Tumbler Ridge shooting: Maya Gebala shot in head and neck while desperately trying to lock out shooter
‘They heard the screams and chaos, and Maya and her classmates tried to close the library door and lock it,’ said Krysta Hunt, a cousin of Maya’s mom, describing what the family was told. 

Three days after eight people were killed in the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, a 12-year-old girl who tried to protect her classmates remains in the fight of her life.
With her parents and loved ones by her side, Maya Gebala is in a medically induced coma in the intensive-care unit at B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver.
Maya was one of two teens injured when a shooter carrying two firearms came through the doors of the local high school and began firing, killing six at the school.
Another student injured in the shooting, Paige Hoekstra, is in stable condition in Vancouver General Hospital on Friday, and might be discharged this weekend.
Maya, a seventh-grader, was in the library at the time of the shooting and, based on what family was told, displayed a bravery and selflessness beyond her years.
“They heard the screams and chaos, and Maya and her classmates tried to close the library door and lock it,” said Krysta Hunt, a cousin of Maya’s mom, describing what the family was told.
The door lock, however, was broken and it wouldn’t lock properly.
“Maya’s classmate ran for cover, and Maya spent an extra few seconds trying to lock the door,” said Hunt. “She was not successful.”
The shooter smashed through the door as Maya ran for shelter under a desk. But it was too late.
The shooter fired one shot. It grazed Maya’s cheek and ear. The second and third bullets hit Maya in the head and neck.
In the aftermath, a classmate saw Maya’s finger move and alerted first responders to care for her first, said Hunt.
Maya’s mom, Cia Edmonds, was expecting her older daughter to come by her workplace that day to get some lunch money. She didn’t appear, and Cia didn’t think much of it until she got a call later that the school was in lockdown, said Hunt.
Because of the urgency of Maya’s condition, she was quickly flown to Vancouver. Edmonds and Maya’s father, David Gebala, followed on a subsequent flight.
Doctors told the family Maya might not survive the night and likely has permanent brain damage, but the family is clinging to hope.
On Thursday, movement was detected in Maya’s limbs, Edmonds said in a Facebook post. A “stimulus, a kick, a hand move, but it’s something.”
There were more such involuntary movements on Friday, said Hunt, a sign Maya’s body is unaffected from the neck down. But there is major swelling in her brain, and she’s unable to breathe on her own.
The prognosis remains serious, and the family expects she’ll be in critical care for an extended period.
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