The Little Girl at the Gate Who Made Boston’s Most Feared Man Stop-habe

At 7:03 on a freezing January morning, a six-year-old girl stood outside the Corsetti estate in a wrinkled blue dress and held a photograph with both hands.

The wind moved through the trees behind her like it had teeth.

Her shoes were dirty from the shoulder of the road.

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Her sweater was too thin for Boston winter.

Her braid had come loose on one side, and strands of brown hair stuck to her damp cheek.

The gate in front of her was black iron, tall enough to make grown men think twice, with spear points at the top and cameras tucked into the stone pillars.

The house beyond it sat far back on a long drive, polished and silent, the kind of place people slowed down to look at but never stopped in front of.

The kind of place built to tell the world no.

The girl looked up at the guard standing on the other side of the gate and said, “I came here to find my sister.”

Patterson did not laugh.

He had spent twenty years in private security.

He had stood outside courtrooms, private clubs, union dinners, funeral homes, and one governor’s fundraiser where every man in the room pretended not to know who had paid for the band.

He knew the difference between a nuisance and a problem.

He knew when someone was lying.

He also knew when fear had burned through a person so completely that all that was left was purpose.

This child did not look lost.

She looked decided.

“Sweetheart,” he said carefully, keeping his voice soft, “are you here with somebody?”

She shook her head.

Her fingers tightened around the photo.

“Where are your parents?”

“My mom’s sick.”

The answer came fast, as if she had been asked it too many times already.

Patterson glanced down the road behind her.

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