Diana and Briaunna Totten get a new home in Malden

Diana Totten, far left, and her daughter Briaunna Totten,12, watch as furniture is hauled into the new home built for them in Malden, Washington Friday, Mar. 26, 2021. The new home was just completed my missionaries of an Anabaptist community from Montana. Carrying the new couch is Tennessee Cochran, center, and Jason McSteen, owner of furniture store 16 Cents, 3 Shoes & 5 Socks. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Dianna Totten and daughter Briaunna Totten, 12, stand inside their new home in Malden, Washington, Monday, Mar. 1, 2021. Totten lost her home in the Labor Day fire last year and the new structure is being built by a group of volunteers. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Top: Diana Totten and daughter Briaunna Totten, 12, stand inside their new home March 1. Inset: Volunteers from a religious community in Montana put siding on the new home being built March 26 for Lori Dickinson in Malden, Wash. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Briaunna Totten, 12, puts a mug of water into the microwave March 26 in the new home built for her and her mother, Diana Totten, in Malden, Wash. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Diana Totten, far left, talks with Terri Meade of furniture store 16 Cents, 3 Shoes & 5 Socks while her daughter Briaunna Totten, age 12, rides her hoverboard around the new home built for them in Malden, Washington Friday, Mar. 26, 2021. The new home was just completed my missionaries of an Anabaptist community from Montana. The furniture store helped to cover the cost of the new furniture. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Diana Totten holds up one of the gifts from the religious community which built the new home for her and her daughter. The new home was just completed by missionaries of an Anabaptist community from Montana. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Volunteers from a religious community from Montana put siding on the new home being built for Diana Totten and her daughter in Malden, Washington Friday, Mar. 26, 2021. The new home was just completed my missionaries of an Anabaptist community from Montana. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Diana Totten, left, hands a cup of coffee to Jim Jacobs, 90, a neighbor, after moving into the new home built for her and her daughter in Malden, Wash., on March 26. A furniture store had just dropped off a couch set, a dining room set and a new mattress. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Briaunna Totten, 12, and her mom Diana Totten, second and third from left, stand with the crew from 16 Cents, 3 Socks & 5 Shoes, a Spokane furniture store that delivered new furniture for the Tottens’ home on Mar. 26. The crew from the store are, from left, Terri Meade, the Tottens, Brandon Kaser, Jason McSteen, Tim Votroubek, Tennessee Cochran and Tracy Cochran. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
A modest 1000 square-foot home is taking shape in Malden, Washington Feb. 24, 2021. Missionaries from a religious community in Montana built two new homes for residents of the town that was decimated by wildfire on Labor Day 2020. (Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review)
Dianna and Brianna Totten get a new home in Malden