The residents of one south Minneapolis apartment building started desperately warning one another with shouts and pounding a little before 4 a.m. Saturday as the city suffered through perhaps the worst night in its history.
"Our neighbors were banging on all the doors and screaming, 'Fire, fire, fire,' " said Catharyne Bryant, who lives with Brandon Byers in the building near the intersection of Nicollet Avenue S. and W. 35th Street.
"My reaction was get my cat and get out," she added.
Immediately next door, separated by only a few feet, a building containing O'Reilly Auto Parts and a Family Dollar store was on fire — one of hundreds that burned as a third night of riots and unrest spread to more neighborhoods in Minnesota's largest city.
Lizz Brazen was awake and following the news when she realized the Fond du Lac building was in imminent danger. She jumped right to notifying neighbors instead of bothering to call 911, then helped organize teams of residents to wet down the apartment building with garden hoses and buckets.
"Because we knew no one was coming for us," Brazen said.
What started as demonstrations in response to the death of George Floyd after being restrained by Minneapolis police last Monday had mutated by Friday night and Saturday morning into widespread arson, looting and violence. For some, it was a night of abject terror as calls to 911 failed to deliver help.
The worst of the violence started after nightfall despite an 8 p.m. citywide curfew, even though former officer Derek Chauvin had been charged with murder and manslaughter in Floyd's death earlier in the day. The neighborhoods around Lake Street and Nicollet Avenue became one focal point as groups of protesters converged on the Fifth Precinct Police Station.