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Man says stricken wife is ‘silent victim’ of Oregon mall shooting

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“At that point I get on the highway, and I get passed by 14, 15 emergency vehicles. Full sirens, full lights, moving very fast.”

By the time he reached the mall, it was blocked by emergency vehicles. Ogden went to Red Robin, waiting what seemed like hours until Vanessa walked through the door. She was fine, she said. Their unborn baby was unharmed.

It was at a pre-Christmas family gathering five days after the shooting that Ogden noticed how tired his normally perky wife seemed. He wrote it off to her pregnancy until, over the next few days, Vanessa began spending hours on end stretched out on the couch.

“Vanessa’s just sort of a go-go-go person, so it was just really unlike her to be this way. Lethargic, wanting to sleep all day. The Vanessa I know would certainly have considered that a huge waste of time,” he said.

Then came the onset of near-total silence. One night, Ogden awoke to find his wife moaning in apparent terror, unable to talk. She had wet the bed.

Ogden hauled her to the emergency room, and doctors discovered that she had suffered dozens of small strokes. They were brought on, they learned, by acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, in which the brain, usually after an infection, becomes inflamed. Physicians said the fact that it happened so soon after the shooting was probably just a coincidence.

They were trying to treat the inflammation when, on Dec. 28, seven weeks early, Vanessa went into labor.

“I asked them, how in the world is a mother in this state supposed to give birth? And they said, basically in birth, your body takes over,” Ogden said.

Somehow, he said, his wife was able to deliver a premature baby so healthy she began screaming immediately. “I say this, and I’m pretty confident,” he said. “I witnessed a miracle.”

Now, Ogden is on unpaid leave from his job. Donations have flooded in through the family’s Facebook page; friends and strangers have signed up to provide meals every other day through March. Mothers who were in the store with their daughters on the day of the shooting have contacted him. “You don’t know me, but I just wanted to share with you that we were there the day of the shooting,” one wrote in an email. “You have no idea how much it means to me that she did this for us.”

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