Sunday, May 24, 2026

James Brogan: Missing Husband

 

James Brogan: Missing Husband

James Brogan sat in his cramped office above the Korean deli on 14th Street, nursing a lukewarm coffee and staring at the rain streaking down the window. The city smelled like wet asphalt and regret. His last case had ended with a cheating accountant and a broken nose—his own. Business was slow.

The door opened without a knock.

A woman stepped in, mid-forties, expensive coat, tired eyes that had once been beautiful. She introduced herself as Elena Voss.

"My husband, Richard, has been missing for nine days," she said, placing a photo on his desk. Clean-cut guy in his late forties, weak chin, expensive watch. Looked like every mid-level executive who'd ever disappointed his wife.

"Police?" Brogan asked.

"They think he ran off with his secretary. But she’s still at the office, crying into her oat milk latte every day. Something’s wrong."

Brogan took the case. The retainer was good, and he needed the money.

Three days of legwork later, he was standing in a parking garage downtown, looking at Richard Voss’s silver Lexus. The car was exactly where Elena said it would be—Level 4, spot 237. Richard had driven it here on the morning he vanished. Security footage showed him walking toward the elevator at 8:17 a.m. He never reached the street.

Brogan popped the trunk.

Inside was a gym bag with a change of clothes, a half-eaten protein bar, and a burner phone. The last call on it had been to a number in Queens. Brogan called it.

A gruff voice answered. "Yeah?"

"This about Richard Voss?"

Silence. Then, "Who the hell is this?"

"Someone who’d rather not involve the cops if I don’t have to."

The man on the other end laughed bitterly. "Too late for that, pal. Voss owed a lot of money. He thought he could play the ponies and get rich quick. He was wrong."

Brogan leaned against the Lexus. "He dead?"

"Not yet. But he’s close. We’ve got him in a warehouse in Red Hook. He keeps saying his wife will pay to get him back. That true?"

Brogan thought about Elena Voss’s tired but determined eyes.

"Yeah," he lied. "She’ll pay. But I want to do the handoff. My way. No bullets, no bodies."

The voice gave him an address and a time.

That night, Brogan drove to the warehouse with $40,000 of his own money in a duffel bag (most of his savings plus what he’d borrowed from a guy who still owed him a favor). He walked in alone, hands visible.

Richard Voss was tied to a chair, looking like he’d been through a car wash during a hurricane. Two large men with guns stood on either side.

Brogan tossed the bag at their feet.

"Count it. Then cut him loose."

One of the men opened the bag, whistled, and nodded.

As they untied Richard, the husband looked up at Brogan with pathetic gratitude. "Thank you. I swear I’ll pay you back—"

"Shut up," Brogan said quietly. "Your wife thinks you’re worth saving. Try to prove her right for once."

They let him go.

Two days later, Elena Voss sat across from Brogan again, this time with a check for the rest of his fee.

"You brought him back," she said softly. "Even after what he did."

Brogan shrugged. "My job isn’t to judge who deserves saving, Mrs. Voss. Just to find what’s missing."

She stood up, hesitated, then said, "He told me you used your own money. Why?"

Brogan looked out the window at the gray city.

"Figured the city’s already got enough ghosts."

He waited until she left before pouring himself a real drink.

Another case closed. Another husband found.

The rain kept falling outside, like it always did.

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