Real diamonds in the rubble.
A man from California shocked his girlfriend when he got engaged to her immediately after he found the engagement ring, which he believed, he lost him in forest fires in Los Angeles, as well as everything else he owned.
Brian Mcshea and Stephanie Raynor stopped at their burning home in Altadena on Friday to see if they could restore any elements that may have survived from the flames from Eaton Fire when McShea decided to search for the circuit, according to ABC 7 LOS. Angeles.
The couple fled their home on January 7 before Eiton's fire was settled on the ground, which burned more than 140,000 acres in Los Angeles. The fire was one of a series of fires through the Los Angeles Province destroyed more than 16,000 buildings and killed at least 28 people earlier this month.
McCchi suggested that Renor examine the rubble around the place where his office could have been – as the ring was hidden in the stairs – but he did not tell her the reason.
I was thinking: “Well, perhaps the stone can survive and may find the little stone.” I thought the ring would completely disintegrate. “
However, Mac Xia went to find a shiny thing.
He said to a local port: “So we are digging around my office, and again we are just looking for a stone, man, I had no great hope.” “But you only remove some rubble and have a small loop, pick it up and actually serve as a washing machine for something, and this happened four times, then you pick it up, and there is a little diamond.”
McShea – who had plans to suggest in the near future before the fire – could not wait and ask the question where their house was located one day.
He said: “I was on my knees and said: Do you accept to marry me?” “I wear full personal protection equipment, dressed in white hood and everything.”
“I am crying,” he added.
The couple does not have a wedding date yet, but they want to stay in the area and rebuild.
“We really hope that Los Angeles can support Altadena in reconstruction efforts during the next two years, and that we are able to return because this society is very special,” McShea told ABC 7 La.