For now, Julionna, who has a part-time job, is focused on more immediate issues, like helping her parents pay for their weeks-long hotel bill, which their home insurance does not cover.
“My mind’s always been on school, but now it’s making sure my family is going to be OK,” she says.
Suffering from survivor’s guilt, Julionna has busied herself by trying to help less fortunate friends. Last Friday night, she drove to a suburb of Sacramento, where the Del Oro High School had turned its state division championship football game into a fund-raiser for two of her classmates.
One student, Kaleb Nelson, a Paradise High football player and wrestler, was given a new generator, gift cards, and enough donations to buy a used pickup truck.
About a month earlier, a neighbor had pounded on Kaleb’s front door, screaming about the approaching wildfire. He ran barefoot toward his pickup truck with his girlfriend, Adrianna Marciella Orozco, and they inched along in traffic past woods wreathed in flames. His truck broke down shortly after they moved into his uncle’s trailer, which is parked on a Chico street and lacks electricity and running water.
Adrianna, 17, says she can’t forget the inferno that killed her four dogs and made her family homeless. Racked by flashbacks of the burning heat on her skin, she’s rethinking her life after graduation. She had planned to attend a community college near Paradise but now is considering a school in Arizona surrounded by desert.
“It’s too traumatizing,” she says, “to be around trees.”