Area 3 House Fire
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Firefighter rushed to save girl,
later broke down and cried
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"Tony! She's upstairs!"
Those were the first words volunteer firefighter Tony
Hess heard when he arrived on the scene of a house
fire in Rand.
Hess, 23, put on his oxygen mask and bolted into the
blazing, smoke-filled home. He ran upstairs and began
searching for any signs of life.
He couldn't see anything but dense, black smoke.
Hess broke a window in the second-floor bedroom to
flush out some of the smoke. Once he could see better,
he spotted her - 2-year-old Alyssa Abner. The little
girl was lying unresponsive on a bed.
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Those were the first words volunteer firefighter Tony Hess
heard when he arrived on the scene of a house fire in
Rand.
Hess, 23, put on his oxygen mask and bolted into the
blazing, smoke-filled home. He ran upstairs and began
searching for any signs of life.
He couldn't see anything but dense, black smoke.
Hess broke a window in the second-floor bedroom to flush
out some of the smoke. Once he could see better, he
spotted her - 2-year-old Alyssa Abner. The little girl was
lying unresponsive on a bed.
He snatched her up and rushed down the steps and out the front door
toward an awaiting ambulance.
It didn't look good for Alyssa. Emergency crews started working to
resuscitate her, applying a bag valve mask, a hand-held device used
to provide oxygen to patients who aren't breathing adequately. Using
the device is often called bagging the patient.
"She was lifeless when I picked her up," he said. "We started bagging
her, and her eyes started opening up."
Alyssa was not giving up without a fight.
Hess hopped in the back of the ambulance and rode all the way to
Charleston Area Medical Center General Hospital with the little girl.
"In the emergency room she started crying," he said. "She was starting
to come around."
She was then flown to the burn center at Shriner's Hospital for
Children in Cincinnati.
Hess, the rugged firefighter, broke down and started to cry.
A 10-year veteran volunteer for both Malden and Rand fire departments,
Hess said the job never gets any easier.
Last Friday morning about 5, he was awakened by the emergency call of
a house fire with possible entrapment. Although he doesn't always
respond to calls for Rand, something told him to go this time even
though he was due at his other job at 8 a.m. at Yeager Airport.
Bill White, Rand's fire chief, is Tony's neighbor. They were both on
the first fire engine to arrive at the home on Midland Drive, Hess
said.
Michelle Abner, Alyssa's mother, was the person who called out and
instructed him to go upstairs. She was one of five people who made it
out of the house unscathed.
Michelle knew Tony. They had grown up together and graduated from
Riverside High School in 2002.
But as he rushed into the home, he didn't know who had called out. It
turns out he saved an old friend's child without even knowing it.
"I didn't find out until I was at the hospital that it was
Michelle's," he said. "But there's a reason for everything. You just
have to have faith in a higher power."
Alyssa is now in a coma and is listed as in critical condition.
But she is alive and has made it through the most critical stage - the
first 24 hours. She received burns on more than half of her body and
still has a long road to recovery.
Friday's fire was put out by 7:30 a.m., but the investigation has
continued. The state fire marshal determined it started somewhere
upstairs.
The home belongs to Gary and Joyce McNeeley, who are Alyssa's
grandparents. Alyssa and her mother were staying there when the fire
broke out.
U.S. 60 was shut down for about two hours while the firefighters
battled the blaze, White said.
Hess said Bill White got him into the firefighting lifestyle when he
was younger.
"Now I want to make a career out of it," Hess said.
Hess is in his junior year at West Virginia State University. The
business management major said he's been fighting fires so long it's
like second nature to him now.
"It's something I enjoy doing," he said. "It has a lot to do with the
brotherhood of firefighters. Bill's like a second dad."
Hess is no stranger to loss, either.
He lost both his father and sister in the past five years to sudden,
unexpected deaths.
But dealing with loss and tragedy is something he said he would never
get used to.
"I have to deal with it when it happens," he said. "The longer you put
it off, the more it's going to come back and bite you."
His mother, Katherine, who he now stays with, beams with pride when
talking about her son.
"She embarrasses me a little, but after growing up and playing sports,
I've gotten used to it," he said.
Katherine said her son doesn't enjoy getting the spotlight for
anything he does, but she said he truly deserves it.
"I'm not doing it for the publicity or lights or sirens," he said. "I
just want to be a fireman."
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