I promised myself I wouldn't come bck and read this thread, but I love all of you and am sobbing as I type this. Thank you all so very very much.
Depite everything I have done, it seems that something was set into motion that was unstoppable. The only corals to survive were all my Psammacora, a Fungia, and a Pavona chip, Several others are alive but continuing to die, no matter what I try. All the fish lived, except maybe a wrasse - I think. The water is still too cloudy to see through after three days of skimming, carbon and 600 gallons of water changes. Those that are still alive and hanging on are bleached white and many of those are loosing what tissue is left. Basically, I have rocks. The coraline died, the sponges died as did all the other life on them. Most a sitting in a pile on my living room floor to stop further fouling. Everything. I have never, despite monstrous accidental faults of my own, power outages, A'C failures and even a top off malfunction have I seen anything like this. To bring the salinity up alone required 350 gallons of salt. My skimmer drains to the outside, so there would have been a pool of some 400 gallons of water if the skimmer was overflowing and the skimmer was at a perfect skimming level that evening when I got home. No water in the sump room from sump overflow. Auto-top working perfectly then and now. I hate to think somone would do this, but as far as I can tell, that is the only conceivable thing I can think of. I have cried daily, and I am crying now. Some of the species I had can never be replaced. I filled several curbside trash cans with coral skeletons.
Thank you all so much for you beautiful words. I have thousands of fragments in culture, sadly limited in types, could never afford to restock the tank to what is was, and it will be 5- 10 years before - and if - it ever resembles what it did a few days ago. Thank you for your well wishes and offers. Sadly, to see the massive corals in my tanks replaced by chips and fragments is too much to consider right now. I will care for my culture system and my bedroom tanks and let this tank stabilize for several months and see what else lives or dies.
I do realize, however, that my love of this hobby and corals still exists, and I will be here for you, though with a very sad heart to help how I can, if not only to help anyone else from ever experiencing anything of this magnitude. So while I may have been premature saying I am leaving the hobby, I won't. But, posting without my inspiration behind glass sitting beside me will be a heartwrenching task.
My dear wife, Brandee, said "when we restock, we restock together so I can know everything there is to know about everything that goes in the tank." I promised.