea had flooded
my mind with memories of the forts I used to build with my friends
thirty- two years ago. On Saturday, I had encouraged the boys and
helped them get started. Each of the four had dug a hole about three
feet deep, five feet in diameter and four or five feet from the
other holes. They had kept their holes in a straight line. The digging
was made easy and comfortable by the warm weather and loose sandy
soil. I had helped them get plywood to cover the holes, so they
could hide. They had spent most of the day perfecting and camouflaging
their forts. By the end of the day, they had been quite proud of
their hard work. I inspected the holes and wished I was young.
Forgotten
Forts
The forts hadn't really entered my mind as I had
begun another Sunday of church meetings. Our family had done all
of the things we normally do on Sundays. We had gone to church,
we had studied, we had prayed, but this Sunday Devin and his young
friends decided to do one more thing that none of us knew.. They
had dug their holes deeper. For hours on Sunday, the boys had kept
on digging.
Then it was Monday,
February 27.. Devin and two of the boys had decided to
race home after school and dig their holes even deeper. When they
had reached a depth of seven to eight feet they built a ladder to
climb into the holes. "Let's dig a tunnel and connect all of the
holes," said one. "OK, but there is only enough room for one of
us, so let's take turns."
It was 5:25, and
still surprised to be home so early, I was talking to a colleague
on the phone when we heard the scream. It was our daughter Mikah.
She had been outside and heard an unusual noise and had seen Devin's
two friends as they began to yell for help. I said "What is it?
She said, "I don't
know but Devin's in trouble."
Then, I remembered the forts. I dropped the phone
mid conversation and ran outside to find only two young men. The
looks on their faces are still vivid in my mind. One was unable
to speak or move. The other was as white as the snow that had covered
the ground only a few weeks earlier. "Where is Devin? " I asked,
my voice taut with panic. They stuttered and pointed to the trench
that had been created by an obvious cave-in of the wet hillside.
The fear that came over me as I looked at this 25- foot long and
six-foot wide trench, can not be described but only felt by those
who have watched a tragedy unfold before their eyes. My son was
eight feet down somewhere in that trench, and I didn't know where.
My wife was standing in the doorway. I can still see the look on
her face as well. "Call 911!" I shouted.
I grabbed the
only shovel in sight. Questions assaulted me. I've only got seconds.
Where do I begin? Where in this 25 feet is he? I shoveled frantically,
moving vast amounts of dirt. "What if I hit him in the head with
this shovel? What if I am digging in the wrong place?" I fell to
my knees and began to scoop dirt with my bare hands. They started
to bleed and I was running out of time.
"How long can
someone survive with no air?" I wondered. I figured I had a few
precious minutes left. Panic filled my soul. This was our son, and
I couldn't let him die like this. "He has too much potential," I
remember thinking. "He has only begun to live."
As the squeal
of sirens approached, Devin's two friends were wildly scooping dirt
with their hands. The sirens only intensified the feeling of time
running out. Where was he? I felt desperate. The trench was too
long and too wide for one man and one shovel working on a very short
clock.
"OH GOD, HELP
ME!" I screamed it as loud as I could. As soon as the words left
my mouth, something nearly beyond my comprehension happened. I saw
through the dirt, as if it were transparent.. For a moment that
was extremely brief, I could see Devin plainly. I was digging in
the wrong place. I was below his feet and to the right of his body.
He was laying on his left side, his hands clutching his chest, his
knee bent. He appeared to be unconscious. This view into a few feet
of earth, disappeared as quickly as it had come.
I quickly moved
and began shoveling in the right place. Within seconds I had uncovered
his nose and then his mouth and then his entire head. He was, in
fact, unconscious. I stuck a finger deep into his mouth to clear
the dirt he had been trying to breathe. He coughed. I cleared more
dirt. I was preparing to give him mouth to mouth with only his head
showing from the ground. My lungs burned from exhaustion. Devin
started to cough and spit. He opened his eyes and saw me. "Dad I
love you, I love you , I love you, I love you," he blurted over
and over.
The paramedics
arrived and finished digging him out. One big firemen carried him
down the hill to the awaiting truck. He placed Devin on the bed,
knelt down, and I saw tears fill his eyes. He looked at us and said,
"We go on about four or five of these kinds of cave-ins a year,
and it is rare that someone survives. You tell that boy that someone
is watching over him."
Devin is now a priest in Sandy, Utah. He plays
football and basketball for his high school. He is tall, handsome,
and has many good friends. Yet, he has never forgotten that day
in February 1995 when God intervened and allowed him to live to
serve a greater purpose. He is preparing for a mission, now, and
will join the ranks of the Lord's growing missionary force in August
2001.
And as for me,
I can bear unqualified witness that our Father is a God of miracles.
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