Once Child Protective Services were brought in
to find a foster home for the little boy, Keck figured that was that – and it
was, until Thursday evening when guess who came calling, eager to celebrate his
tenth birthday at the place he affectionately refers to as “my fire station?”
“On the drive here he was rattling on and on,”
said Rebecca Quintanilla, the foster mother who took Koregan in and eventually
adopted him. “I can’t tell you specifically what he said but I can tell you he
never stopped talking. He was so nervous and excited at the same time.”
That makes two of them. Fire veteran Keck has
been around long enough to have found himself in a few heated scrapes, but few
things made his palms as sweaty as this. He admitted to being anxious about
meeting the boy he found. As Koregan and his mother walked into the fire
station, they instinctually flew their arms open for bear hugs. First Keck and
Quintanilla, then Keck, Quintanilla and Koregan.
Keck took Koregan for a spin in the fire
truck, gave him a tour of the station and surprised him with birthday gifts, as
if hanging out in the fire station wasn’t enough.
“Amazing,” said Keck. “Just amazing.”
Koregan, who lives in Watauga with five
sisters, all adopted, was left at the station under Texas’ Baby Moses law,
which allows a parent to leave an unharmed infant up to 60 days old at a fire
station or hospital, no questions asked. (The name comes from the Biblical
story of baby Moses who was placed in a wicker basket by his mother to be saved
from death and who then grew up to become an important person in history.)
Quintanilla describes Koregan as a smart kid
with a gentle nature and maturity beyond his years. When asked by a teacher
where he’d like to go more than any other place in the world, he responded “my
fire station.”
That’s when Quintanilla began her search for
Keck, watching the television news video of the day Koregan showed up at the
back door to get his name. She connected with the fire department, and the
reunion was on.
Quintanilla called Keck her hero but he said
the real hero is actually the Baby Moses Law put on the books in 2001.
“You look at the person who made the decision
to bring him to a place where he could be found and taken care of instead of in
a dumpster somewhere,” Keck said. “That law saved his life. And the family that
adopted him. They saved his life. I just brought him in from the cold.”
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