PARIS — When the bare-chested gunman suddenly appeared aboard the speeding Paris-bound train, laden with weapons and his mind allegedly filled with Islamic State group propaganda, passengers at first were stunned.
Then, they sprang into action.
"'You're not going to sit in the corner and die,'" is what British businessman Chris Norman recalls telling himself on Aug. 21, 2015 as he steeled himself to act.
"I was terrified when I first saw him coming up the aisle, but then I got angry," the 67-year-old recalled Thursday in an interview with The Associated Press before he testifies at the attack suspect's trial in the French capital.
The thoughts of another passenger who helped thwart the attack on the train that day, French-American citizen Mark Moogalian, weren't for himself but for his wife when he lunged for the gunman's Kalashnikov rifle.
"I was trying to protect Isabelle," Moogalian said, also speaking Thursday before he testified in Paris. "There was no way I was going to let anything happen to her. I was going to do my best."
The recollections at the courthouse from passengers who disarmed the alleged Islamic State operative on the train traveling from Amsterdam highlighted the split-second decisions that foiled what could have become a mass slaughter. The passengers' heroics inspired Clint Eastwood to direct a Hollywood movie reenacting the dramatic events: "The 15:17 to Paris."
"My first reaction was panic, put yourself in a protective ball and hope nothing happens," Norman said. Then, "I came to the conclusion that really I had to move, I had do something."