By ALLEN G. BREED and JEFF CARLTON
FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) Pfc. Marquest Smith, on his way to
Afghanistan in January, was completing routine paperwork about a
bee-sting allergy when the sounds erupted.
A loud, popping noise. Moans. The sudden, urgent shout of
''Gun!''
Smith poked his head over the cubicle's partition and saw an
extraordinary sight: An Army officer with two guns, firing into the
crowded room.
The 21-year-old Fort Worth native quickly grabbed the civilian
worker who'd been helping with his paperwork and forced her under
the desk. He lay low for several minutes, waiting for the shooter
to run out of ammunition and wishing he, too, had a gun.
After the shooter stopped to reload, Smith made a run for it.
Pushing two other soldiers in front of him, he made it out of the
Soldier Readiness Processing center only to plunge into the
building twice more to help the wounded.
Smith had survived the worst mass shooting on an American
military base, a rampage of more than 100 shots that left 13 dead
and 30 wounded, including the alleged shooter, Army psychiatrist
Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan.
It could have been much worse, but for the heroics of Smith and
others like the 19-year-old private who ignored her own wounds,
and the diminutive civilian police officer whose gunfire helped
take down Hasan.
''Unfortunately over the past eight years, our Army has been no
stranger to tragedy,'' said a somber Gen. George Casey, Army chief
of staff. ''But we are an Army that draws strength from adversity.
And hearing the stories of courage and heroism that I heard today
makes me proud to be the leader of this great Army.''
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Home of the 1st Cavalry and 1st Army Division West, Fort Hood
has seen more than its share of deployments and casualties in the
past eight years.
As a psychiatrist, Hasan, 39, had listened to soldiers' tales of
horror. Now, the American-born Muslim was facing imminent
deployment to Afghanistan. In recent days, Hasan had been saying
goodbye to friends. He had given away many of his possessions,
including copies of the Holy Quran.
At 2:37 a.m. Thursday and again around 5, Hasan called neighbor
Willie Bell. Bell could normally hear Hasan's morning prayers
through the thin apartment walls, but Hasan skipped the ritual
Thursday.
Bell didn't pick up either time, but Hasan left a message.
''Nice knowing you, old friend,'' Hasan said. ''I'm going to
miss you.''
About an hour later, surveillance cameras at a 7-Eleven across
from the base captured images of a smiling Hasan, dressed in a long
white garment and white kufi prayer cap, buying his usual breakfast
coffee and a hash brown.
At the processing center on the southern edge of the
100,000-acre base, soldiers returning from overseas mingled with
colleagues filling out forms and undergoing medical tests in
preparation for deployment.
Around 1:30 p.m., witnesses say a man later identified as Hasan
jumped up on a desk and shouted the words ''Allahu Akbar!''
Arabic for ''God is great!'' He was armed with two pistols, one a
semiautomatic capable of firing up to 20 rounds without reloading.
Packed into cubicles with 5-foot-high dividers, the 300 unarmed
soldiers were sitting ducks. Those who weren't hit by direct fire
were struck by rounds ricocheting off the desks and tile floor.
When he decided that Hasan wasn't close to being out of ammo,
Smith made a dash for the door. He'd made it outside when he heard
cries from within.
''I don't want to die.''
''This really hurts.''
''Help me get out of here.''
Smith rushed back inside and found two wounded. He grabbed them
by their collars and dragged them outside.
His second time through the door, he ran into the shooter, whose
back was to him. Smith turned and fled, bullets whizzing by his
head and hitting the walls as he rushed outside.
Around this time, Fort Hood Police Sgt. Kimberly Munley got the
call of ''shots fired.'' The SRP isn't on Munley's beat; she was in
the area because her vehicle was in the shop.
Munley, 34, was on the scene within three minutes.
Just over 5 feet tall, Munley is an advanced firearms instructor
and civilian member of Fort Hood's special reaction team. She had
trained on ''active shooter'' scenarios after the April 2007 mass
shooting at Virginia Tech University. She didn't wait for backup.
As Munley approached the squat, rectangular building, a soldier
emerged from a door with a gunman in pursuit. The officer fired,
and the uniformed shooter wheeled and charged.
Another officer, Senior Sgt. Mark Todd, also responded to the
sound of gunfire. He arrived to find Hasan ''just standing there,
hiding behind a telephone pole.''
