As remnants of Florence continued to batter the Carolinas Sunday, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned that "the risk to life is rising with the angry waters."
Rivers continued to rise as much of eastern North Carolina remained flooded and the danger of flash floods spread throughout the state. The National Weather Service warned of possible tornadoes in the east as well as landslides in the mountains.
Access to Wilmington was completely cut off by flood waters, officials said.
Downgraded Sunday to a tropical depression, the former Hurricane Florence was blamed for at least 10 deaths in North Carolina. As many as 15,000 people remained stranded in more than 150 emergency shelters, Cooper told reporters at noon.
More than 661,000 customers remained without power in the Carolinas by mid-afternoon. That was down from more than 1 million Saturday as emergency crews worked around the clock.
Flooding closed more than 170 roads in North Carolina, including parts of Interstates 95 and 40.
In Wilmington, an emergency official said there was no longer any way in or out of the county by land.
"You can't come yet. Please stay where you are," said Woody White, chairman of the New Hanover county commissioners.
In Charlotte, there were closed roads and downed trees throughout the city, and Duke Energy reported that water could spill out of several of its lakes above and below Charlotte starting as soon as Monday evening. The National Weather Service forecast up to 6 inches of rain in the area during the day and through Sunday night, with wind gusts as high as 30 mph.
In eastern North Carolina, which took the brunt of the storm, flooding continued as at least four rivers, including the Neuse and Cape Fear, reached flood stage. Some people stayed; others left.
Vickie Mariniello was one who stayed.
She has seen her share of hurricanes and other natural disasters after living in Fayetteville off and on for 64 years, she said.
"When I was a baby, my mother passed me through a window during the evacuation of Hurricane Hazel in 1954," Mariniello said.
On Sunday, she stood on the porch of her apartment in the Tartan Place neighborhood off of Ramsay Street, hand to her face, watching the incessant rain come down, unsure if she should leave. Mariniello lives less than a mile from the Cape Fear River, which on Sunday morning reached its minor flood stage of 35 feet. Police came through Mariniello's neighborhood on Saturday.
"They scared all of us," she said. "They came through with their speakers and told everyone that if they don't leave, no one will come back for you. No one will be able to rescue you."
As of Sunday afternoon, Mariniello said she had no plans to evacuate. "A lot of people are staying," she said.
Not Auriel Tinsley.
The resident of Hope Mills, near Fayetteville, scooped up her three small children _ ages 5, 3 and 1 _ and got on a Greyhound bus bound for Charlotte Thursday.
"I was just running from the storm," Tinsley, 26, said Sunday. "I wanted to get farther away (from the hurricane). I was scared."
She has been at the Red Cross shelter at West Mecklenburg High School since Friday morning with her children and her grandmother, who's 66. And she plans to stay put until the storm has moved on.
"I'm just riding a wave," she said.
Meanwhile in Lumberton, Shakeia Bethea got a knock on her door around 12:30 a.m. Sunday. She was told to get out of her mobile home right away.
"They said the levee broke," Bethea told the Raleigh News & Observer. She had been in the same home in October 2016, when Hurricane Matthew flooded Lumberton, forcing thousands of people from their homes.
Josh Stein, North Carolina's attorney general, warned people of unscrupulous businesses.
"Unfortunately there are some out there (who want) to take advantage of a natural disaster to make a quick buck," he said at a news conference.
Stein said the state has put a price gouging law in effect. He also warned would-be car buyers to beware of flood-damaged vehicles in the days and weeks after the storm.
"Florence has brought hardship and despair," he said. "Let's make sure that hardship is not compounded by scam artists."
����
(Abbie Bennett and Martha Quillin of the News & Observer, Tim Funk of the Charlotte Observer and Avery Wilks of The State newspaper contributed to this report.)