The screams shattered the quiet Mississippi night.
Headlights vanished beneath the black surface of the Pascagoula River.
Three teenage girls were trapped in a sinking car, the current ripping at the doors, the darkness swallowing their cries.
A 16‑year‑old boy was the only one close enough to help. No life jacket. No backup. No time. He ran to the edg… Continues…
By the time the car slipped beneath the surface, Corion Evans was already in the water. Sixteen years old, barely more than a kid himself, he pushed through the current toward the panicked voices, swallowing river water as gasoline and debris swirled around him.
The girls were disoriented, choking, fighting to stay afloat in the dark. There was no way to wait for rescue; every second meant another lungful of water they didn’t have to spare.
One by one, he pulled them toward the shore, steadying them when they slipped under, refusing to let go even as exhaustion and fear clawed at his own strength.
When a responding officer was swept under, Evans went back again. Four people lived because, in the most terrifying moment of their lives, a teenager chose action over safety, courage over hesitation, and proved that heroism can surface in the unlikeliest hour.
