GALVESTON, Texas - Rescue crews canvassed neighborhoods inundated by Ike's storm surge early Sunday morning in a race against time to rescue those who faced a second harrowing night trapped amid flattened houses, strewn debris and downed power lines.
As darkness fell Saturday, a search and rescue squad began pushing into a neighborhood on a finger of land in Galveston Bay. Authorities hoped to spare thousands of Texans - 140,000 by some estimates - who ignored mandates to flee Hurricane Ike from another night among the destruction.
Paramedics, rescue dogs and structural engineers fanned out under a full moon, hoping to find the unknown number of people who remained trapped.
Roads blocked by waist-deep water and downed trees kept many rescuers at bay as they struggled through the largest search-and-rescue effort in state history, just a day after the Category 2 storm crashed into Texas with 110 mph winds.
Five-year-old Jack King escaped serious injury when storm surge sent a rush of water that washed out the first floor of his family's home.
"I falled in the attic," Jack told paramedic Stanley Hempstead of his 10-foot tumble. Jack and his family had taken refuge in the room, loaded with blankets and other supplies. As rescuers arrived, Jack gazed at a TV aglow with "The Simpsons." The only evidence of his fall was a Band-Aid plastered to his closely-cropped hair, covering a gash.
"We just didn't think it was going to come up like this," said the boy's father, Lee King. "I'm from New Orleans, I know better. I just didn't think it was going to happen."
Fortunately, Jack only suffered scrapes and bruises from the 10-foot fall. The Kings had hoped that a family member would pick them up, but a paramedic told him the road inland wouldn't be open for days. Lee King thought they could survive another night, but then their generator died. He ultimately decided the family was ready to leave.
Gov. Rick Perry's office said 940 people had been saved by nightfall Saturday, but that thousands had made distress calls the night before. Another 600 were rescued from Louisiana floods.
"What's really frustrating is that we can't get to them," Galveston police officer Tommie Mafrei said. "It's jeopardizing our safety when we try to tell them eight hours before to leave. They are naive about it, thinking it's not going to be that bad."
Some coastal residents waded through chest-deep water with their belongings and children in their arms to get to safety Saturday. Military helicopters loaded others carrying plastic bags and pets in their arms and brought them to dry ground.
Big-wheeled dump trucks, boats and helicopters were at the ready to continue searching hard-hit Galveston and Orange County at daybreak Sunday.
The death toll so far was low, and rescuers were hoping they could keep it from rising. Only four deaths were blamed on the storm - two in Louisiana, and two in Texas, and no crews had reported finding bodies in inundated homes.
The water had reached 3 feet deep in Jeffrey Jordan's Galveston living room by the time police arrived to save him and his family. Like many who were rescued in the hours after the storm, he was escorted to a shelter.
"They sent a dump truck to get us," Jordan said. "We shouldn't have been there because the water was rising something like a foot every five minutes."
In downtown Houston, winds shattered the windows of gleaming skyscrapers, sleeting glass onto the streets below. Police used bullhorns to order people back into their homes. Furniture littered the streets, and business documents stamped "classified" had been carried by the wind through shattered office windows.
More than 3 million were without power in Texas at the height of the storm, and it could be weeks before it was fully restored. Utilities made some progress by late Saturday, and lights returned to parts of Houston. Between Ike and Labor Day's Hurricane Gustav, 180,000 homes and businesses in Louisiana were without power.
Ike was the first major storm to directly hit a major U.S. metropolitan area since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005.
Storm surge that crawled some 30 miles inland in Louisiana flooded tens of thousands of homes. A levee broke and some 13,000 buildings flooded in Terrebonne Parish, 200 miles from Texas. More than 160 people had to be saved from floodwaters near St. Charles.
In Texas, the mayor of Orange, Brown Claybar, said he saw water overflowing the levees in the southern part of Orange early Saturday, something he's never witnessed in his life. Roads were covered with floodwaters, which he hoped would start to recede Sunday so crews could make better progress checking on residents.
"They're not able to turn on the pumps that would drain the city because the water is still coming over the levees," he said. "Any property that is flooded is holding the water because there is no place for the watershed to draw it to."
Though emergency crews were frustrated by those who stayed behind, weary residents of East Texas's swamplands and Big Piney Woods were beginning to feel that whatever decision they make about a Gulf hurricane is wrong.
In 2005, they were battered by Hurricane Rita, a powerful September storm that ripped pine trees from their roots, smashed trailer- and wood-frame homes and left them in what has become a perpetual state of disrepair with the trademark FEMA blue tarps still visible over some.
Wary of another such disaster, they listened when authorities told them to get out of Gustav's way last week. They spent days in north Texas shelters or doled out precious dollars on hotels and gas while their homes received nothing more than a mild shower.
This time around, thousands ignored the mandatory evacuation order and were sucker-punched by the stronger side of Ike.
Those who did leave were glad they heeded orders, despite the inconvenience. Retired nurse Ida Mayfield said that because Gustav hit Louisiana and not Beaumont two weeks ago, many decided not to evacuate ahead of Ike. She was warm and dry at a church-turned shelter in Tyler, along with thousands of her neighbors.
"Two o'clock this morning made a believer out of all of them," said the 52-year-old Mayfield, adding that she spoke to a friend Saturday who was on a roof waiting for help after calling 911. "They're scared now."