I offer my thanks to my beta reading team for their very valuable input and to Randi for her editorial prowess and skills.
If anyone is wondering, SFA is a genuine medical condition and all cases of SFA referenced within this story can be found in the medical literature. However, this is a work of fiction.
David Brookman ground out the cigarette butt with the heel of his shoe. Strange, here he was, 32 at his last birthday and until six months previously, he had never smoked more than three cigarettes in his entire life. Now he was virtually a chain-smoker. His colleagues in the IT department that he was the director of hated that he'd taken up smoking, but said nothing under the dreadful circumstances.
His doctor had said, "They'll kill you."
His reply had been a softly spoken: "Yes, I expect they will." His doctor hadn't mentioned it again, just placed his antidepressant medication on his automatic repeat prescription list.
David looked up at the door of the building he was about to enter. Fixed to it was an old brass plate, polished down through the wearying years and decades by a multiplicity of hands, bearing dusters, cloths and bottle after bottle of brass polish. The plate bore the words "Coroner's Court." Was it his imagination, or could he smell the tangy scent of Brasso?
He walked through the door and several minutes later, he sat himself down in the moderately-sized room that was used by the coroner for the district.
He had never been in a coroner's court, and previously he might have been interested to look round the late Victorian building, the bench where the coroner presided from, the seating area where witnesses would wait to be called, the small area where six coroner's jurors would sit, if a jury was required, and the small area were nosy members of the public could spectate. But now? David could hardly get up enough interest to live, let alone notice what his surroundings were.
He had arrived early, before everyone else would enter the court. His life had been irrevocably changed six months previously when he had answered the door of the flat he shared, or rather had shared, with his wife of seven years, Diana.
Two police officers had faced him. They told him that his wife had met with an accident and had been taken to the A&E department of St Vincent's Hospital. When he asked them what had happened, they both shook their heads, denying that they had any details. They looked shifty, guilty almost.
When he had arrived at the hospital, she was already dead, but the condition of her body was a testimony to the fact that the medical staff had worked hard, damned hard, to save her life. There had been no medical miracle. Diana was dead.
If someone, anyone, had told David that there could be anything worse than discovering that his wife, the love of his life, had died, he would not have believed them, but he came to realise that the situation he faced was much worse.
He had been taken to identify her body, which he did. The body was covered in a white sheet, though he wondered why they thought to protect the modesty of a dead person?
Everyone was very sympathetic. He thought he saw someone he vaguely recognised, hanging about, looking distraught. David thought, kindly, "Poor man. I'm not the only person here who has lost a loved one." That thought had given him comfort, but eventually it was to come back to haunt him.
That was then, this was now. The funeral was delayed until the coroner's inquest was opened, and the case immediately adjourned for the results of the autopsy to be reported.
Because "life extinct" had been declared with no obvious cause of death, an autopsy was mandatory under the circumstances.
David had operated on autopilot, he had placed the death notice in the local paper, dealt with the letters, sympathy cards and social media posts and the phone calls, and he found the assistance of the local vicar and the funeral director invaluable when it came to the funeral arrangements. He comforted her parents and her younger sister.
The funeral had been well attended with their friends and relatives (David had no living parents or grandparents) and colleagues from both their workplaces. The wake had gone as well as one could expect, people telling stories about Diana, they ate the food and consumed the drinks and David was left alone wondering what to do now that part of his soul had been ripped away.
He felt a weird unspoken undercurrent at the funeral service and the wake, but he didn't understand why. Some people seemed wary of him, almost.
When the autopsy report came out, he wasn't sure what the terms meant so he turned to his good friend Google and learned. He found that although Google was helpful, under these circumstances, Google hadn't been "friendly" to him at all. He took up smoking, drank more than before and generally stopped giving a shit about himself.
Now, a little more than six months later, just after 10AM, the coroner's court began to fill up with people. Retirees, some students from the local college and a few other random people sat on the public benches. In England and Wales, coroner's courts are, generally speaking, open to all members of the public.
There was the special area of seats that were reserved for witnesses who would be available for the coroner to call upon to give evidence and answer any questions that the coroner might have.
