Sun.Star Cebu

‘I wasn’t ready to die’

- / AP

Tubes connecting to veins in her arms, Natalie Vanderstay clutches a pillow to her stomach, over the spot where a bullet entered her body. Blankets cover the leg that was ripped apart, doctors believe by shrapnel.

The 43-year-old Los Angeles nurse can hardly believe she’s alive. In the past 48 hours, she saw corpses and people dying as she fled the massacre on the Las Vegas Strip.

She recalls being trampled and shot and then summoning a survival instinct to find a way out.

“I said, ‘OK, I can’t stay here. I’m going to bleed out.’ It hurt so bad,” Vanderstay said, weeping from her bed at University Medical Center on Tuesday. “But I knew I didn’t want to die. I wasn’t ready to die.”

The staggering count of people injured in the shooting at a Las Vegas music festival on Sunday means their recoveries are likely to be as varied as the victims themselves.

Some injuries are as simple as broken bones, while others are gunshot wounds involving multiple surgeries and potential transplant­s. All come with the added emotional scars of enduring the deadliest shooting in modern U.S. history, with 59 killed.

Vanderstay is one of more than 500 people injured that night. At least 130 people remained hospitaliz­ed Tuesday, with 48 listed in critical condition.

Rehabilita­tion for the most seriously hurt victims will take far longer than many may realize.

For Vanderstay, there are physical wounds that she as a nurse knows will take many weeks or longer to heal. She under- went surgery to have her colon and small intestine resectione­d, meaning portions were removed.

Then there are the memories of how it happened and how one night out with friends at a concert turned into a siege.

“People were screaming. And the screams got louder and louder,” she said. “I felt this force in my stomach and I knew that I had gotten shot.”

When the gunfire ripped into her, “it felt like a huge baseball, just the force of it going through my stomach.” She could see that her leg had been “fileted open,” she said, and she recalled taking off her flannel shirt to tightly wrap the leg.

“There were people that were dead. There was a guy, his eye was blown out, and I couldn’t help him,” she said.

At the site of the attack, people fashioned stretchers out of fence posts and tarps and made tourniquet­s out of belts.

“They were coming in so fast,” said Dr. Jay Coates, a trauma surgeon at University Medical Center of Southern Nevada, who operated on three people with gunshot wounds. “We were just trying to keep people from dying.”

To get out alive, Vanderstay willed herself to jump over a fence and escape the concert ground. She then hunkered down with a group of strangers, waiting for the seemingly endless gunfire to stop.

Once bullets stopped raining down from overhead, Vanderstay spotted a cab with three people already inside. She told them she’d been shot and needed to get to a hospital. The strangers took her in and put pressure on her stomach wound.

 ?? AP FOTO ?? INJURED. Natalie Vanderstay answers questions from her hospital bed. She was shot in the stomach and suffered a leg injury after a gunman opened fire on an outdoor music concert in Las Vegas on Sunday.
AP FOTO INJURED. Natalie Vanderstay answers questions from her hospital bed. She was shot in the stomach and suffered a leg injury after a gunman opened fire on an outdoor music concert in Las Vegas on Sunday.

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