The Pregnant Janitor In His Locked Lounge Was His Dead Wife Alive-eirian

The Cobalt Lounge had always been a place where men lowered their voices before they lied.

That night, the lie was already standing near the back door.

Arthur Gallagher did not know it yet.

Image

He only knew that six months of grief had turned the city into a map of enemies, and every road led back to the black SUV that burned on Lake Shore Drive.

He had watched the flames eat the metal.

He had heard men shouting his name as they dragged him away.

He had smelled rubber, gasoline, and the terrible sweetness of ruined leather.

Then Dr. Aris Mitchell signed a report, dental records were matched, and Clara Davies Gallagher became a name carved into marble.

Arthur believed the report because a grieving man will grab any hard thing when the world has become smoke.

So he buried an empty casket without knowing it was empty.

He tore through the Russo family because Tommy Callahan pointed him there.

He drank in the Cobalt Lounge because going home meant walking past a nursery Clara had painted pale green before she ever told him why.

He became the kind of man people crossed streets to avoid.

Then a pregnant janitor knelt in his bar with a dustpan in her hand and Clara’s perfume on her skin.

At first, his mind refused the sight.

Grief can make a man hear footsteps in an empty hall.

Whiskey can make a face appear in glass.

But grief did not make the crescent scar above her eyebrow.

Whiskey did not put those freckles over her nose.

And no hallucination cut its finger on crystal and bled onto Arthur’s floor.

When Chloe looked up, she saw a stranger with bloodshot eyes and too much power in his hands.

When Arthur looked down, he saw his wife after the world had erased her.

She backed away from him until her spine struck the brick wall.

Her hand covered the swell of her stomach.

That was when the room split open inside him.

Six months.

The bombing had been six months ago.

She was six months pregnant.

Behind him, Tommy Callahan stepped forward with a careful voice and a face that had gone too pale.

He called her a look-alike.

He called it a Russo trick.

He said Arthur needed air, a doctor, sleep, anything except the truth kneeling in front of him.

Rosa, the night manager, ruined him without meaning to.

She said the girl came from St. Jude’s shelter in Gary.

She said the clinic found her injured, confused, and pregnant.

Read More