Chance Allison had planned a future filled with memories beside Brittany Clark. Instead, he found himself fighting through the water as a massive alligator dragged the 31-year-old beneath the surface during what should have been an ordinary day outdoors. In a devastating message shared after her death, Chance said he was still struggling to believe what had happened. “We had so many things planned out and memories to be made,” he wrote, before promising Brittany that he would care for the pets they loved together. His final words revealed a man trying to hold himself together while everything around him was collapsing. Chance had called 911 and pleaded for help while desperately trying to free Brittany. Now, the painful details of their final moments together — and the promise he made after losing her — are leaving readers heartbroken.
Heartbroken boyfriend of alligator attack victim speaks out after desperately trying to save her
“Also thank you everyone for all the kind messages,” he wrote. “They really have helped me hold together just as much as I’m falling apart.”
Allison desperately fought to wrench Clark from the 13-foot gator after it clamped its jaws onto her while the couple and her roommate, Jayden Hernandez, were swimming in the Econlockhatchee River at Little Big Econ State Forest in Seminole County on Sunday, authorities said.

Shocking audio from the frantic 911 call obtained by The Post revealed details of the horror attack, with a woman describing Clark’s injuries as “horrible,” adding that “one of her arms is completely off and the other one is like attached barely.”
Clark can be heard crying in the background, as the dispatcher asks if her detached arm can be found.
The Orlando victim, a bulldozer operator, died on the way to the hospital from “multiple blunt force injuries of the upper extremities,” according to a medical examiner report obtained by The Times.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said that Clark did not appear to have done anything “malicious” to provoke the alligator, and had been swimming in “about three feet of water” at the time of the attack.
“A 13-foot alligator found at the incident location, and a 12.5-foot alligator half a mile away were captured and killed,” the FWC said in a statement.
“Samples from the alligators have been collected and the FWC’s investigation into this incident remains active.”
The FWC stressed in a statement that “serious injuries caused by alligators are rare in Florida” following the deadly attack.
Between 1948 and 2025, the FWC recorded a total of 500 unprovoked bites in Florida, of which 32 resulted in fatalities, Click Orlando reported.
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

