Wednesday, April 15, 2026

The Case of the Missing Husband

 

The Case of the Missing Husband

James Brogan was halfway through a lukewarm pastrami sandwich when the knock came—sharp, impatient, like someone who was used to doors opening on the first try. He wiped mustard off his fingers and buzzed the visitor up.

The man who entered was tall, mid-forties, wearing a charcoal suit that cost more than Brogan’s rent for six months. His eyes were red-rimmed but dry, the kind of exhaustion that came from too many sleepless nights.

“Mr. Brogan, I’m Richard Harlan. My husband, Daniel Park, disappeared five days ago.”

Brogan motioned to the chair opposite the desk. “Five days is a long time. Police involved?”

“They took the report, filed him as a missing adult. Daniel’s a corporate attorney at a big firm downtown. No history of depression, no drugs, no gambling debts that I know of. He kissed me goodbye Tuesday morning, said he had an early deposition, and never made it to the office.”

Brogan leaned back, studying the man. Richard Harlan looked genuine—worried, angry, helpless. The kind of client who’d actually pay the invoice.

“Tell me about the last few weeks. Any arguments? Unusual behavior? New people in his life?”

Richard hesitated, then slid a phone across the desk. “He’d been getting late-night calls. Would step outside to take them. When I asked, he said it was work stress—big merger closing. But two nights before he vanished, I overheard him on the balcony. He sounded scared. Said something like ‘I can’t keep covering for this.’”

Brogan scrolled through the call log Richard had already pulled. Several numbers with no names attached, all after midnight. One repeated frequently.

“Mind if I keep this for a bit?”

“Keep the whole phone if it helps. Just find him.”

The next forty-eight hours were legwork. Brogan started at Daniel’s firm. The partners were polite but cagey—claimed Daniel had been acting distracted, missing deadlines on the merger. No one admitted to knowing about any late-night calls.

He hit the couple’s South End condo next. Richard let him in without question. In Daniel’s home office, Brogan found a hidden drawer: burner phone, still powered on, and a stack of printed emails. The emails were from an anonymous account, threatening to expose “irregularities” in the merger documents unless Daniel paid $250,000 in cryptocurrency.

The burner had only one contact saved: “Fixer.”

Brogan called it. A gravelly voice answered on the second ring.

“Who the hell is this?”

“Someone who doesn’t like lawyers getting leaned on. Where’s Daniel Park?”

A pause. Then a low chuckle. “You’ve got balls, whoever you are. Park’s fine. He’s just taking a little unscheduled vacation until he transfers the money. Tell the pretty husband to stay out of it.”

Brogan smiled without humor. “Wrong answer. I already traced the last cell ping to a storage facility in Dorchester. You’ve got two hours to let him walk before I send the Staties and every reporter in Boston down there with cameras rolling.”

He hung up.

That night, Brogan sat in his car across from the storage lot, watching. At 11:47 p.m., a side door opened. Daniel Park stumbled out, looking pale and unshaven but alive. Two men in hoodies hurried him toward a waiting sedan.

Brogan stepped out of the shadows, .38 in hand but low. “Evening, gentlemen. Change of plans.”

The larger of the two reached for something under his jacket. Brogan put a round into the pavement near his foot. “Don’t.”

The men froze. Daniel looked up, dazed. “Who…?”

“Friend of your husband’s. Get in my car.”

The kidnappers didn’t argue once Brogan mentioned he’d already forwarded the burner data and email chain to a detective who owed him favors. They drove off empty-handed.

Back at the condo, Richard nearly collapsed when Daniel walked through the door. The two men embraced hard enough that Brogan looked away, suddenly interested in a painting on the wall.

Later, over coffee in the kitchen, Daniel explained: he’d discovered the merger involved falsified financials. One of the senior partners had pressured him to sign off. When he refused and threatened to go to the SEC, the “fixer” was hired to scare him straight and shake him down for hush money.

Brogan stood up, hat in hand. “Cops will want statements in the morning. I’d suggest you both get some sleep first.”

Richard caught his arm at the door. “Thank you. I thought… I thought I’d lost him for good.”

Brogan shrugged. “Most missing husbands turn up when someone actually looks. Tell Daniel to testify. The world needs a few honest lawyers.”

He stepped out into the cool night air, lit a cigarette, and walked toward the nearest all-night diner. Another case wrapped, another marriage still intact.

For once, the city felt a little less rotten.

Just another Wednesday for James Brogan.

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