Showing posts with label Missing Car. Private Detective. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Missing Car. Private Detective. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

James Brogan Private Detective: Missing Car

 

Missing Car

James Brogan sat in his cramped office above the Chinese laundry on 14th Street, nursing a lukewarm coffee and staring at the rain streaking the window like it had a personal grudge. The radiator clanked like an old man clearing his throat. It was Tuesday, which meant the rent was due yesterday and the bottle in the bottom drawer was getting dangerously low.

The door opened without a knock. A woman stepped in—mid-forties, sharp black coat, pearls that probably cost more than his car. Her name was Eleanor Voss, and her actual car was worth more than his entire block.

“Mr. Brogan,” she said, voice clipped but edged with something raw. “My husband’s Jaguar is missing. Along with my husband.”

Brogan raised an eyebrow. “Usually it’s one or the other. You get the two-for-one special?”

She didn’t smile. “Richard left for the club last night at 7:15. He never came home. The car is gone from the garage. No note. No call. The police think he simply left me. I don’t believe it.”

Brogan leaned back, chair creaking. “Insurance fraud? Secret girlfriend? Midlife crisis with a blonde in the passenger seat?”

Eleanor placed a manila folder on his desk. Inside: photos of the silver Jaguar F-Type, recent bank statements showing a series of large cash withdrawals, and a single blurry photo of Richard talking to two rough-looking men in a parking lot.

“He’s been nervous lately,” she said quietly. “Something about a business investment that went south. He kept saying ‘they know where we live.’”

Brogan took the case. Half upfront, expenses extra. He wasn’t in the business of turning down desperate rich people.


First stop: the club. The doorman remembered Richard. Said he left around 11 p.m., alone, looking like he’d seen a ghost. No one saw the Jaguar pull out.

Brogan drove his battered Plymouth around the city, checking chop shops and low-end dealers who might flip a high-end ride. Nothing. Then he hit a stroke of luck at a dive bar near the docks. A mechanic with grease tattoos recognized the photo.

“Yeah, I seen that Jag. Got dropped off last night by a guy who looked like he was about to piss himself. Two big fellas in a black SUV took him somewhere after. Didn’t look voluntary.”

Brogan slid him a twenty. “Where’d they go?”

The mechanic shrugged. “Toward the old industrial park. But you didn’t hear it from me.”


The industrial park was a graveyard of rusting warehouses and broken dreams. Brogan parked a block away and went in on foot, collar up against the drizzle. He found the Jaguar parked behind a chain-link fence, doors locked, no sign of forced entry. A single set of footprints led from the driver’s side toward Warehouse 17.

Inside, he heard voices. Richard Voss was tied to a chair under a hanging bulb, looking like he hadn’t slept in days. Two thugs stood over him. One held a baseball bat.

“You thought you could just walk away with our money, Richie?” the bigger one growled. “Boss wants it back. With interest. Or we take it out of your kneecaps.”

Brogan slipped in through a side door, revolver in hand. “Evening, gentlemen. Mind if we keep the violence to a minimum? My dry cleaner hates blood stains.”

The fight was short and ugly. Brogan took a punch to the ribs but laid out the first guy with the butt of his gun. The second swung the bat; Brogan ducked and introduced the man’s face to a nearby forklift. Richard sobbed with relief.


Back at the office the next morning, Eleanor Voss wrote Brogan a check that made his eyes water. Richard sat beside her, bruised but alive, muttering about never touching another “sure-thing investment” again.

“You knew it was trouble from the start?” she asked.

Brogan lit a cigarette. “Rich guys don’t disappear without a reason. And fancy cars rarely vanish on their own. Usually it’s either money or women. This time it was money.”

He walked them to the door. Eleanor paused. “Thank you, Mr. Brogan. Truly.”

As they left, Brogan looked at the check, then at the bottle in the drawer. He poured two fingers, raised the glass toward the window.

“To missing cars,” he muttered. “And the poor bastards who drive them.”

Outside, the rain finally stopped. Somewhere in the city, another client was probably about to walk through his door with another problem.

James Brogan smiled thinly. Another day, another dollar.

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