As the temperatures plummeted, Jay Mitchell huddled in his truck thinking he would die in the relentless cold.
He'd spent the past three weeks living in his vehicle. Cancer killed his wife a month earlier and he lost the month-to-month lease on his home in Randall, Minn. He had nowhere to go because he refused to give up his 10-year-old dog.
"He's all I have left in the world," Mitchell said from his hospital bed in the burn unit at HCMC. "All my other family is in the ground."
Mitchell, 57, and his dog, Hero, moved into his '94, single-bench seat pickup truck Jan. 2. He'd spent his meager savings to bury his wife, Kathy.
"I wanted to make sure her funeral was dignified," he said.
He had taken care of her for two years and knew her death was inevitable. And yet, it seemed unfathomable that he would have to live on without her after 27 years of marriage.
"We had a love that a lot of people hope to find," he said.
Grieving the love of his life, who "disintegrated before my eyes," his sorrow soon was subsumed by a fight to stay alive.