Na'Dasia Johnson's grandmother had given her the sweater when she was 8, and it always reminded her of summer sleepovers and going to the beach with family from the Jersey Shore.
But the childhood memento was lost forever last month — along with everything else Johnson owned — when it burned in a fast-moving fire that swept through her apartment on Minneapolis' South Side.
"My baby pictures were by my window," said Johnson, 20.
After graduating from Minneapolis North High in 2017, Johnson was finding her footing: She was taking college classes and had moved into her first apartment that she furnished with a newly bought furniture set, complete with a dining room table and lamp stands.
On the night of March 6, she had eaten dinner, showered and gone to bed just after 1 a.m. when she was awakened by a smoke alarm and ran to the kitchen to find a pan of grease on fire on the stove.
She recalled choking on the billowing black smoke filling the apartment as she ran back to her bedroom to retrieve her phone, but thought better of it and headed for the balcony.
At the same time, two Minneapolis police officers were climbing up the side of the building at 3030 S. Pleasant Av. to try to reach her. Johnson vaguely remembers dropping into someone's arms and then feeling the ground beneath her.
"I'm very grateful, and I appreciate them a lot," she said. Moments later, she was in the back of an ambulance, an oxygen mask strapped to her face.