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He just kept saying, ‘Mate, stay there, I’ll look after you.’ I didn’t know where my wife was. He said, ‘You’re all right mate, she’s here.’”But he said he couldn’t hear her and was “lying in the gutter” thinking, ‘My wife’s dead.’ I really thought she was dead.
I don't trust anyone really, I'm very on guard.”He says he too is haunted by that day, recalling: “We were walking up the street to go back to the car and we saw two lads fall on the floor. I don't remember this but I was told I was headbutting the window for about five seconds till it went through.“Since then I’ve become friends with Dan Barr who stopped the car, even though he was being bitten and punched.
“Breaking down in tears, he said: “I didn't know he was going to be alive to be honest, I thought he was dead. So when I saw him on the floor it was the best feeling in the world.”About where it all happened, he said: “I've been back since, I've walked down that road where it happened and that was probably one of the hardest things I've done.”He revisited the scene last December, as he attended Doyle’s sentencing where he “locked eyes” with the man who has left him in such torment.“I just walked down the road and I sat down there and I had a cry.
