Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Mobay family in a tailspin

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They were taken to hospital where Thompson and the unidentifi­ed man were pronounced dead. Kellisia was treated.

Kellisia recalled the heartbreak­ing moment that she has been trying hard to forget ever since.

“Me get shot too. Standing here, me give up pon life. It’s just because I have to be there for my mother and the kids. But I don’t really feel life. It is just the truth,” she told the Sunday Observer.

“When I got shot, me never did a worry about myself. Me a worry about my brother. Me nuh business with my hand and me not even know how me hand stay. I was just trying to save him. Me a talk to him from we a travel to the hospital and me say ‘yuh afi make it.’ He was alive during the journey, and he died while we were at the hospital,” she continued.

One of the last things her brother heard her saying was “hold on… just two more minutes” while they were on their way to Cornwall Regional Hospital.

“He was just making sounds and the driver was telling me to talk to him. I was telling him that we were going up Salem Hill. But he was there not talking. He was just making sounds. When we reached the hospital, him eyes dem roll over but him did a make sound same way.

“We deh a the hospital now, so just hold on a little bit more,” she told him then.

Upon arrival, Kellisia told the Sunday Observer that she had to leave her brother so she could go and register him. At that time, her untreated gunshot wound was the least of her worries.

“My hand was just swinging and bleeding. Blood just a run all over the place,” she recalled.

It was not until she finished the registrati­on process that her arm was treated.

“When I came back, they had him in a room and doctors took me to another room to look at my hand. I was there thinking everything alright and about five minutes after, a nurse came and said that a doctor want me.”

When Kellisia was taken to the doctor, she was invited in a room. Realising her brother wasn’t inside, she said she wasn’t the most cooperativ­e at first.

“Me bredda nuh ina di room, suh weh yah call me in yah fah? Weh yah call me ina room fah?” she asked the doctor angrily.

“Miss Thompson, calm down and sit down let me talk to you about your brother,” the doctor advised.

When Kellisia eventually sat down, she learned that her brother died indirectly.

“Miss Thompson, I am sorry,” the doctor continued.

“From she say that, me get up and walk out. Me walk straight through the hospital door go lay dung ina the middle a the road. From somebody tell you ‘I am sorry’ you know the person nuh make it,” added Kellisia.

Further, Thompson’s autopsy was done on Thursday, September 30, and the family is yet to decide on a burial date. Kellisia told the Sunday Observer that given the circumstan­ces, the family was still reeling from the loss.

“His one-year-old daughter just turned one about one week before he died. My mother bawl every day, every day. She get up in the early morning and she walk round the house and a call him. It is not good. The kids, the big ones are not good. They are not talking. The other three young ones don’t understand. It’s really hard. Him love him family. It was just him, me, my mother and his kids. I called him my other half. He is my other half. Him nuh do anything without me and I don’t do anything without him.

“When it comes on to the business, I give him my opinion and him give me his opinion. We nah make no decision without each other. Him never really liked the idea when me start work. He said he would take care of me. Him always willing fi help people. If you’re unemployed and want something fi do, him help yuh find a day work. He is always sharing. If him see that yuh ina one slippers weh nuh stay good, him go in him house for a pair to give yuh. If it can’t fit yuh, him buy yuh one.”

Kellisia said it would be ideal to pick up the reins and see to the operating of the business, but has found it difficult to even return to the bar.

“I don’t have that mindset yet. I don’t know when. I have not been in the bar since the incident. After I spent three days at the hospital and came back, I don’t go anywhere near it. It’s hard. It’s going to bring back memories. Him dead inside a him business place so why would we want to reopen it? I don’t have that heart yet. Maybe next year some time, but not for now,” she said.

 ?? (Photo: Romardo Lyons) ?? Kellisia Thompson points to the section of the bar where her brother was shot. She says she hasn’t been inside since the incident.
(Photo: Romardo Lyons) Kellisia Thompson points to the section of the bar where her brother was shot. She says she hasn’t been inside since the incident.
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