They had also carried four knives between them and were sharing a pair of gloves Harris wore the right hand while Klebold wore the left hand. In the large pockets of Klebold’s cargo pants, he had partially hidden a sawed-off, double-barrelled 12-gauge Stevens shotgun ( The Denver Post, 16 May, 2000 – ‘2 Propane Bombs Could Have Killed or Maimed 500’). Hidden underneath his coat was an Intratec TEC-DC9 semiautomatic handgun which was attached to a strap which had been slung over his shoulder. 17-year-old Dylan Klebold dressed in cargo pants, a black T-shirt with the word ‘Wrath’ written on the front and a black trench coat. He had also brought along a sawed-off 12-gauge Savage-Springfield pump shotgun in a duffel bag. He carried a 9mm Hi-Point semiautomatic carbine on a strap hidden beneath his coat. On that fateful morning, 18-year-old Eric Harris donned a black trench coat and a white T-shirt which had the words ‘Natural Selection’ written on the front. While the physical injuries from that fateful day have long since healed, the emotional scars in Hungerford still run deep