Bleeding in the ER, a DA’s Wife Named His Enemy as Contact-Tep

At 12:07 a.m., rain hit the glass walls of Mercy Harbor Medical Center like handfuls of gravel.

The storm had turned the Boston streets slick and black, and every time lightning flashed beyond the emergency room doors, the waiting area went white for half a breath.

The lobby smelled like wet coats, floor cleaner, and burned coffee.

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Nurse Amy Collins had just finished telling a teenager with a swollen ankle to keep the ice on for another ten minutes when the automatic doors opened.

A woman came through barefoot.

For one strange second, Amy thought the woman was wearing a formal dress because she had come from some charity dinner or campaign event gone wrong.

Then Amy saw the blood.

It ran down the front of the ivory maternity dress in thin uneven lines, diluted by rainwater, darkening the fabric over the curve of her stomach.

The woman’s blond hair was plastered to her cheeks.

One hand was pressed under her seven-month belly.

The other scraped along the wall as though the building itself was the only thing keeping her upright.

The security guard at the doors stepped forward.

Then he stopped.

Recognition does that sometimes.

It freezes people before decency can move them.

Claire Vale was not just another patient coming into an emergency room after midnight.

She was Claire Vale, thirty-two years old, wife of Grant Vale, the district attorney whose face had been on half the televisions in Massachusetts for the past year.

Grant Vale was running for governor on law and order, clean streets, safer families, and a public promise to destroy organized crime in Boston.

His favorite name to say on camera was Luca Moretti.

He said it with disgust.

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