Granny’s heart ‘mashed up’

A deadly late-night ambush on a Trinidad and Tobago roadway has left a nation grappling with unspeakable sorrow, after gunmen pulled over a car carrying five people returning from a casual day trip, killing four including a 9-year-old elementary school student with a bright artistic future. The violent attack unfolded Sunday evening along Lady Young Road in Morvant, cutting short the lives of 34-year-old Asim Armstrong, his 9-year-old great-niece J’Layna Armstrong, 27-year-old Obataiye Latiff, and 24-year-old Chelsea Edwards. The fifth passenger, 23-year-old Cornelius Short, escaped with his life and remains hospitalized in stable condition following the attack. For Tee Bruce, a Belmont resident and mother to Armstrong and honorary grandmother to J’Layna, the violence has shattered her world completely, leaving her unable to process the sudden loss of two of her closest family members. In an emotional interview with local media on Monday, Bruce described her heart as “mashed up” by the killings, saying she is stuck in a constant state of numb grief that leaves her weeping nonstop. “Numb is the word to say. I have no more feelings. I cry every minute,” Bruce shared. For Bruce, who raised three sons, J’Layna filled the place of the daughter she never had, and the bond between Armstrong and the young girl was unbreakable—so close, Bruce said, they were like “ring on finger.” The morning of the trip, Bruce had packed J’Layna’s clothes for the group’s outing to Harry’s Water Park in Tabaquite, and watched the child walk out the door to meet her uncle, with no idea it would be the last time she saw her alive. “Everybody was good. Everything was okay,” she recalled. Now, she says her days are marked by crippling emotional ups and downs, and J’Layna’s biological father is faring even worse in the wake of the tragedy. Though Bruce says she draws some comfort from the outpouring of support from friends and extended family, the loss has left an irreparable hole in her life. Just weeks earlier, the community had mourned the death of 7-year-old Angelica Saydee Jogie, who died in a jet ski accident off the coast of Tobago. Bruce said she had grieved deeply for that little girl, never imagining she would soon be facing her own devastating loss of a child. Remembering J’Layna, Bruce described the 9-year-old as a confident, outspoken, loving and incredibly intelligent young girl who was already showing signs of being a future star. “She will get on very bad, if you don’t pronounce her name properly,” Bruce said, laughing through her tears as she recalled J’Layna’s fiery personality. J’Layna loved the performing arts and drama, and had been training under veteran Trinidadian actress, producer and drama coach Penelope Spencer, who recognized her natural talent and potential from the start. Walking through J’Layna’s bedroom on Monday morning, Bruce found herself staring at the young girl’s landscape paintings, a quiet reminder of all the potential that was cut short. J’Layna’s mother, Bruce added, was a dedicated hardworking parent who doted on her daughter—even making special trips to J’Layna’s school to deliver sushi for her birthday, and bringing flowers to cheer her on after every school walkathon. J’Layna’s stepfather was also a loving, steady presence in her life, Bruce said, and the whole family had welcomed him fully. For Asim Armstrong, J’Layna was “his eyeball”—the person he loved most in the world, Bruce said. What makes their shared death even more tragic, she added, is that Armstrong had already fought and won a brutal battle with aggressive cancer. Diagnosed at age 20, Armstrong endured years of harsh treatment that forced him to give up his beloved hobby of playing football, and he had only just pulled through a major health crisis around the 2023 Christmas holiday. Armstrong would have turned 35 on May 31, and the family had been planning a celebratory trip to Saint Lucia to mark the occasion. Despite the unthinkable loss, Bruce says the family holds no anger toward the attackers, and is just focused on supporting one another through this dark time. Instead of a traditional wake, the family will host a night of prayer to honor Armstrong and J’Layna before their funeral. Local political leaders and community members have also expressed profound shock and sorrow over the attack, which has sent waves of grief across the entire country. Keith Scotland, Member of Parliament for Port of Spain South, called the killings far more than an ordinary tragedy, saying the violence has shifted the entire national mood. “What has occurred there is more than a tragedy. It’s something that has changed the mood of the nation. It’s unfathomable what has transpired,” Scotland said in a telephone interview Monday. Scotland extended his deepest condolences to the entire family, noting that even though he never met J’Layna, all accounts paint her as a good child on a promising path. Scotland added that this ambush is just the latest in a string of violent tragedies that the small nation is struggling to process, coming just after the killing of Corporal Eversley in San Fernando and the discovery of 56 buried bodies at a cemetery in Cumuto. “It’s a lot for the country to process. It’s sad,” he said. For residents of Morvant, the news of the ambush, and the killing of an innocent 9-year-old, has left the entire community reeling. On Monday morning, as residents prepared for their workday, many described feeling overwhelming shock and sadness at the news. One local woman asked, “Who would want to hurt a child?” Another male resident said he personally knew one of the murdered men and the young girl, calling the killing simply senseless and sad. “We have to keep praying. Day in, day out. We have to cover ourselves,” one Morvant woman said of the ongoing wave of violence that has shaken the community.