There were 4 Marines killed in the attack on two military facilities in Chattanooga, Tennessee this past Thursday by gunman Muhammad Youssef Abdulazeez, 24, and their names have been revealed as Skip Wells, Thoma Sullivan, Carson Holmquist and David Wyatt.
Caroline Dove, girlfriend of slain Lance Cpl Skip Wells, 21, says he sent her a text message on the morning of the brazen attacks, saying there was an ‘active shooter’.
Dove,
who lives in Savannah, Georgia, was confused at first, thinking it was a joke.
But she started to get worried when her mother sent her an online report saying
that four Marines had been killed in a shooting in Chattanooga.
Lance
Cpl. Squire Wells, who was known as Skip, was swapping text messages with his
girlfriend of 2 ½ years, excited that she had booked a flight to visit him in
Chattanooga after months apart.
“Can’t
wait anymore,” Wells texted. “Yes you can honey,” his girlfriend, Caroline
Dove, replied.
His next two words would be the last she’d ever hear from him.
“ACTIVE SHOOTER,” he wrote.
His next two words would be the last she’d ever hear from him.
“ACTIVE SHOOTER,” he wrote.
She
thought he was kidding: “You are so weird,” she replied.
Hours of silence. “I love you,” she tried. Hours more passed, the news out of Chattanooga becoming clearer. “Hon, I need you to answer me please,” she wrote.
Hours of silence. “I love you,” she tried. Hours more passed, the news out of Chattanooga becoming clearer. “Hon, I need you to answer me please,” she wrote.
It
would not be until Friday that she learned his fate.
The
two met at Georgia Southern University, but he soon followed in his family
footsteps and enlisted. His grandfather had been in the Air Force, and his
grandmother and mother served in the Navy, Dove said. Dove, too, plans to
enlist in the Marines, a process she began in November. She said she is not
dissuaded by what happened.
Through
tears, Dove remembered her boyfriend’s love of flag football and Nerf guns, his
passion for U.S. history, his ability to handle her when she was grouchy and
how good he was at listening. He dreamed of being a drill sergeant, and when
they last saw each other around Valentine’s Day, he gave her a gold-and-silver
ring.
When
the time came to propose, she said, he knew to ask her parents first.
Wells’
mother was watching television coverage of the shooting when Marines appeared
at her door. She knew what the visit meant.
“Every service parent, especially moms,
dreads opening the front door and seeing people in uniform,” sai
d Andy
Kingery, a friend who is acting as a family spokesman.
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