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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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33 | Close Calls <strong>and</strong> Tragedies<br />

AfteR the 1994 eLection, Gorton went East to visit his brothers.<br />

He was staying with Nat, a federal judge in Boston, when he set<br />

out one morning for his usual run. Halfway through, he began to<br />

feel awful. His chest hurt <strong>and</strong> his legs were heavy. He also had a curious<br />

pain near his collar bone. It couldn’t be a heart attack, he reasoned. At 66,<br />

with his lean runner’s body, he was as fit as an active man 30 years his<br />

junior <strong>and</strong> every family doctor’s dream patient. He’d never smoked, drank<br />

sparingly, h<strong>and</strong>led stress remarkably well <strong>and</strong> maintained a healthy<br />

diet. “It doesn’t matter how good something is, he doesn’t have a second<br />

helping,” Sally says, marveling at his self discipline. After his morning<br />

routine <strong>of</strong> stretching, pushups <strong>and</strong> sit-ups, he ran every day—still does—<br />

rain or shine. His cholesterol was low. He slept like a baby.<br />

Something, however, was very wrong. He walked back to Nat’s house,<br />

thinking the feeling would pass. His sister-in-law, Jodi, thought he looked<br />

drawn <strong>and</strong> extremely serious as he headed straight upstairs. Sally saw<br />

how disconcerted he was <strong>and</strong> had Jodi call Nat’s doctor, who listened to 30<br />

seconds’ worth <strong>of</strong> the symptoms <strong>and</strong> said, “Call 9-11.”<br />

Slade was soon at Massachusetts General, undergoing an angioplasty<br />

to roto-rooter a clogged artery. He told his brother he felt chagrined because<br />

somebody in his condition shouldn’t have had a heart attack. When<br />

the head <strong>of</strong> cardiology assured him it was an aberration—a “biological<br />

accident”—<strong>and</strong> predicted no further problems, he was relieved. “How soon<br />

can I resume running?”<br />

On January 4, 1995, Gorton was sworn in for his third term. He was<br />

out running again by the end <strong>of</strong> the month. 1<br />

He exchanged get-well cards with Patty Murray, who was recovering<br />

from a hysterectomy. <strong>The</strong>ir relationship was improving after a chilly start.<br />

Murray’s chief <strong>of</strong> staff was a hard-nosed New York Democrat averse to<br />

any kind <strong>of</strong> cooperation with a Republican running for re-election. Jealous<br />

over Gorton’s relationship with Boeing, he even attempted to scuttle<br />

a bill Slade’s staff had crafted to make it easier for struggling airlines to<br />

295

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