Here's what a student texted to his mother during the Colorado shootout



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Messages have thrown into panic.

"I was terrified by this event," CNN's Cami Brainard, 34, told CNN Wednesday. "I thought about it everyday."

They exchanged texts for about 14 minutes when Owen was hiding in a classroom. Brainard asked that his son be identified only by his first name.

A student was killed and eight others wounded on Tuesday in a school shooting in a suburb of Denver, near Columbine High.

Brainard shared the messages that she exchanged with Owen on Facebook, as well as a brief recording recorded by Owen on his phone during the shooting.

"It's a shootout at the school"

Brainard was in the hair salon where she was working when the messages started flashing on her screen.

"There were gunshots, we are about to be escorted to leave," his 14-year-old son wrote at around 14:09, minutes after shooting began.

"Or?" she answered. "Can you call me."

"No," he wrote. "We must remain silent."

The sight of police cars and fire engines, the mermaids lamenting, the passage of the salon several kilometers from the school quickly confirmed her fears, she said.

"Owen, how are you?", She writes.

"Somehow," he replied.

Brainard's family had already been hit by mass shootings. His sister-in-law was at Route 91 Harvest Music Festival in October 2017 when an armed man killed 58 people; she survived.

Not yet, thought Brainard.

"Please tell me what's going on [on]," she wrote.

"It's a shooting in a school," wrote Owen.

Brainard said that she was becoming hysterical. "I did not stop repeating myself," she remembered.

"Please, keep texting me," writes Brainard "What's going on?"

"We can not have to keep our hands free," he writes.

At 2:23 pm, he wrote, "We are out."

Lockdown, shots and howls

Later that night, Owen played his mother's recording that he had done when his cell phone was in his pocket.

"Student Attention: Lock, Locks, Lights Out of View", played several times in the background.

"They found it," Owen whispered on the recording.

Then shots and screams in the background.

"Knowing that he's my child and that he's experienced this … he's going to be scarred for the rest of his life," Brainard said.

Owen said that "his legs were shaking and his teeth were chattering that he was in such a fear," wrote Brainard on Facebook.

Cami Brainard

Brainard said that she was discussing the possibility of displaying audio.

"I do not want to be responsible for any further trauma," she wrote.

But she said that she had decided to post it "before people pay more attention, before people worry anymore."

"I think the more people are forced to see these things, the more risk, the more they realize that it can happen to them," she said.

"It will happen again unless we do something," she said.

CNN's Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.

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