There was a table labelled "press" and there was a young girl sat behind it who was probably fresh out of her journalism degree, an old-fashioned reporter's notebook and a Biro in her hands, ready to start taking notes. She hoped her shorthand would be up to the task.
When the coroner entered the room, an elderly official said, loudly, but with a voice touched by age, "All rise!" Everyone stood up, the coroner bowed to them and enjoined them all to "please sit down."
The inquest was reopened.
The coroner was a middle-aged man. He looked like a small-town solicitor, which was exactly what he was. George Cardew was a senior partner at the Bridgeacre firm of solicitors, Cardew, Royston and Hatcher. He'd been the coroner for the town and the surrounding district for 15 years.
Unlike many countries such as the USA, coroners in England and Wales rarely, if ever, had medical qualifications, but always had a legal qualification. If they needed medical expertise, they would be able to call on Doctors, pathologists and the like to assist them.
"Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the Bridgeacre and District Coroner's Court. My name is George Cardew, and I am the coroner. As is the normal practice, I will not be convening a coroner's jury for this inquest.
"The inquest is into the death of Diana Brookman. Mrs. Brookman was married to Mr. David Brookman, and I would like to offer my sincere condolences to Mr. Brookman in regards to the death of his wife."
The first witness he called was the Coroner's Officer who was an investigating officer for the Coroner. Usually, although by no means always, they were former police officers. As with all the other witnesses, he was sworn in to offer his evidence.
"Good morning. My name is Peter Phillips. I am the Coroner's Officer. On March 5th this year, we received a report of a death of a woman. She had been taken by ambulance to Bridgeacre General Hospital."
The next witness who was called was a paramedic. "My name is Paul Harris. I am a paramedic in the employment of the Eastern Counties Ambulance Service. On March fifth, we were directed to an address in Cadman Apartments in Cadman Street, Bridgeacre. We had received a report of a woman undergoing a medical emergency.
"When we arrived, we found that the patient was very unwell and barely responsive. Based on my 20 years' experience, it was pretty clear that the patient was suffering from severe anaphylactic shock. According to her male companion, she was not known to be suffering from any allergies. We administered an intramuscular injection of epinephrine whilst we were in the flat. When we moved her to the ambulance, we placed her on a saline drip and we took her to Bridgeacre General Hospital on blues and twos."
The coroner thanked him for his evidence and then called Dr. Anthony Travers to the witness stand. "My name is Dr. Anthony Travers. I am the Senior Registrar in the A&E Department at Bridgeacre General Hospital. I was the senior Doctor on duty when Mrs. Brookman was brought in by the paramedics.
"We continued with the drip they had placed her on. We took blood samples and administered intravenous antihistamines and steroids. We placed her on oxygen.
"She was severely ill and her condition was deteriorating rapidly. From monitoring her blood pressure and heart rate, it was clear that her organs were already going into failure.
"She had a heart attack and the crash team were summoned. They used defibrillation, which re-started her heart. However, the situation was still very desperate and I took the decision to administer an adrenaline injection into her heart.
"Her heart failed again, and I took the decision to use open heart massage. However, this also failed and I recorded the time of death at 3.15PM. We did what we could, but in this case it wasn't enough."
The coroner thanked him for his efforts to save Mrs. Brookman and called the next witness, the Home Office Pathologist, Peter Brown.
"My name is Professor Peter J. Brown. I am a Home Office Registered Pathologist and a member of the Royal College of Pathologists.
"I was asked to perform an autopsy on Mrs. Diana Brookman. Mrs. Brookman was a woman in her early 30s and, according to her medical records, she was in otherwise good health until she fell ill on March 5th.
"The diagnosis of the cause of death was given by the hospital registrar as cardiac arrest, which was caused by a severe case of anaphylactic shock. In fact, I have to say it was one of the worst cases of anaphylactic shock that I have seen in my 20 years as a practicing pathologist.
"Upon examining the organs of the deceased, I saw that they all shown signs of degradation as a result of a severe allergic reaction. It was not easy to identify the point of entry for the allergic reaction. There were no insect bites, for example, no markings on the lips and in the mouth and throat indicating that Mrs. Brookman had ingested a food or drink to which she was allergic."