đź’” An Empty Chair: The Heartbreaking Legacy of Iryna Zarutska
In the bustling heart of Charlotte, North Carolina, where the scent of fresh dough and marinara sauce lingers in the air like a comforting embrace, there’s a pizza shop called Zepeddies Pizzeria. It’s the kind of place where locals gather for late-night slices, families celebrate birthdays with cheesy pies, and the staff hustles through shifts with the rhythm of a well-oiled machine. But since August 22, 2025, one spot at the counter remains eerily vacant—an empty chair that no one dares to claim. It belonged to Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee whose kindness defined her, and whose brutal murder has left an indelible scar on everyone who knew her.
Friends and colleagues remember Iryna as the quiet hero of the kitchen, the one who volunteered for extra hours without complaint. “She always stayed late to cover for the younger ones,” says Maria Gonzalez, a fellow server at Zepeddies, her voice cracking during a recent interview with WCNC. “The kids had school the next day, or family stuff—Iryna would just say, ‘Go, I’ve got this.’ She was like a big sister to us all.” At 23, Iryna was hardly old herself, but her maturity shone through in small acts of selflessness. Born on May 22, 2002, in Kyiv, Ukraine, she had already endured more hardship than most lifetimes demand. When Russia’s full-scale invasion shattered her world in 2022, Iryna fled with her mother Anna, sister Valeriia, and younger brother Bohdan, seeking refuge in the United States. Her father, Stanislav, stayed behind, bound by Ukraine’s martial law that forbade men aged 18 to 60 from leaving.
The family’s escape was no easy feat. For months, they huddled in a cramped bomb shelter beneath their Kyiv apartment, the relentless drone of explosions a grim lullaby. “We lived in fear every day,” Iryna’s uncle, who asked to remain anonymous, told People magazine. “But Iryna was the one keeping spirits up, drawing pictures for the little ones to make them smile.” An accomplished artist with a degree in Art and Restoration from Synergy College in Kyiv, Iryna poured her creativity into gifts for loved ones—vibrant sketches and restored heirlooms that captured the beauty she refused to let war erase. Upon arriving in Huntersville, North Carolina, she dove headfirst into her new life. Her first job was at a local assisted living facility, where she cared for elderly residents and their pets with a tenderness that endeared her to everyone. “She’d walk the dogs after hours, just because they looked sad,” recalls a former coworker. “And the residents? They adored her. Over 100 showed up to her memorial—some in wheelchairs, others on buses the facility arranged.”
By 2025, Iryna had blossomed in America. She enrolled at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, mastering English in record time and eyeing a future as a veterinary assistant—her deep love for animals was legendary. Neighbors often spotted her strolling with borrowed pups, her radiant smile lighting up the block. Romance found her too, in the form of Stas Nikulytsia, a fellow Ukrainian Ă©migrĂ© who taught her to drive. “She was so excited about her test in October,” Stas shared in a tearful video montage posted online. “We’d just bought a used car together. She texted me that night: ‘Almost home, love you.'” The clip, a montage of Iryna laughing over barbecues, dancing with friends, and sipping cocktails, captures a young woman utterly enchanted by the American dream. “She fell in love with this country,” her uncle added. “The freedom, the opportunities—it was everything Ukraine couldn’t give her then.”
At Zepeddies, Iryna wasn’t just an employee; she was family. Starting as a cashier, she quickly rose to line cook, her steady hands flipping dough and her warm demeanor diffusing rush-hour chaos. “Iryna had a heart of gold,” says owner Tony Zepeddie, echoing sentiments from a heartfelt Facebook post the shop shared days after her death. “We lost not only an incredible employee, but a true friend. Our dear Iryna left this world far too soon, and our hearts are heavy with grief.” The post detailed how she’d linger after closing to train new hires or tidy up, always with a joke in broken-but-improving English. “She’d say, ‘Pizza is love in a box,’ and we’d all crack up,” Tony recalls. “The younger staff leaned on her so much. Now, her chair sits empty as a tribute. We’ve got a candle burning there, and a little frame with her favorite sketch—a sunflower field from back home. No one’s sat in it since. It feels wrong.”
