Pensacola man spent 54 years in search of the love of his life. He lost her in seconds
A Pensacola man is still reeling several days after he lost the love of his life in a fire that destroyed the couple's humble campsite where they had been living.
Craig Heathcoe, 55, said he tried to save his girlfriend, Angela Meeks, from the flames after a small portable heater accidentally caught their camping tent on fire last week.
Meeks, 53, who had trouble walking unassisted due to recent strokes, succumbed to her burn wounds Wednesday night before paramedics arrived to the homeless camp where she and Heathcoe had been living together as a couple for almost a year.
Heathcoe himself was badly burned while trying to pull Meeks out of their tent’s boiling nylon, and less than a week removed from the tragedy, he’s still living in the woods and in pain.
The skin up and down the right side of his body is raw and stings when an over-the-counter burn cream is applied.
But the physical pain, Heathcoe said, pales in intensity compared to the hurt in his heart.
“I prayed for her for 54 years until I found her, but then I only got to spend one year with her,” he said about his lost love, Angie.
Heathcoe is heartbroken, and the ache of it is consuming.
“She loved me every day. She loved me. And she truly loved me, not like all those other damn women who I’ve had in my past,” he said. “Angie loved me, and I loved her.”
He said that she loved him regardless of his past and current situation. To her, it hadn’t mattered that he was homeless, lived in the woods in a tent and had spent the better part of the past decade rambling his way across the continental U.S. jobless.
On cold and desperate nights in the woods when they were huddled together, Meeks made Heathcoe feel like he was still a special person with a place in the world — by her side.
“Yes, I loved her with all my heart, bro — all my heart,” Heathcoe said.