A Father Found The Evidence Bag That Bradley Wanted Buried-habe

The doctors told Dominic Mercer that his daughter’s jaw had been shattered in six places.

Six.

The number sat in the hospital room like a stone no one could move.

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The X-ray light board buzzed in the corner, washing the film in a cold white glow.

The room smelled like antiseptic, burned coffee, wet jackets, and the copper trace of blood that still clung near Lila Mercer’s hairline.

Dominic stared at the cracks on the X-ray as if a father could hate bone into healing.

One fracture near the hinge.

Two along the lower jaw.

Another line ran toward her chin like lightning trapped beneath skin.

The surgeon standing beside him was an older man with silver stubble, red eyes, and the careful voice of someone who had learned to deliver terrible news without flinching.

He tapped the X-ray with the back of his pen.

“Whoever did this swung with intent,” he said.

Dominic turned his head just enough to look at him.

Intent.

The word was clean.

The meaning was not.

People used words like intent when murder had come close enough to breathe in the room, but no one wanted to say murder in front of the father kneeling beside the bed.

Lila Mercer was nineteen years old.

She was a sophomore at Bradley University.

She still kept grocery-store receipts in her backpack because Dominic had taught her to track every dollar when she started school.

She still texted him pictures of bad cafeteria coffee and called him dramatic when he told her to check the tires on her little car.

Now she lay behind a half-pulled curtain in Room 214 at Mercy General Hospital with her mouth wired shut.

Purple bruises had spread under both eyes.

One eye was swollen closed.

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