A teenager told her mother: "You know Mum, I love you. I'm sorry. Goodbye" before she collapsed in her arms following an allergic reaction on holiday.
Lily King died four days later from a cardio-respiratory arrest caused by anaphylaxis and triggered by food. She had eaten a tiny piece of carrot at a restaurant in Morocco - where the family had been on holiday to celebrate the teen completing her first year of her economic degree - but instantly experienced allergy symptoms.
Within minutes, Lily, 18, was gasping for air and losing consciousness despite taking an antihistamine tablet and using her EpiPen. Her mum, Aicha, recalls: "She said, 'You know Mum, I love you. I'm sorry. Goodbye.' And she collapsed in my arms." The tragedy comes after a man recently died after his wife ran him over in a car park in a "tragic accident".
Since Lily's inquest in June, her parents Aicha, 57, and 75-year-old Michael have used the media to urge others to be extra cautious eating out while on holiday. They had chosen a restaurant they had been to before - and that Lily loved - during a previous trip to Rabat, Morocco but her dish was served with vegetables and a sauce Aicha, a fluent Arabic speaker, hadn't requested.
READ MORE: Woman unexpectedly falls asleep for hours in the sun – then instantly regrets it
READ MORE: Woman forced kids to 'crush peppers to try to trigger fatal reaction in mother-in-law'
It was a small bite of one of these rogue vegetables - a carrot - that led to Lily's swift cardio-respiratory arrest. Speaking this week, Aicha, a carer for the Epilepsy Society, said: "Neither the waiter nor any of the doctors spoke English. Without Arabic, it would have been impossible to make myself understood. It is my mother tongue and yet I still couldn't get the care Lily needed... My daughter was my best friend, my everything... Without her, our life is nothing.
"I was so, so careful with everything Lily ate. I cooked everything at my mum's house and brought it to the hotel so we could eat together. We never ate hotel food. The only thing I ordered was tea."
Lily, who was from Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, was diagnosed with severe allergies to fish and seafood, nuts, sesame, milk and eggs when she was two-and-a-half. Her asthma inhaler helped open up her airways if she ate one of the foods she was allergic to during her childhood.
The only time the student had a severe reaction that warranted emergency hospital care was in January 2024, five months before the Morocco trip, when she bought a burger at a music festival in Exeter, Devon, and shortly afterwards suffered anaphylaxis – the most extreme allergic reaction.
Reflecting on this, Michael, who is a set decorator in the movie industry, told Mail Online: "Before then, we didn't think her allergies were life-threatening. This one could have killed her. It changed everything.
"We want to spread a warning to anyone travelling to other countries where the laws are different to those in the UK – don't trust anybody,' adds Michael. We had 18 beautiful years with Lily. Never in our wildest dreams did we think we would lose her like this."
You may also like
Used in Operation Sindoor: IAF, Navy to place big order for BrahMos missile; what makes it crucial
Black rain alert issued twice in 6 hrs: Heavy rains batter Hong Kong; flights delayed, public services hit
Entire village washed away: Cloudburst triggers flash floods in Uttarakhand - what we know so far
Roman Kemp shares heartbreaking message to friend on fifth anniversary of death
This Morning viewers 'in tears' as host tells child with cancer 'you've changed my life'