The Province

Couple from Fort McMurray goes from ruins to riches

Lottery win comes year and a half after wildfire took everything

- JOE O’CONNOR joconnor@nationalpo­st.com twitter.com/oconnorwri­tes

It was a Tuesday morning, May 2016. Bill Pendergast came off the night shift at the Suncor operation near Fort McMurray, Alta., headed home and went to bed. Drawing the blackout blinds, turning off his cellphone, putting in earplugs and setting the alarm for 6 p.m. so he could wake up and do it all over again. There were reports of a wildfire in the area, but the sky over Bill and Carrie Pendergast’s place at 135 Airmont Court, in the south part of town, was blue.

Carrie was in Ontario, visiting the grandchild­ren. She switched on the news as her husband slept. The fire had turned. It was burning into town. Carrie called home, frantic. Leah Rogers, a family friend who was staying with the couple, answered and burst into Bill’s room around 2 p.m. saying they had to get out.

“It was unbelievab­le,” Bill recalls. “The amount of smoke and how fast it was moving — and it was moving toward our neighbourh­ood — and so then it became a mad scramble to get out.”

Bill wrangled the family pets, charged down the basement stairs, grabbed totes of photo albums and a box marked pictures — which actually contained music cassettes — and jumped into his red 2005 Mustang, driving away from the flames. Hours later, his phone started beeping with notificati­ons from the home alarm. The back door was breached. Windows were breaking. Then, at 8:01 p.m.: “Fire is detected at 135 Airmont Court.”

“My heart sank,” Bill says. “When we finally got back into the house in June, it was like you would see on TV, when a bomb goes off. Everything was flattened.”

The home Bill and Carrie purchased in 2012, and were paying $2,400 a month in mortgage to carry, was gone, as were several heirlooms: Carrie’s jewelry, a coin collection, home movies, marriage and birth certificat­es, winter clothes, Christmas decoration­s — everything. The cascade of loss levelled the couple, as it would so many other McMurrayit­es.

All the stress had been wearing on Bill, he admits. The 54-year-old flew home to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador in late January to visit his ailing father. Bill Sr. was in hospital in St. John’s. Bill Jr. stopped at a gas station near his aunt’s place to get the old man a 7Up and get himself $20 worth of lottery tickets.

Bill was always telling Carrie that one of these days his number would come up. Someone has to win, which is why a stressedou­t millwright became a (mostly) relaxed instant millionair­e.

Bill went to bed at his aunt Linda’s place on a Saturday night. The next day, Feb. 4, aunt Linda awoke frantic, saying someone in Goulds — a neighbourh­ood on the outskirts of St. John’s — was holding a winning ticket. Bill checked his numbers against the winning numbers displayed on his phone.

“I kept looking at my phone and looking back at the ticket,” he says. “It looked like the right number, but I thought my eyes might be playing tricks on me, and so I asked my uncle to look at my phone and call out the numbers — and gave my aunt the ticket to check them.

“And my aunt looks at me and says, ‘You just won a million dollars.’ ”

The fire was one of those terrible things, Bill says, that happens — but it never happens to you. The same with the lottery: you read about somebody else winning.

“It went from the end of the scale of losing everything, right to the other,” Bill says in wonder.

“We’re going to be able to help our kids and grandkids financiall­y now,” Carrie says.

Says Bill: “I’m keeping my eye on the 2019 Mustangs. It is about time I got a new car.”

Bill popped back into the gas station near his aunt’s place where he bought the winning ticket, just the other day, and bought another ticket — since you just never know.

He also found the cashier who sold him the million-dollar winner and tipped him $100.

 ?? — ATLANTIC LOTTERY CORP. FILES ?? Bill Pendergast lost his Fort McMurray, Alta., home in the 2016 wildfire. This month, he won the lottery.
— ATLANTIC LOTTERY CORP. FILES Bill Pendergast lost his Fort McMurray, Alta., home in the 2016 wildfire. This month, he won the lottery.

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