Two years ago, Deserae Turner's life turned around and very nearly ended after a brutal, senseless attack. Now, she's homecoming queen.
Two years ago, Deserae Turner's life turned around and very nearly ended after a brutal, senseless attack. Now, she's homecoming queen.
The Utah teen remembers little of that night. "My first memory is my dad coming and holding me when I woke up in a mysterious place," she told KSTU.
"He said, 'Des I want you to know that you're safe but you've been shot and you're in the hospital.' My big question was who. Who would do this? And I finally found out later down the road and it was kind of a shock to me. I was like wow, I thought we were friends."
Peterson and his friend, Jayzon Decker told her a story about searching for a lost ring. According to prosecutors, the pair had originally planned to slit her throat with knives.
Instead, as she knelt down to search for the ring, Decker texted Peterson "let's get this done, bro" and Peterson shot her.
Deserae lay there, cold and alone, for eight hours before two women searching for her after she'd been reported missing found her, The Salt Lake Tribune reported.
Peterson expressed remorse for his attack, breaking down in sobs in the courtroom at his sentencing after pleading guilty to aggravated attempted murder and second-degree-felony robbery.
Decker, meanwhile, cast as the "mastermind" in the attack, expressed no remorse. Deserae said he "didn't even look at me" at the sentencing hearing. "He had no empathy and I didn't care. It was like, 'screw you' kind of thing."
Both boys received 15-years-to-life in prison for the attack.
She had dreamed of a career in nursing and was an accomplished equestrian, but those days are behind her now.
"I did sit down in my room and just cry because it was a really sunny day and I wanted to go out and ride but I couldn't," she told KSTU.
With the bullet still lodged in the right side of her brain, Deserae has trouble using the left side of her body, especially her arm, her leg, and her eye.
She's had 10 brain surgeries and extensive physical therapy, and has all the scars to prove it, which she loves to show off.
There's a routine to it, like weekly chiropractic adjustments, after which she'll spend an hour in a hyperbaric chamber, which helps her brain heal.
To improve her balance, she'll spend time standing on a swing. To help her eyesight, she plays catch with her sister.
Despite all she's been through, she doesn't complain much. "I'm not a complainer, I don't like complaining," she says.
And to her, it means the world.
"'I was just a homecoming queen, there’s nothing special about that,'" Deserae says she sometimes thinks, "but if you think about what I’ve been through, yes — it’s very special. It is very awesome."
The donations just started pouring in after Deserae's mom, April, shared the news on Facebook. "When people were volunteering, it was happy tears," April said. "And again when people were cheering for her, it was happy tears again."
"It just gives you that comfort and love that, yes, I am truly loved," Deserae said. "Everybody needs to know that feeling."
At one point, her shoe came off, leading to a fairy tale moment. "The homecoming king got down and put my shoe on and I totally felt like Cinderella. It was a beautiful moment," she said.
Given that she still has two more surgeries planned this year, it's hard to think of anyone more deserving of such a special evening.
h/t: KSTU