Thirteen people were killed when an Army psychiatrist opened fire on soldiers at the Fort Hood Army base, including Michael Grant Cahill. Here is a short profile:
Mr. Cahill, a 62-year-old physician assistant, suffered a heart attack two weeks ago and returned to work at the base as a civilian employee after taking just one week off for recovery, said his daughter Keely Vanacker.
“He survived that. He was getting back on track, and he gets killed by a gunman,” Ms. Vanacker said, her words bare with shock and disbelief.
Mr. Cahill, of Cameron, Texas, helped treat soldiers returning from tours of duty or preparing for deployment. Often, Vanacker said, Cahill would walk young soldiers where they needed to go, just to make sure they got the right treatment.
“He loved his patients, and his patients loved him,” said Ms. Vanacker, 33, the oldest of Mr. Cahill’s three adult children. “He just felt his job was important.”
Mr. Cahill, who was born in Spokane, Wash., had worked as a civilian contractor at Fort Hood for about four years, after jobs in rural health clinics and at Veterans Affairs hospitals. He and his wife, Joleen, had been married 37 years.
Ms. Vanacker described her father as a gregarious man and a voracious reader who could talk for hours about any subject.
The family’s typical Thanksgiving dinners ended with board games and long conversations over the table, said Vanacker, whose voice often cracked with emotion as she remembered her father. “Now, who I am going to talk to?”
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