Scott Lumley.Photo: courtesy of Nancy Arbelo

Scott Lumley loved his friends and his life on Fort Myers Beach, his home for most of the last 30 years.
“Everybody on the island knew my brother,” his sister, Nancy Arbelo, tells PEOPLE. “He was just a big guy, a gentle giant. He had a heart of gold and never said a bad word about anybody.”
Arbelo, 62, of Whitehouse Station, N.J., confirmed that her brother died afterHurricane Ianhit Florida as a Category 4 storm with sustained winds of 150 mph on Wednesday afternoon. Lumley, who was washed away from his home in the floodwaters, was one ofmore than 100 people who died in the storm.
Because of the lingering effects of a serious car accident almost 50 years ago, Lumley, 65, only had partial use of his arms and legs, used a cane and spoke with a stutter.
As his health worsened about two years ago, Lumley, a native of Martinsville, N.J., left his beloved island to live with Arbelo, her husband Hector, and their three children, so his sister could care for him.
Scott Lumley on his 3-wheeled bike.Courtesy of Nancy Arbelo

But the pull of Fort Myers Beach, where he loved to ride his three-wheeled bicycle up and down the beach to visit friends, drew him back — despite Arbelo’s pleas for him to stay in New Jersey.
“He was not happy here,” says Arbelo. “He just wanted the beach life, and he missed seeing all his friends.” About a year-and-a-half ago, she continues, “he got himself on an Amtrak and off to Florida he went. I tried to get him back here, so many times.”
Back in Fort Myers Beach, Lumley was briefly homeless, sleeping on a bench near a Baptist church. During a rainstorm in January, Lynn Krinkey and her husband, Don Romano, who’d known Lumley for about 25 years, discovered him at a bus stop, banged up after someone robbed him. They decided to welcome Lumley into the one-story rented bungalow they called home.
“Everybody loved him on the beach,” says Romano, 58. “He was a great guy.”
Scott Lumley with his sister, Nancy Arbelo, and Nancy’s children.Courtesy Nancy Arbelo

When Hurricane Ian was forecast to hit Fort Myers Beach, Arbelo called her brother Tuesday. “I said, ‘You need to get off that island, this is going to be catastrophic, worse than Katrina,’ " she recalls. “He said, ‘I know we’re gonna be fine.’ "
Arbelo spoke to Lumley Wednesday morning, begging him to leave. “He was like, ‘It’s not gonna be bad,’ " she says. “And that was the last time I talked to him.”
Not long after, the hurricane floodwaters began creeping up the steps of the bungalow, where Krinkey, Romano, Lumley and another friend named Chris hunkered down to ride out the storm.
Krinkey, 59, called 911 for help with Lumley, who was almost immobile because of his health issues. The dispatchers said they couldn’t come “because of the winds and stuff like that,” she says.
By mid-afternoon, a surge of floodwaters flipped Romano’s white Ford Mustang convertible and swept it down the street.
Then the water “kept coming up,” Krinkey tells PEOPLE. Before long, it started inching towards the ceiling. “We got on this mattress that was floating,” she says.
Romano, who does maintenance at the Sandcastle Beach Club timeshare, bashed in the ceiling to create a hole into the attic. He hoisted himself, Krinkey and their two small dogs through the opening. With Chris still down below, they struggled to lift Lumley to safety.
Scott Lumley with his brother-in-law, Hector Arbelo. and two nieces in 1995.Courtesy of Nancy Arbelo

“We could hear Scotty screaming, ‘Help, help,’ " recalls Krinkey. “We just couldn’t get him up there.”
Chris grabbed an extension cord and tried to tie himself to Lumley and then to a tree or a post, Krinkey says, but the raging storm waters — now tossing around air conditioners, washers, dryers and refrigerators — were too powerful.
Krinkey says she’s not sure how much time passed before Chris returned, climbed into the attic, and told them, “Scotty’s gone.”
“He said, ‘Scotty was blue. I tried to bring him back, but I couldn’t. The back wall washed out and he went with it,’ " Krinkey recalls.
Meanwhile, Chris, who’d stayed behind, found Lumley’s body in the yard of the bungalow, beneath a refrigerator and other debris, Krinkey says.
Law enforcement officers contacted Arbelo on Friday with the news of her brother’s death, she tells PEOPLE. She plans on him cremated and bringing his ashes back to New Jersey for a celebration of life ceremony.
Hurricane Ian damage in Fort Myers Beach.Joe Raedle/Getty

“He was living and doing what he wanted,” Arbelo says. “Even after all he’d been through, he wasn’t the type to say, ‘Why me?’ He made the best of every situation. He didn’t have a mean bone in his body.”
Romano tells PEOPLE he feels like he lost a brother. Krinkey continues to see her friend’s face when she closes her eyes.
In recent months, Lumley’s health had continued to deteriorate. When he fell, the couple couldn’t lift him and needed to call an ambulance for help, but Lumley refused to go to the hospital. So, rescue workers would put him back in his recliner.
“He was always a fighter and he probably fought till the end,” says Romano. “Scotty always just talked about God. And he said, ‘I’m never afraid to die. You know what I mean?’ And he said, ‘Whatever happens, happens.’ "
source: people.com