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California wildfire 'most destructive' in county history

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LAKE ISABELLA, Calif. (AP) — Sallie Keeling had seen enough photos of destruction over four days to know what to expect when she returned Monday to the fire-ravaged neighborhood where she and her husband had lived for 13 years.
 
"There's nothing," she said, covered in soot after digging through the rubble. "Just ashes."
 
Keeling, 71, surveyed the devastated South Lake near Lake Isabella as evacuation orders were lifted in some nearby communities that suffered less damage from the wildfire that killed two people and destroyed 200 homes in the southern Sierra Nevada.
 
The fire grew to more than 70 square miles, but was it 40 percent contained as it burned in steep terrain south of Lake Isabella. Houses could be vulnerable if winds blow the fire back toward some of the communities in the popular recreation area, Fire Chief Brian Marshall said.
 
"There's still more threats out there," Marshall said. "This is going to go down as the most destructive wildfire in Kern County history."
 
Cadaver dogs searched through the rubble of devastated neighborhoods for more possible casualties, though remains found over the weekend were identified as an animal, Kern County sheriff's spokesman Ray Pruitt said.
 
The cause of the fire remains under investigation. A man with two guns was arrested Sunday in a mandatory evacuation area, though further details weren't available on possible charges he could face, Pruitt said.
 
The fire began Thursday and quickly exploded in dry brush and bore down on small communities of houses and mobile homes that surround Lake Isabella, a dammed section of the scenic Kern River popular for fishing, whitewater rafting and other outdoor activities.
 
Terrifying flames arrived with little warning and residents, many elderly, had to flee amid heavy smoke.
 
"People were escaping barely within an inch of their lives," Marshall said.
 
The bodies of an elderly couple, apparently overcome by smoke, were found Friday. Their names have not been released.
 
In addition to the destroyed homes, another 75 were damaged.
 
The fire was the most damaging blaze in California, but it is just one of many that have burned large swaths of the arid West during hot weather.
 
Keeling poked through debris and twisted metal in a vain search for a safe-like metal box. She unearthed a charred jewelry box, but most everything else was a total loss, including a Chevy pickup truck and small car that sat on their axles nearby.
 
Her husband, Steve Keeling, said he inherited the house and the ashes of his parents' remains had been inside. They always wanted to spend eternity in that place and now it seemed they would.