Emily Goodlett hid inside a cash vault on Monday morning as a gunman killed five of her colleagues at Old National Bank.

Two days later, she and her husband came together with hundreds to mourn, pray and celebrate the heroes.

Louisville is grieving, and on Wednesday evening, the community had the opportunity to do it together at a vigil at the Muhammad Ali Center, about eight blocks from where the shooting happened downtown. For Goodlett, this pain was raw and personal, and she cried after the vigil as her husband, Caleb, told the story of how she had frantically called him from inside the vault. He immediately left his office a mere three blocks away and arrived at the scene as Officer Nickolas Wilt was shot.

The couple had previously discussed what to do and who to call during a mass shooting.

They lived it on Monday.

“You can’t say this isn’t the time to make this political,” Caleb said in an interview with The Louisville Courier Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network. “If we don’t make it (political) now, … This is happening again tonight somewhere. This is happening tomorrow somewhere.”

The Goodletts weren’t the only ones crying out for change Wednesday.

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As Louisville remembered Tommy Elliott, 63; Jim Tutt Jr., 64; Josh Barrick, 40; Juliana Farmer, 45; and Deana Eckert, 57, who were all killed at the bank, as well as Chea’von Moore, who died in a different shooting downtown Monday morning, faith leaders, officials and doctors clamored for change at the vigil.