David Jensen did just what he was supposed to Sunday night when he wanted to send a text: He pulled his SUV off the dark highway north of Grand Forks, N.D., and turned on his flashers.
But as the 25-year-old tapped out a message to his girlfriend to see if he need to pick anything up on his way home, a car coming the other way veered across a lane and struck his vehicle head-on.
"It felt like it was slow motion," Jensen said Monday. "There was nothing I could do."
Jensen, his face bloodied and arms burned from his air bag, raced to the other vehicle. Flames were coming out of the hood. The driver's door was jammed. He could see the driver was passed out.
He immediately called his father, the fire chief of nearby Alvarado, Minn.: "Call 911," he recalled saying. "I'm trying to pull her out."
Jensen said he started "kicking the door and yanking on it," and by the time he forced it open, there were flames in the passenger area.
"I got the door open, undid her seat belt and dragged her 50, 60 feet from the vehicle," he said. "Then it just blew — just engulfed itself."
He checked her vital signs, but Jensen said flames from the car were chewing up the grass and marching toward the SUV he was borrowing from a friend.