Focus Live: Police Commissioner Mike Bush provides an update after the successful recovery of six bodies from White Island and announces plans to return this afternoon.
When Brendan Paterson saw the face of a young guide killed in the eruption at Whakaari/White Island, he recognised Hayden Marshall-Inman as the man who saved his and his child's life.
"I saw his face in the paper and thought, 'if it wasn't for you, my little fella wouldn't still be here and there's a good chance that I wouldn't be here'."
The Whakatāne man was the first person confirmed killed after Monday's volcanic explosion which has claimed 14 lives. A further three people are still missing, two of whom are believed to be on or near the island.
In January 2016, Paterson and his two boys went on a guided tour of Whakaari/White Island.
Hayden Marshall-Inman guided them around the island on their tour.
Paterson remembers Marshall-Inman as an incredibly patient man who, as he put it, politely put up with a barrage of questions and facts from his autistic son, who was obsessed with volcanoes and Māori culture.
White Island guide Hayden Marshall-Inman, from Whakatāne, died in Monday's eruption. Photo / Supplied
"All during the tour, when we were on that island with Hayden, my youngest was just hammering him with facts and figures about volcanoes and Māori culture and he very politely put up with this non-stop barrage," Paterson said.
Paterson and his two sons, then aged 11 and 12, "had a ball" on the tour.
But even on the still day they visited Whakaari, Paterson said he could feel the immense, unpredictable power of the volcano as he stood in the same spot where visitors were pictured moments before Monday's eruption.
"Even on a good day, I remember thinking, if this thing decided to play games, that's it'," Paterson said.
"I can only imagine what it must've been like on Monday."
But the Australian trio's trip was not without its own drama. Their boat, the Pee Jay 5, burst into flames and sank on their return to the mainland.
The fire which destroyed the Pee Jay V as it returned from White Island in January 2016. Photo / Katee Shanks
The family, along with all aboard the alight ship, had to jump into the choppy seas without lifejackets to escape the blazing vessel.
Paterson remembers a chaotic scene of thick, choking smoke and inflatable boats speeding to save those jumping in the water.
He feared for his oldest son, who has asthma and his youngest, who couldn't swim well.
When a boat approached and gave Paterson a thumbs-up, he told his oldest son to jump in, where he was dragged aboard a waiting dinghy.
Paterson and his youngest son then leapt into the water.
"Because the seas were so rough, the boat was chopping up and down in the air. My [youngest] son hit the water and a wave pushed him under the boat," Paterson said.
He resurfaced, as Marshall-Inman sped over towards them in a rescue dinghy and dragged the 11-year-old aboard.
Paterson had drifted back towards the flaming Pee Jay 5, and Marshall-Inman came back for him.
"I'd inhaled a hell of a lot of smoke and I wasn't much good for anything."
Marshall-Inman grabbed him by the scruff of the neck and dragged him aboard.
Hayden Marshall-Inman on the island. He was killed in Monday's volcanic explosion. Photo / Supplied
"If it hadn't have been for him on the day, I dare say that my youngest would've drowned and that would've been the end of him - and I probably wasn't all that far off as well."
Paterson said he felt sick when he heard of the volcano's devastating eruption, and hoped Marshall-Inman would be returned to his family soon.