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Tornado survivor: 'Not knowing is worse than knowing'

Autumn Kirks and her boyfriend were working the night shift at the Mayfield candle factory when the tornado struck.

MAYFIELD, Ky. — Autumn Kirks said she and her boyfriend, Lannis Ward, had been dating for about a year and were saving money to buy a house. They were both working the night shift at the candle factory for extra money when the tornado struck.

Then Ward, described by Kirks as “a big teddy bear," disappeared — and all she could do was wait.

“Not knowing is worse than knowing right now," she said Sunday as she stood outside His House Ministries, a nondescript prefabricated building on the edge of Mayfield where people have been told to go to wait for word about the missing. In the aftermath of the massive tornado that roared through the western Kentucky darkness early Saturday morning, the chances for good news seem to diminish by the hour.

“I’m trying to stay strong," Kirks said. “It’s very hard right now.”

Later in the day, she got the terrible news — that Ward had been killed in the storm.

An unusual mid-December swarm of twisters across the Midwest and the South leveled entire communities and left dozens dead in five states. The death toll is expected to go higher in Kentucky.

RELATED: Crews continue search for missing after central US tornadoes

In the terrible moments before the storm hit, Kirks had moved to a hallway in the innermost part of the building that housed Mayfield Consumer Products, where some 110 employees were working the night shift to crank out Christmas candles.

“They said, ‘Duck and cover!″ she recalled. “I pulled my safety goggles down, jumped under the closest thing, and seconds later I looked to my left and instead of wall there was sky and lightning and just destruction everywhere.”

RELATED: After tornado, Kentucky residents struggle with loss

The closest thing was a row of metal stands with nets across the top, used to store wax and fragrance buckets. Kirks said she and some other employees moved the buckets and took cover under the stands. She tried to keep an eye on Ward, but she is a team leader and had to make sure other co-workers were safe.

“I remember taking my eyes off of him for a second, and then he was gone," she said. “I don’t know where he went -- don’t have any idea.”

RELATED: How to help tornado victims in Kentucky, other states

An eerie silence preceded the storm, Kirks said, “and then all of a sudden you hear just crumbling, and it’s like the whole world is just falling down around you.”

Kirks said she and three co-workers were trapped under a concrete wall, but that a co-worker lifted the wall to rescue them.

“I still wish I knew who it was that lifted that wall off of us,” she said. “He was our superman that night.”

RELATED: Biden pledges federal support in deadly storms: 'Whatever is needed'

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