In a tragedy that has shaken the nation, the mother of 19-year-old Ella Cook, one of the two students killed in the December 13, 2025, mass shooting at Brown University, has opened up about their heartbreaking last conversation. Ella, a bright and beloved sophomore from Mountain Brook, Alabama, confided in her mother that she had a foreboding sense of danger just moments before the gunfire erupted – a premonition that proved tragically accurate, yet powerless to save her life.

The shooting occurred in the Barus and Holley engineering building on Brown’s Providence, Rhode Island, campus during a final exam review session for a principles of economics class. A masked gunman entered the lecture hall shortly after 4 p.m., opening fire on students as chaos unfolded. Ella Cook and freshman Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov were fatally shot, while nine others sustained injuries, some critical. All victims were Brown students preparing for the end of the fall semester.

Ella was described by those who knew her as a “bright light” – an accomplished pianist fluent in French, a devoted parishioner at the Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham, and an active campus leader. She served as vice president of the Brown University College Republicans and was a cherished member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Friends and family recall her as bold, kind, faithful, and intellectually curious, with a passion for French and mathematics-economics studies. Her church community mourned her as an “incredibly grounded and generous” young woman whose faith shone brightly.

In her final call home, Ella expressed unease about something unspecified, hinting at an instinctive warning of impending peril. Her mother, grappling with unimaginable grief, shared that Ella felt something was wrong but had no time to act. “My daughter sensed the danger but couldn’t save herself,” she revealed, capturing the agony of a life cut short in an instant of senseless violence.

The attack sent shockwaves through the Ivy League campus and beyond. Brown University President Christina Paxson called the victims “brilliant and beloved,” noting their “amazing promise” extinguished too soon. The university canceled remaining classes and exams, offering extensive counseling and support as the community reels from the loss.

The shooter fled the scene, prompting a massive manhunt. Authorities later identified the suspect as Claudio Neves Valente, a former Brown student, who was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in a New Hampshire storage facility. Investigations linked him to a separate killing of an MIT professor days later.

This incident marks another grim chapter in America’s ongoing struggle with gun violence on campuses. As families prepare for holidays overshadowed by mourning, Ella’s story serves as a poignant reminder of young lives full of potential stolen in moments of terror. Her legacy of kindness, faith, and courage endures in the hearts of those she touched.