Search crews are picking through rubble as they search for a missing employee after a gas explosion destroyed a restaurant in Kansas City, Missouri.
Seven people injured in Wednesday evening’s blast and inferno at JJ’s eatery remain in hospital, two critically.
At least seven others were treated and released after the explosion in the Country Club Plaza retail centre.
Officials suspect a utility contractor accident could be to blame.
A woman, an employee of the restaurant, remained missing on Wednesday morning.
A doctor with St Luke’s Hospital told reporters two of the injured being treated there were in critical condition, one with "pretty severe burns".
Six others walked into the hospital with minor injuries.
The Kansas City Star reported a total of 15 patients across three area hospitals, including St Luke’s Hospital.
Sniffer dogs were being used to search the smouldering wreckage for bodies, city officials said.
First images from the scene showed firefighters and other emergency teams battling a massive blaze that appeared to have engulfed an entire block.
Jill Chadwick, spokeswoman for the University of Kansas Hospital, said one patient had told her that the restaurant was being evacuated when the blast happened and the roof fell in.
"This patient told me there had been the smell of gas and that they had evacuated any patrons and that employees of the restaurant were in the process of shutting off gas valves and trying to get out of the restaurant when there was the explosion," she told the BBC.
"He said the last thing he remembered was the roof collapsing. I asked him how he got out and he said the front of the restaurant was blown away and he just walked through the rubble."
The initial blast was felt beyond the shopping area.
Matthew Noonan, who lives just under one mile away, told the BBC: "My wife and I were in the house playing with our daughter when something shook our windows. It sounded like a loud thunderclap, and we were pretty sure it was an explosion. Just after that we saw it come on the news.
"The severity of the explosion is quite shocking."
Peggy Zilm, who lives about seven blocks from the fire, told the Star: "I thought something had exploded in my house."
The shopping area, established in 1922, is based on the architecture of Seville, Spain, and includes retail, restaurants, apartments and offices.
There were signs saying that utility work was being carried out in the area ahead of the blast, and one man told told the Star he saw Missouri Gas Energy workers inside JJ’s with gas detectors.