SEAN ROSE
Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Alyson Myatt said her own safety never crossed her mind.
After waking to a loud boom and realizing smoke detectors were going off in the Shelbyville home where she worked as a nanny early Tuesday morning, all she knew was she had to get to the 5-year-old boy she cared for.
And she did, after walking barefoot through a flaming hallway and carrying the boy to safety from the house on Goldenrod Court. "I didn't even think about me getting burned," Myatt said. "I care for the kid a lot. I really do."
Speaking from a bed in University Hospital's burn unit Wednesday evening, Myatt, 22, said she had been working as a live-in nanny for the family only two months.
Both her feet and her right hand were heavily bandaged after suffering severe burns, and she said it was too early to guess how long her hospital stay might be or what her recovery might entail.
Still, looking back, Myatt said she felt lucky. "I feel very blessed, it could have been a lot worse," she said.
After waking up around 6 a.m. Tuesday, Myatt raced from the basement bedroom, where she slept, to the main floor of the house to check on the boy.
She found a hallway bathroom engulfed in flames, and the fire had spread across the hallway carpet leading to the boy's bedroom.
She called his name and the boy answered, shouting that he was in the room hiding under the covers.
Myatt ran barefoot across the flames into the room and snatched up the screaming boy.
Though she didn't feel any pain, she said, something felt wrong, like she was "walking on goo."
"It was all the skin, my feet were just burned off," Myatt said through tears.
Myatt carried the boy back through the burning hallway and took him outside, where she jumped into a van and drove them both to a neighbor's house, telling the boy on the way that he would have to run to the home and ring the door bell until someone answered.
A neighbor came to the door, called the fire department and drove Myatt to a Shelbyville hospital.
When Shelbyville Fire & Rescue arrived on scene minutes later, the attic of the home and entire front bedroom where the boy slept were engulfed in flames, said Chief Willard Tucker.
If the boy had still been inside, it would have been too late, Tucker said.
He added that in his 20-plus years as a firefighter, the courage Myatt showed stands out.
"To physically run through flames is heroics to the nth degree," Tucker said. "To make a choice to charge right through flames is kind of above what are normal heroics."
Tucker said the fire started in a ventilation fan in a hallway bathroom that Myatt said had been smoking three hours earlier when she first heard smoke alarms.
At that time, Myatt went to see what was going on and said she threw water on the smoking fan, which seemed to put out any fire.
The boy's family has called, and Myatt said she's spoken to the boy on the phone long enough for him to tell her that he misses and loves her.
She downplays any heroics that others attribute to her. "I just did what I would hope every human being would do," Myatt said.
But Tucker disagrees.
"She did it and I bet a lot of people wouldn't," he said.
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Information from: The Courier-Journal,
http://www.courier-journal.com
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