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Graice Hunt, the daughter of the owners of Kansas City Chiefs Clark and Tavia Hunt, cried the loss of a 9-year-old parent who died during the devastating floods in Texas during the weekend.
Janie Hunt was one of the dozens of children from the Mystic camp who died in the floods. She was only 9 years old. Gracie Hunt published a heartbreaking message on Instagram while the devastating news continued to get out of the county where the Mystic camp was.
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Gracie Hunt, member of the family of chefs, before the AFC championship match against the Buffalo Bills in Geha Field at the Stadium Arrowhead in Kansas City, Missouri, January 26, 2025. (Images of Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn)
“Some days, it is difficult to understand how the world can contain both so much beauty and so much pain. How the same God who created the stars and put the planets in motion allow such a deep suffering? The truth is that we live in a broken world-the one that groans for redemption,” she wrote a passage from the Romans. “But writing promises that one day, Christ will make all things new – a new sky and a new land (2 Peter 3:13).
“My heart hurts me for our extended family and our friends who have lost girls – for each lost life and each family broken by the floods of Texas. I have no easy answers, but I know this: following Jesus does not save us from pain – but that means that we never do it alone.
“Even in the darkest valleys, we keep hope that it is not the end of history.”
The family owner’s family cries the young parent lost in the devastating floods in Texas: “tragic loss”

The personal effects of campers are located outside one of the cabins of the Mystic camp near the Guadalupe river after a flood flood swept the region on Monday, July 7, 2025 in Hunt, Texas. (AP photo / Eli Hartman)
Sudden floods killed more than 100 people in the state. In Kerr County, which houses youth camps from Texas Hill Country, the researchers found the bodies of 84 people, including 28 children, officials announced on Monday.
Ten girls and an advisor were still not counted at the Mystic camp.
President Donald Trump also told journalists on Sunday in Morristown, New Jersey, which he would likely visit Texas on Friday.
“We were in contact with Governor Abbott and very close to Governor Abbott. And everyone in Texas. Kristi Noem has, as you know, were there and will continue to be there. And we work very close with Texas representatives,” said Trump.

A research and rescue volunteer holds a t-shirt and a backpack in Comfort, Texas, July 6, 2025. (Danielle Villasana for the Washington Post via Getty Images)
“And it is a horrible thing that took place. Absolutely horrible. We say, that God bless all the people who have crossed so much, and that God blesses the state of Texas. This incredible place.”