Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
An aerial photo shows the destruction of the Mayfield Consumer Products candle factory after tornadoes moved through the area in Mayfield, Kentucky, on Friday night.
An aerial photo shows the destruction of the Mayfield Consumer Products candle factory after tornadoes moved through the area in Mayfield, Kentucky, on Friday night. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA
An aerial photo shows the destruction of the Mayfield Consumer Products candle factory after tornadoes moved through the area in Mayfield, Kentucky, on Friday night. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA

‘Not knowing is worse’: tornado survivor at candle factory awaits news of missing boyfriend

This article is more than 2 years old

Autumn Kirks took shelter and glanced away from her boyfriend, who was 10ft away, and when she looked back he was gone

Workers on the night shift at the candle factory in Mayfield, Kentucky, were part of the holiday rush that was keeping the place going around the clock when a tornado whirled towards the small city and the word went out to “duck and cover”.

Autumn Kirks pulled down her safety googles and took shelter, tossing aside wax and fragrance buckets to make room for herself.

She glanced away from her boyfriend, Lannis Ward, and when she looked back, he was gone.

On Sunday, he was among scores of people missing and feared dead in the rubble of the factory leveled by the record tornado that howled in on Friday night, with the death toll expected to exceed 100 in Kentucky alone.

Aerial footage shows extent of tornado damage in Kentucky – video

Kirks and others are waiting in a heartbreak of emotional agony for news of their loved ones, even though by late Sunday afternoon no one had been found alive in the wreckage since 3am Saturday.

“Not knowing is worse than knowing right now. I’m trying to stay strong. It’s very hard,” she said.

The factory is now 15ft deep of mangled steel and there are cars on top of the ruins where the roof was, the state governor, Andy Beshear said on CNN.

Kirks said she and her boyfriend were about 10ft apart in a hallway. Suddenly, she saw sky and lightning where a wall had been, and Ward had vanished.

“I remember taking my eyes off of him for a second, and then he was gone,” she said.

Kirks was at a ministry center where people gathered to seek information about the missing.

The pastor, Joel Cauley, said of the disaster scene: “It was almost like you were in a twilight zone. You could smell the aroma of candles, and you could hear the cries of people for help. Candle smells and all the sirens is not something I ever expected to experience at the same time.”

Kyanna Parsons-Perez, who was also on shift at the Kentucky candle factory, told the Guardian while sitting in the hospital, how a gust of wind suddenly changed everything.

“My ears started popping and I felt my body swaying,” she said of the moments right before “boom, everything fell on us”.

She was stuck for three hours in the rubble despite being in a storm shelter deep in the interior. She was trapped by a water fountain, an air conditioner and 5ft of debris.

In Arkansas, where a nursing home was destroyed and two people were killed, the governor, Asa Hutchinson, said workers shielded the residents with their own bodies.

More on this story

More on this story

  • How bad were the US tornadoes and what caused them?

  • Kentucky tornadoes: governor says death toll expected to grow as crews sift through ruins

  • Amazon faces scrutiny over worker safety after tornado strikes warehouse

  • Kentucky candle factory: questions arise over why staff worked during tornadoes

  • Aerial footage shows extent of tornado damage in Kentucky – video

  • Kentucky tornadoes: fears death toll from record twisters could exceed 100

  • Biden calls on EPA to investigate role of climate crisis in deadly tornadoes

  • US tornadoes: up to 100 people feared dead after historic storms – video report

Most viewed

Most viewed