''He just looked like he was calm and he was just pointing, it
was almost like he was pointing his finger at me,'' Todd told CNN
in an interview late Friday. ''But then I seen the weapon. ... I
just know I seen the weapon and muzzle flashes and then that's when
we returned the fire.''
Munley was hit at least three times in the exchange twice
through the left leg and once in her right wrist. Hasan was hit
four times. It's not clear whose bullets hit the suspect, but from
the first shots to the last, authorities say the whole incident
lasted less than 10 minutes.
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Pfc. Jeffrey Pearsall, 21, from Houston, was waiting outside in
the parking lot for Smith. He was talking to his brother on a cell
phone when a group of soldiers ran out the door and a window
shattered.
It was only then that he heard the gunshots.
He pulled his pickup truck forward, then hopped out and helped
the wounded into the bed. He loaded as many as he could and sped
off to the base hospital.
Next door, at the Howze Theater, Spc. Elliot Valdez was filming
a graduation ceremony for soldiers who'd completed correspondence
courses. Several proud scholars were posing for a group shot when
Valdez heard a pounding at the side door.
The door burst open and the theater filled with shouts of
''Medic!'' and ''Stay in the building!'' A combat videographer who
returned from a 15-month Iraq tour in January, some of it in the
notorious Sadr City slums, Valdez ran out into the sunlight.
Crouching as he continued to roll tape, Valdez could see windows
broken by fleeing victims. He saw a soldier in his Class A dress
uniform with a gunshot in his back. Soldiers in flowing black
graduation robes and purple sashes rushed to help.
Pfc. Amber Bahr, 19, of Random Lake, Wis., tore up her blouse
and used it as a tourniquet on a wounded comrade. It was only later
that she realized she'd been shot in the back, the bullet exiting
her abdomen.
Sgt. Andrew Hagerman, a military police officer, was patrolling
a housing area when word of shootings crackled over his radio.
As he arrived at the processing center, bloodied soldiers, some
shirtless, were already treating each other on the grass outside,
ripping pant legs off and tying off wounds. Munley with whom
Hagerman had exchanged small talk on patrols was being loaded
into an ambulance.
Hasan lay on the ground, his two handguns beside him, as medical
personnel struggled to remove his handcuffs to treat his wounds.
Hagerman entered the building, took a deep breath and asked
himself: ''What do I need to do?''
He picked his way around the room's edges, careful not to step
in pools of blood or to kick any spent shell casings. He had seen
death during his two tours in Iraq, but nothing that compared with
this.
In the confusion, Army Reserve Spc. Grant Moxon, 23, lost his
cell phone. He borrowed a comrade's phone to send a text to his
family in Lodi, Wis.
The message stated simply: ''Grant. I was shot in the leg. I'll
be OK.''
Sgt. Howard Appleby, 31, was at the hospital for his regular
meeting with a psychiatrist. Appleby, who was born in Jamaica and
grew up in New York City, sustained a traumatic brain injury and
has post-traumatic stress disorder from a roadside bomb blast
during a tour in Iraq.
His appointment canceled, Appleby found himself pulling the dead
and wounded from ambulances. In combat, he was used to one or two
casualties a day. ''This,'' he thought, ''is crazy.''
Lt. Col. Larry Masullo, an emergency room physician from
Farmingdale, N.Y., was heading into a monthly meeting to review new
doctors' credentials when he heard of the shootings.
''Yeah, OK,'' he said. ''Multiple gunshot wounds. Is this a
drill?''
In the next hour and a half, he would treat nearly two dozen
soldiers.
For several hours, authorities feared there were several gunmen.
By the end of the day, it was clear Hasan had acted alone, they
said.
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Hasan, hooked up to a ventilator, was moved Friday to a military
hospital in San Antonio. The woman who stopped him, Munley, awaited
surgery Friday to remove the bullets from her leg. Her husband was
flying in from Fort Bragg, N.C.
Her boss, Chuck Medley, was thankful. ''If an officer had to be
close by to respond,'' he said, ''Kim Munley is someone we'd want
to be there.''
Marquest Smith says some of the people he helped made it. But he
knows others did not.
Afterward, Smith noticed a hole in heel of his right combat
boot. A bullet had entered the boot, but he had somehow escaped
injury at least the physical kind.
After the adrenaline wore off, Smith was overwhelmed by a sense
of betrayal, because this assailant who spilled so much blood was a
soldier.
''We're supposed to be a family,'' he said.
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EDITOR'S NOTE: AP Writers Mike Baker and Paul J. Weber also
contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)