“I just lay on top of her,” he told Sky News Australia.
“Maybe a minute later, Vanessa called and said: ‘Have you got Gigi?’, and I’m like I don’t have Gigi, she didn’t have Gigi and that’s when the absolute panic just set in.”
Vanessa, meanwhile, said she heard gunshots flying all around her. She saw her daughter dancing, and the next she was gone.
“I don’t know how I didn’t get hit. There were bullets all around me,” she said.
“All I can do is scream: ‘Where is my family? Where’s my little girl? Where’s my little girl?’
“I saw her dancing for a second and she was gone.”
She said a man was shot to death in front of her as she searched and a police officer who had also been “shot in the head”, grabbed her and tried to force her to get down for her own safety.
“I actually tried to grab the policeman’s gun and he grabbed me. I was ready to just get in there and just ... I didn’t know what to do. I could just see blood everywhere and then I stayed down. The bullets stopped,” she said.
At the same time, Wayne was waiting for what “felt like hours” for the shooting to end. He managed to find his wife and immediately ran to search for their missing child.
“I gave Capri to Vanessa and I said: ‘I’m gonna go look for Gigi’. I went, I was looking, there was just blood and bodies everywhere and she was wearing a pink skirt and I saw this lady lying on top of her,” he said.
The woman had been shot but told Wayne: “I’ve got your daughter, I’ve been protecting her.”
“I said: ‘You’ve saved my daughter’s life. I said I’ll be indebted to you for the rest of my life’,” Wayne said.
“Her name is Jess. I spoke to her about 10 minutes after I took her [Gigi]. She was going to hospital, she said she was okay.”
He said another woman was lying “lifeless” next to Jess.
“It was the most appalling experience,” he said. “That this can happen in Australia and we’re just lying there and shots were coming. We were like sitting ducks.”
He said there was a man lying near him who had been shot but he felt like he couldn’t help.
“I feel bad that there was nothing more that I can do but I had two little children and I just had to get them out of there,” he said.
Sign up to Herald Premium Editor’s Picks, delivered straight to your inbox every Friday. Editor-in-Chief Murray Kirkness picks the week’s best features, interviews and investigations. Sign up for Herald Premium here.