Donnell Gibson was driving to work in St. Paul Wednesday afternoon when he saw "huge" flames leaping from a fully engulfed house at Western Avenue and Front Street.
Then he saw something that made his heart sink — three small children standing near the house next door, which also was starting to burn.
Gibson, 29, pulled a U-turn, jumped out of his car and began shouting for the children to get away from the house. Instead, they ran inside.
Gibson ran in after them and pulled them out, then ran back in — over and over again — to rescue the rest of the family — about 10 members in all.
And he got every one.
"It felt like when you open the oven door," he said of the intense heat and danger. "I kept saying, 'You gotta go, you gotta go, you gotta go NOW!' "
The harrowing rescue came on a day when temperatures in the metro area soared into the 80s and winds gusted to 40 miles per hour or more, contributing to fires in other parts of the region and prompting the state fire marshal to issue fire weather warnings because of the dry conditions. The high of 84 in Minneapolis broke a 133-year-old record.
St. Paul fire investigators said late Wednesday that a downed power line in a yard ignited vegetation that was carried by high winds to the homes at Western and Front. For Gibson, an East Side resident who works at a nearby recreation center, all that mattered in those terrifying minutes when the homes were in flames was getting everybody to safety.