Somebody's shooting up the school at Stoneman Douglas."
These were the principal froze words via telephone from an understudy when a shooter entered his Florida secondary school on Valentine's Day.
The 911 responder answered: "I'm sad, I can't hear you. What's going on?"
"Somebody's shooting up Marjory Stoneman Douglas."
"Somebody is doing what? Hi? Hi? Hi?"
The understudy is whispering now: "Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School is being shot up."
"It's being shot up? Is it accurate to say that you are at the school?"
The guest whispers something.
"I can't hear you," says the responder. "Is it accurate to say that you are at the school?"
The day everything changed
That Valentine's Day, the lives of 3,300 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School understudies in Parkland, Florida, changed until the end of time.
The shooter slaughtered 17 individuals. Others are as yet battling for their lives in clinic.
It's turned into a relatively unremarkable occasion in current America: This was at that point the 6th school shooting of 2018 in the US.
However, this time was extraordinary. Since rather than simply tolerating it for part of day by day life, this gathering of 16, 17 and 18-year-olds chose that weapons were tearing separated groups and that excessively numerous guiltless individuals were biting the dust.
This is the tale of how they began a political development in only a month.
The seed of the crusade was planted under 24 hours after the assault.
Assembling in a neighborhood stop with candles, understudies were grasping their companions, conversing with the media or lamenting unobtrusively.
"That is the point at which we as a whole clasped hands together and said 'This is the place there will be change. This is the place it will be unique'," Jared, a Marjory Stoneman Douglas understudy, tells Newsbeat.
That was a Thursday. By the end of the week, the Never Again development was up and running.
It was enhanced via web-based networking media with hashtags including #NeverAgain, #MarchForOurLives, #WhatIf and #IWillMarch.
In any case, this time, it was substantially more than an online development which lawmakers could overlook.
Never Again would come full circle with a showing on Washington DC which the battle was calling the March For Our Lives.
Its first real bit of media scope went ahead the Saturday with a sincerely charged discourse by Emma Gonzalez.
"[To] organizations attempting to make exaggerations of the youngsters nowadays, saying that all we are is self-included and slant fixated, and they quiet us into accommodation when our message doesn't achieve the ears of the country: We are set up to call BS," she cried.
"They say harder weapons laws don't diminish firearm brutality," she included. "We call BS."
That discourse appeared to change how the world's media secured this most recent shooting - rather than the executioner being the fundamental story, it wound up about the survivors who were battling in the interest of their dead companions and instructors.