Vancouver Sun

‘VERY, VERY DIFFICULT DAYS’

Oak Bay grieves for young girls

- RICHARD WATTS AND KATIE DEROSA

Leaders of Christ Church Cathedral School and the church offered grief counsellin­g and support Wednesday following the deaths of Chloe and Aubrey Berry.

Chloe was in Grade 1 at Christ Church Cathedral School in Victoria. Aubrey was at St. Christophe­r’s Montessori School in Oak Bay, which offers preschool and kindergart­en.

Speaking in front of the cathedral on Quadra Street at the corner of Rockland Avenue, Christ Church principal Stuart Hall said counsellor­s and ministers were inside the church to help those at the school during a vigil for Chloe and Aubrey. About 100 people attended.

“As days and weeks unfold, we will re-examine what needs to be put in place for our families,” a visibly shaken Hall said. “It’s very, very difficult days.”

Police officers found the bodies of Chloe, 6, and Aubrey, 4, on Christmas Day in the Oak Bay apartment home of their father, 43-year-old Andrew Berry. No cause of death for the girls has been released.

Berry is in hospital with selfinflic­ted wounds.

The father and the girls’ mother, Sarah Cotton, a Victoria publicrela­tions specialist, have been estranged since 2013. Sandra Hudson, a close friend of Cotton’s, said that Cotton is doing “as well as anyone could be expected.”

Hudson has known Chloe and Aubrey since they were born. “They were fun. They were smart. They were full of life, just like Sarah,” Hudson said.

Trisha Lees, another family friend, said the children would often visit a beach near their home with their mother and the family loved visiting a nearby island.

Lees said Cotton was devoted to the girls.

“Seeing the three of them together was an absolute delight,” she said. “Sarah was just one of those mothers who was born to be a mother and did an exceptiona­lly great job with them in every possible way.”

Frank Cotton, the girls’ greatuncle, said his daughter had been teaching Chloe to ride horses. “(Chloe) was doing very well. She was catching on to riding properly. And it’s all over,” he said.

Hall said he first heard of the deaths of the two girls on Tuesday afternoon. He contacted the school’s crisis team and notified staff and parents via email and steered them to assistance.

Hall said he contacted the Greater Victoria school district to ask for assistance.

“We are very appreciati­ve of the help we have been offered,” Hall said. “We are a small school of limited resources. It’s extremely challengin­g to explain this to anyone. It’s unfathomab­le. It’s a terrible and deep and jagged tragedy that we are all facing.”

Before attending Christ Church Cathedral School, Chloe attended Selkirk Montessori School for two years.

“She was an absolutely delightful little girl, a beautiful little girl,” said Penny Barner, the school’s administra­tive head.

“I’m rememberin­g her beautiful smile. She was an important and well-loved member of our school community.”

Barner said an email was sent to parents notifying them of the deaths and directing them to resources about how to talk to their children about it.

Selkirk Montessori School dealt with a violent death a decade ago. Six-year-old Christian Lee, who was killed by his father in an Oak Bay murder-suicide in September 2007, was a student of the school.

The first responders who found the bodies are also receiving help, Oak Bay police said Wednesday.

“While our focus and that of the community needs to be on the loved ones who are suffering such a devastatin­g loss as well as the greater impact within our community, I can assure you that we have engaged experts in the field of critical incident stress management and we’re following every step of their counsel and our critical incident stress model to ensure our officers are very well cared for,” Oak Bay deputy chief Ray Bernoties said.

There will be a candleligh­t vigil for Chloe and Aubrey at Willows Beach on Saturday at 7 p.m., Oak Bay Mayor Nils Jensen said.

A statement from Jensen and the Oak Bay council said there “are no words to express the sadness we feel for the loss of these two young girls and how to truly comfort the profound grief of their family.”

 ??  ??
 ?? VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST ?? Six-year-old Chloe Berry, left, and her four-year-old sister Aubrey were found dead by police on Christmas Day.
VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST Six-year-old Chloe Berry, left, and her four-year-old sister Aubrey were found dead by police on Christmas Day.
 ?? PHOTOS: DARREN STONE/TIMES COLONIST ?? Bouquets of flowers are piled up outside the apartment building where Chloe and Aubrey Berry lived in Oak Bay on Wednesday.
PHOTOS: DARREN STONE/TIMES COLONIST Bouquets of flowers are piled up outside the apartment building where Chloe and Aubrey Berry lived in Oak Bay on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Christ Church Cathedral School principal Stuart Hall speaks to the media on Wednesday in Oak Bay. “It’s unfathomab­le,” he said of the girls’ deaths.
Christ Church Cathedral School principal Stuart Hall speaks to the media on Wednesday in Oak Bay. “It’s unfathomab­le,” he said of the girls’ deaths.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada