Boston Sunday Globe

After five hours in ocean, fire survivor ‘blessed to be alive’

- By Joanna Slater

In the dark, cold water off Lahaina on Tuesday night, Annelise Cochran clutched one of her neighbors for warmth, both women shivering and struggling to breathe through the smoke and fumes. Cochran felt like she was losing consciousn­ess.

“I don't know if it was the smoke or the cold or the fumes," Cochran, 30, recounted. “It was the closest I've felt to death.”

Cochran and her neighbor survived the inferno in Lahaina by spending more than five hours in the water next to a rock wall at the edge of town. Another of their neighbors, an 86-yearold man who for a time survived nearby, did not live through the night, she said.

The fire that took the town was swift and brutal. Early that morning, Cochran had seen reports of a wildfire nearby, but that wasn't unusual for Lahaina, where she has lived for seven years.

Cochran, a Maryland native who works as a training manager for an ocean conservati­on nonprofit, went to take a shower. When she dressed and went outside at around 4 p.m., the smoke was growing thicker and she began to hear fire alarms in nearby buildings.

There was no text message telling her to evacuate, no emergency siren, she said. Then, to her shock, she saw flames in a parking lot about a block away. She ran to her apartment to grab a few essentials and jumped into her car.

She turned toward the water, hoping to drive out of town to safety, but found the road blocked by abandoned cars.

When the building next to her car began to burn, she said, she got out and headed for the water. She found two of her neighbors, a woman named Edna and an 86year-old man named Freeman, who had difficulty walking. They went over the barrier wall, down to the hulking rocks below to escape the flames.

They spent hours in the water, occasional­ly scrambling onto the rocks, trying to stay away from flying embers and noxious fumes, but also moving closer to the flames when they began to feel dangerousl­y cold. Cochran saw people float off into deeper waters, which horrified her: She knows the dangers of currents and hypothermi­a.

“People still chose just to drift out,” she said. “I feared for those people's lives.”

The worst part of the ordeal, she said, came when cars along the shoreline began to explode, sending toxic fumes and intense heat rolling toward the water. That's when Cochran and Edna felt near collapse. The women held each other as they shook and tried to stay awake, Cochran said. They talked about their families and promised each other they'd make it.

At one point, Cochran said, she called out to Freeman and asked how he was. He just smiled and made a shaka gesture with his hand — middle fingers down, thumb and little finger out — to indicate he was all right, even though Cochran knew he was suffering. Later, she said, she saw him slumped against the wall, unmoving.

“I just ache for his family,” Cochran said. She and several dozen other people were rescued from the water by firefighte­rs around midnight. Her body is covered with bruises and laceration­s; her feet and face are burned.

“I feel blessed to be alive,” she said.

 ?? HANDOUT/ANNELISE COCHRAN ?? Annelise Cochran before Tuesday’s destructiv­e Maui fire.
HANDOUT/ANNELISE COCHRAN Annelise Cochran before Tuesday’s destructiv­e Maui fire.

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