Sunday Mirror

HUSBAND’S AGONY

- By amy sharpe

IT should have been one of the happiest days of Vanessa McAloon’s life – a motorbike ride with her man to celebrate the all-clear from cancer.

But as they rounded a corner in their countrysid­e spin all that joy was cruelly ended in a horror crash that snatched the mum of two away – and will haunt her devastated husband Jim forever .

Vanessa’s bike hit a car coming towards her on the wrong side of the road – and as she fell on the tarmac, Jim, following behind, could not avoid running over her.

It was a horrifying moment he will never forget – and one which has wrecked his life forever.

Not only has he had to cope with crippling grief at losing the love of his life – but also shattering posttrauma­tic stress disorder which has seen him lose his business and a home. And added to that was the agony piled on by the car driver refusing to admit being at fault.

Jean Williams, 84, was found guilty of causing death by dangerous driving last month at a crown court trial where Jim and daughters Sophie, 19, and Becky, 24 – along with Vanessa’s parents Rosemary, 77, and Alan, 81 – were forced to face their loss all over again – and the agonising way it happened.

Vanessa fell right in front of me. I had nowhere left to go JIM ON HORROR MOMENT HE RAN OVER HIS WIFE

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“Every day I relive her death. I ran over my own wife,” says Jim, 52. “In a split second she fell right in front of me. I had nowhere else to go. I had to tell everyone – her parents, our daughters. We were numb for weeks.

“Since then my whole life has fallen apart. I have PTSD, my business went bust and I’ve had a house repossesse­d. I have no idea what I’m doing.

“I know Jean Williams didn’t kill my wife on purpose. It was an accident. But she has never shown remorse or apologised and that has made our grief even harder.”

Vanessa, 48, had everything to live for that day in November 2016 after what had been a frightenin­g two months. In September she had been diagnosed with breast cancer, had a mastectomy and began chemothera­py.

“My wife was a strong person,” says Jim “I cried when we were told she had cancer. She went, ‘I’ll survive, it’s all good’.”

Sitting next to him, daughter Sophie, a carer, adds: “Mum dealt with it all so well it was easy for us to deal with it too.”

And in November came the news they longed for. Vanessa was told she was cancer-free – although doctors planned to complete the final round of treatment as a precaution. And also she had just achieved an ambition – her applicatio­n to become a driving examiner was successful and she was to start in April 2017.

“Everything had come together – we were happy,” Jim said.

But that all changed on November 27 as the couple, both motorbike fans, headed out on their celebrator­y ride via the rural A4075 in Pembrokesh­ire, South West Wales – Jim on a Yamaha YZF Thunderace while Vanessa rode a Yamaha Fazer.

They rounded that fateful corner to see Williams on the right-hand side of the road in a Vauxhall Corsa, overtaking a tractor. Jim recalls: “I saw my wife’s back wheel shudder, then she bounced off the front of the car. In a split second she fell right in front of me. I ran straight over the top of my own wife and landed all the way down the road.

“I hobbled back, screaming, ‘Help me, please’. Police, paramedics, and an air ambulance arrived. I had a suspected cracked pelvis but I refused to go to hospital.

“The driver came over, saying, ‘It’s not my fault, I didn’t see her’.

“I said, ‘My wife is dying here, please go away.’ Everyone tried their hardest to save Vanessa, but she never regained consciousn­ess from the minute she hit the car.”

Jim says having to tell Sophie and

 ??  ?? sO happy Jim and his beloved Vanessa hOrse LOVer Vanessa with daughter Sophie
sO happy Jim and his beloved Vanessa hOrse LOVer Vanessa with daughter Sophie
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 ??  ?? DeVasTaTeD Haunted dad Jim with Sophie and Becky
DeVasTaTeD Haunted dad Jim with Sophie and Becky

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