That fateful Friday, August 22, was unremarkable until it wasn’t. Iryna clocked out around 9:30 p.m., her Zepeddies polo still crisp despite the heat of the ovens. Without a driver’s license yet, she boarded the Lynx Blue Line at Scaleybark station in South End, just a 10-minute ride from her apartment near Station 36. Surveillance footage, later released by Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police, captures the horror in chilling detail. Iryna settles into a seat, scrolling her phone—perhaps texting Stas, as records confirm. Behind her sits Decarlos Brown Jr., 34, a homeless man with a rap sheet stretching back to 2011: theft, armed robbery, threats, assault. He’d been arrested 14 times, released on cashless bail as recently as January, including for violent offenses.
Four minutes in, Brown unfolds a pocketknife from his hoodie. He pauses, then lunges, stabbing Iryna three times—twice in the neck, once in the hand—in an unprovoked frenzy. She collapses, blood pooling on the floor, gasping for help. The video skips the graphic strikes but shows Brown strolling away, knife dripping, as passengers freeze in shock. No one intervenes. Paramedics found her minutes later at the East/West Boulevard station; she was pronounced dead at the scene, just blocks from safety. Brown, treated for a hand laceration, faces first-degree murder charges and a federal indictment for a terrorist act on mass transit—eligible for the death penalty. In a jailhouse call, he chillingly told his sister, “I got that white girl,” citing inexplicable anger.
News of Iryna’s death rippled outward like aftershocks. Her family, piecing together the tragedy via her phone’s last location, arrived at the station to unimaginable horror. “We watched the video the same time the public did,” her uncle told ABC News. “It was terrible. She didn’t deserve this—no one does.” GoFundMe campaigns surged, raising over $500,000 for repatriation and support. Her obituary, a poignant tribute, painted her as “kind, creative, with a vibrant spirit and deep love for animals.” Public figures weighed in: Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles called it “senseless and tragic,” Governor Josh Stein decried the violence, and President Donald Trump lambasted the “mentally deranged lunatic” enabled by lax bail policies.
On X (formerly Twitter), the story ignited a firestorm. Posts amassed millions of views, blending grief with fury. “She escaped bombs in Ukraine just to bleed out on a U.S. train,” tweeted @stillgray, capturing the irony that twisted like a knife. Users shared her joyful videos—dancing at barbecues, sketching pets—contrasting the vibrancy stolen in seconds. “Her chair at the pizza shop is empty; no one sits there,” echoed @MrPitbull07, amplifying Zepeddies’ tribute to viral reach. Hashtags like #IrynaZarutska and #EmptyChair trended, sparking debates on transit safety, mental health, and criminal justice reform. “This is why we need change,” wrote @sovey_X, her post logging off in tears: “She worked minimum wage, took the train— and never came home.” Reddit threads on r/Mommit overflowed with parental anguish: “My heart is breaking for her family.”
The outpouring revealed a collective wound. Vigils dotted Charlotte’s streets, sunflowers—Iryna’s favorite—adorning the Lynx stations. At Zepeddies, the empty chair became a shrine: photos, notes from regulars (“You made my Fridays brighter”), and that eternal candle. “We’re processing this tragedy,” the shop’s post continued. “Iryna, we miss you more than words can say.” Coworkers rotate shifts around it, sharing stories of her laughter echoing through dough-tossing sessions. “She’d stay late so we could leave early,” Maria adds. “Now, we stay late for her.”
Iryna’s murder isn’t just a statistic in America’s urban violence epidemic—it’s a stark indictment. She embodied resilience: fleeing war, rebuilding from scratch, choosing labor over leisure. Yet, in a nation she adored, safety eluded her. As her uncle implored, “Remember her for her contributions, her love of family—not this end.” Her father, unable to attend the funeral due to Ukraine’s borders, sent a video message: “My girl chased dreams. Don’t let them die with her.”
One month on, as October’s chill settles over Charlotte, the empty chair at Zepeddies endures—a silent sentinel for what was lost and what must change. Iryna Zarutska didn’t just cover shifts; she covered for hope itself. In her absence, that chair whispers: Sit up straighter. Fight harder. Cover for each other. For in honoring her selflessness, we might prevent another young dreamer from fading into an untouched void.