The lowest wind speed in a hurricane is 75 mph. That wind, while it may not “carry” the boat very far (not like an airplane, anyway), can certainly throw a boat such as that, no matter which way it’s oriented. If you can’t get it inside a garage or otherwise out of the wind, then you should really find a way to strap or tie it down.
I’d be afraid that filling it with water (on land), per @Cruiser‘s advice, could stress the hull rivets and/or structure and destroy it.
Another perfectly good option is to put it in water and either anchor it very securely so that it can ride out the storm, or even sink it. If you anchor it with even a light anchor in four or five feet of water (water that won’t be flowing!) and then sink it in place it will be easy to recover later, and it won’t go far. (Waves may carry it a bit along shore, depending on the body of water. I wouldn’t recommend this in a body of water bigger than a large pond.) Alternatively, can you sink it in a neighbor’s swimming pool?
Small boats at anchor will do fine, provided the ground tackle (anchor and rode) are sufficient, and there’s enough room for the boat to move among other boats in the anchorage, and none of them drag their anchors so that one boat fouls another.