It was roughly 11 pm- I say roughly as I didn’t know the exact time to start with. But the month was June, it had been dark for at least an hour and a friend I was speaking to was over halfway through their shift that finished at midnight. That’s when I was told. Told that my husband, a Police Officer had died. He had been shot and killed ‘in the line of duty’.
All I remember is the screams. I don’t even think I was crying at that point. Just yells of Oh God… Oooh God! Oh, my god! Then crouching down onto the wood floor of the porch with the Deputy Chief Inspector cradling my hands in hers. Did he have any pain? Did he suffer? To which I was told no. He died instantly. It’s not advisable that you view his body she said, as he would be unrecognisable. Basically, meaning that the brunt of the injuries were to his face. Yeah, no wonder it was instant. I wouldn’t get to see his wonderful face. I wouldn’t get to say my final goodbye.
These people who I didn’t know, stood all sullen-yet very professional- at my door surrounding me. Various high ranking, white shirted Police Officers with their hats tucked firmly and professionally y under their armpits and the Chaplain, his arms in front of him making and X and in his hands a large binder held tightly across his torso. All very official. And all obviously hating the situation they had been put in.
With them were some of our friends, fellow Police Officers that became close to us. Their eyes bloodshot and their faces red from all their crying. I looked at them all and thought why am I not crying? Why am I not wailing like a banshee? Does this mean that I don’t feel the way they do? I couldn’t cry. I tried. It was the shock.
The door remained open as a stream of people started to enter my home. So many people. All with the same face. Desperation of wanting to see me. Wanting to try and take this pain away, praying that they got it wrong, hat it wouldn’t be their friend. Yet when they did see me, and realised it was true, having the devastation of wanting to say something other than sorry as that didn’t seem enough. Wanting to cradle me in their arms and try -even just a little- to take that raw pain away. How on earth did they know about this so soon?! I had only just been told myself. At the time, I didn’t really put things together. (that is for another time) The night was just too bizarre. Honestly though, having all these people there offered me the very support I needed. I was simply grateful that they were there. Every one of them. There for me, leaving their own families at home to be by my side… All crammed into my little home. All wanting to make sure I was ok and try and take the Burdon of the night’s events away from me in any way they could.
I don’t really remember much of that night. I remember telling my parents back in England that Dan had been killed over the phone and the horror that pierced intensely through my mother’s voice. I remember being amazed at the fact my children hadn’t woken up to see what all the commotion was about. They would wake up hearing the crinkling of a food wrapper but this they slept through. Typical. I had to then tell his parents. Tell his parents that their only child was dead. He did his job at protecting us and for that his life was cruelly taken away in the worst possible manner. It’s bad enough doing this in person but to do this via facetime?! Nothing was going to make this hideous news any better. They needed to hear this from me rather than the media (again, we will get to that later) so I just had to get on with it. I called them. I was advised with some severity I might add, not to do this. It was 6:30am in Manchester-
There’s been an accident. Two officers were shot and one didn’t survive.
I’m so sorry. That officer was Dan..
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