9/11 Firefighter Remembers ‘Taste of Hell’
Elite Member of Rescue Squad Sees The Fingerprints of God at the Pentagon on 9/11

By Michael Ireland
Special Correspondent, ASSIST News Service

Larry Everett

FAIRFAX COUNTY, VIRGINIA (ANS) -- Larry Everett is a member of the elite Fairfax County, Virginia, Fire and Rescue Department – and he remembers exactly where he was on Tuesday, September 11, 2001.

On that fateful morning five years ago, Everett had a taste of hell.

Pentagon aerial view

According to an article written by Terry White for his denominational newspaper, Everett was called in to assist when a hijacked Boeing 757 slammed into the 29-acre Pentagon complex on September 11, 2001 – a day that will take its place in history alongside Pearl Harbor.

"Everett vividly recalls entering the third floor of the massive facility and being met with a wall of fire. Temperatures exceeded 2,500 degrees -- he and his crew of 25 watched metal desks and file cabinets melt before their eyes," says White.

Wearing firefighting gear rated for only 1,500 degrees, Everett is convinced that God protected him in the inferno. Everett and his colleagues spent nine hours in active firefighting that day.

White says: "Their strategy on the upper floors was to push the fire further back into the building where it would starve and be extinguished. But no matter what they did, they could not escape the intense heat."

“This is what hell is going to be like,” Everett remembers thinking. The impact of the airliner and leaking fuel produced intense heat and a smoky blaze that penetrated three of the building’s five rings.

White says that when the firefighters entered the first floor, they found a dark area within the collapsed building. Eighteen inches of water covered the floor—it had filtered down from firefighters on the upper stories.

There in the basement Everett saw his second picture of hell—a darkness that was so complete it established itself as a presence. “You could feel the darkness,” Everett recalls. “Hell is the complete and utter absence of God.”

“You Start Where You Start”

Firefighters at the Pentagon

When he arrived on the scene in truck No. 402, Everett muttered into his microphone, “Where are we going to start?”

His driver, hearing the question, answered, “You start where you start.”

Everett leaned into his strong faith in God and uttered a quick two-part prayer. “Please give me wisdom to make good decisions that will get the job done and protect my men,” he asked. “And please protect my eyes—don’t let me see something I shouldn’t, that I don’t need to see.”

White says that God answered both prayers for Everett.

He asks how Everett and his men, taking 20-minute shifts, worked effectively in temperatures nearly double the rating of their equipment?

“God created a tunnel of wind that left an opening,” Everett said. That wind tunnel effectively kept cooler air flowing and enabled them to work in the intense heat.

The second prayer was answered by the 18-inch-deep water on the lower floor. “We never saw a body, we never saw a body part,” Everett recalls. “They were there—but 18 inches of water will hide a lot.” The crash killed about 200 people, including all 64 on the plane and 125 at the Pentagon. Most of the dead were on the first floor. Everett and his men concentrated on the first and third floors.

“There were lots of miracles that day,” Everett remembers. One of them was that American Airlines Flight 77, the plane that went into the Pentagon, was only half-full. On a normal day there would have been twice as many passengers.

“And why, of all the places it could hit, did the plane go into the building at a point that had been under construction for several years and was almost completely unoccupied?” he reflects.

Everett refers to September 11, 2001, as the “second greatest day of my life.”

The first, White says, was November 29, 1988, when Everett gave his heart to Jesus Christ. A fire truck in which he was riding collided with a car full of teenagers, an accident that impacted Everett greatly. He’d been working as a part-time insurance agent, and a client whose portfolio he’d reviewed said, “We’ve talked about life insurance. Now I want to talk about life assurance.”

The friend urged Everett to give his heart to the Lord, which he did. “I was physically different the next morning after that experience,” Everett said. “The change in me was real.” Eighteen months later his wife, Andrea, gave her heart to Christ, as well.

John “Larry” Everett, 40, grew up in Rockville, Maryland. He started as a firefighter with Montgomery County, Maryland, was with them for five years, and has now had 20 ½ years with the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department.

White writes: "From firefighter he was promoted to hazardous materials technician, to lieutenant, to Captain I, then Captain II, and this past June 24 was made Battalion Chief. He is now responsible for 75 people in seven stations, covering 80 square miles in elite western Fairfax County, Virginia."