A fast-acting 3-year-old came to an elderly man’s rescue in
Tennessee after he spotted the man trapped inside a hot car as temperatures
inside the vehicle reached over 120 degrees.
While waiting for his wife to come back from an event at the
Vestal Baptist Church in Knoxville last Saturday, Bob King, 68, found himself
trapped in his car after the doors automatically locked.
“We’ve been having trouble with the door on this car since we
bought it,” King told ABC News.
After numerous cancer treatments and having suffered from two
strokes in the past six months, Bob King was described as “in very bad shape”
and “could barely see anything” by his wife, Jenny King.
He frantically grabbed the car door, but was too weak to push
it open. King panicked. Without a car key, he couldn’t turn the air
conditioning on. It was 91 degrees outside that day -- and the temperature
inside the car had reached over 120 degrees.
That’s when King spotted 3-year-old Keith Williams walking
past the car. King knocked on the car window repeatedly and Keith stopped.
“I hollered at him and he just looked at me kind of funny and
I said ‘Get help, get help,’” King said.
Coincidentally, Keith’s mother, Jessie Williams, had educated
him about hot car safety just days before this happened. The toddler, who was
barely three feet tall, was not strong enough to open the car door by himself.
So he ran over to Pastor Jack Greene, who was volunteering at the benefit
event, to get help.
“I was talking to someone and little Keith came behind me and
kept saying, ‘Locked, locked, locked,” Greene told ABC News.
Greene didn’t sense something was wrong, but then Keith
started patting and pulling his hand, and kept saying “hot, hot.”
“I told the gentleman: ‘Excuse me for a minute’ and I
followed him [Keith] out,” Greene said. “When I saw Bob in the car, I said to
myself: “Oh my Lord,’” Greene said.
After a few tries, Greene finally opened the door. As soon as
the door opened, King fell out of the car seat and almost hit his head on the
pavement. “His whole body was raining sweat. His face was red like a pickled
beet,” Greene said.
“I asked him three times: ‘Are you OK Bob?’” Greene said. Scared
that King would get a stroke, Greene asked if he needed an ambulance. “Just
give me a minute,” King told Greene.
Greene brought King inside the church where there was air
conditioning, fed him water and fanned him until King looked better.
King said he would have had waited for another 20 minutes
before his wife came back, and he is thankful that Keith, or “little preacher”
as Greene lovingly called him, came to his rescue.
“I am very impressed and I’m proud that he would know what to
do,” Keith’s mother, Jessie Williams told ABC News.
“He [Keith] said: ‘I saved life’ after I brought Bob inside,”
Green said. “He is such a good kid. He is an inspiration and blessing to us.”
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