The pain hasn’t eased, and Shivy Brooks doubts it ever will. He calls it “immeasurable and seemingly never-ending”—the ache of losing his hero son. Yet even inside that grief, he can say without hesitation that he is proud of his “baby boy,” Bryce, for the way the 16-year-old placed four frightened children ahead of himself.

In April 2023, on a family trip to Pensacola, Florida, Bryce saw a group of young kids caught in powerful rip currents, their heads slipping under as the surf yanked them seaward. There were no lifeguards on that stretch of beach. Yellow flags—warnings of moderate currents—were flying. Bryce didn’t calculate. He reacted. He and two friends ran into the water.

“While being pulled by currents himself, he literally called for help—but not for himself,” Shivy said later. “He was calling for help for the little kids he was looking out for.”

The water took him anyway. As rescuers raced to the scene, Shivy posted a shaky video from the road, asking for prayers. Bryce and a close family friend, “Uncle Chuck” Johnson II, had been airlifted to hospitals. Within a day, Shivy woke to a nightmare—memorial posts with his son’s picture. Bryce had suffered cardiac arrest. He was gone.

“The selflessness that it takes for someone to make such a sacrifice, to do so at only the age of 16—we’re so proud,” Shivy said. “Let it be amplified that Atlanta developed kids that would give up their life for others that they didn’t even know.”

Johnson—a husband and father of three—also didn’t make it. “He was a person who looks after everyone,” Shivy said. “That he would give up his life in an attempt to save Bryce’s life; it’s everything I expect and know about that man.”

Since then, Shivy’s social media has become a timeline of love and loss: heavenly birthdays, first days of school that feel empty, Father’s Day messages to dads who can no longer hug their babies. In one wrenching clip from April 8, he steels himself to break his younger son’s heart: big brother won’t be coming home.

Nothing can mute the shattering heartbreak. But there is pride—fierce, unshakeable pride in who Bryce was and what he chose. “Bryce is a hero. He literally saved the lives of four kids at the expense of his own,” Shivy said. “We’re never gonna get to see Bryce grow up to be the full man he was going to be. But we know that he stepped into his manhood to save these children, and that makes me proud.” Bryce’s mother, Crystal, echoes him: “It doesn’t take away an ounce of pain, but it makes me proud of our son and what he sacrificed. And I’ll forever hold that.”

Out of that courage, the family built a legacy. The Bryce Brooks Foundation now provides free swim lessons for children and adults, funds lifeguard certification for teens, and pushes drowning-prevention and water-safety education. Its first college-support scholarships have already been awarded—among the recipients, Johnson’s son.

“Bryce’s presence is missed evermore,” Shivy wrote recently. “Bryce has always been by my side to make impossible things, feasible. Bryce was always my hero… I just want to talk to this kid. I just want to put my arms around him. I just want my son to come home.”

Some heroes wear uniforms. Bryce wore swim trunks and a teenager’s certainty that strangers’ lives mattered. He saw children in trouble and became the kind of man he hoped to be—without waiting to grow older first.