It’s a story we haven’t been able to look away from all week.
Two brothers who love each other, caught in tragic chaos.
It’s an image that’s hard to forget. I certainly haven’t. One man is fighting for his life on a stretcher as another kneels on the ground, beyond police tape, the full reality of what he’s allegedly done slowly sinking in.
Right now, this is a case before the court. What police will allege is that visiting Irishman Barry Lyttle punched his backpacking younger brother Patrick with enough force that he fell backwards, knocking his head on the concrete pavement and recklessly causing grievous bodily harm.
There is nothing noble about a ‘king hit’.
Ever since this story broke, my own mates have been in a messaging-marathon about the number of brotherly bust-ups they could have imagined spiralling out of control. That’s why we haven’t been able to look away. Because this brotherly bust-up feels like it could have been any of us.
For my friends, thankfully, charges for punching a random on a Friday night aren’t something they’ll ever find themselves facing.
Throwing a loose hook at their brother over something small in the early hours is a lot more likely.
Cue the flashbacks. of that one extra push that nearly tipped things over the edge on the river you camped at every summer, or that one closed fist that missed landing in the wrong spot by only millimetres.
And that’s what turned this case into a rare example where the defendant becomes defended by so many. Yes, it was stupid. Yes, it’s a crime. But he needed the handcuffs replaced by a hug from his hero – his Dad.