Brogan Private Dick: The Bishop’s Gambit
Angelo “The Bishop” Moretti had declared war. Whether he knew it or not.
The first move came quietly, the way The Bishop preferred.
Three days after the Lincoln pulled up beside Brogan on Tremont Street, the pressure began.
Brogan’s few remaining clients started canceling appointments. A nervous divorcee called to say her husband had “suddenly become very reasonable.” A small business owner who had hired Brogan to investigate theft suddenly decided the problem had “resolved itself.” Even the Chinese laundry downstairs received a polite but firm visit: raise the rent on the third floor or find new tenants.
Then came the personal touch.
Brogan arrived at the brownstone one evening to find a single black rose lying on the doormat. No note. Just the rose — and every light in the house turned on, as if someone had wanted him to know they had been inside.
He stood in the doorway for a long moment, then stepped over the flower and went straight to the mantel. Carol-Ann’s photo was still there, untouched. But the frame had been turned slightly — just enough to let him know they could have taken it.
Dave climbed onto his shoulder and chattered low and angry. Marmalade jumped down from the windowsill and hissed at the empty room.
Rush arrived twenty minutes later after Brogan’s call. He surveyed the scene with the same calm he’d shown in the jungle.
“He’s testing you,” Rush said. “The Bishop doesn’t do loud. He does surgical. He wants you distracted. Off balance. Wondering where the next move comes from.”
Brogan lit a Camel. “Then let’s give him something to wonder about.”
The Counter-Attack Begins
They moved like they always did — slow, deliberate, and invisible.
Rush used his old contacts to trace the money. Within a week he had mapped three of The Bishop’s clean front companies and one very dirty trucking route coming down from Montreal.
Brogan focused on the street level. With Dave scouting vents and Marmalade causing convenient chaos in dumpsters near North End restaurants, they began building a picture of The Bishop’s operation.
The man was good. Too good.
His crew moved like professionals. No flashy bikes. No loud arguments. Just quiet, disciplined men who collected payments on time and made problems disappear without leaving bodies on the sidewalk.
But every machine has weak points.
Brogan found the first one on a cold Thursday night.
A mid-level lieutenant named Frankie “Numbers” Rossi had a weakness for the girls at the Velvet Lounge. Brogan waited until Frankie was three drinks in, then slid onto the stool beside him.
“Nice watch,” Brogan said casually. “Must cost a lot on a lieutenant’s salary.”
Frankie stiffened. “Who the hell are you?”
“Someone who knows The Bishop is cutting corners on purity to move volume faster. Someone who knows he’s shorting Vinnie’s old crew on their split. Someone who knows you’re the one who has to explain the missing money when the Chinese suppliers start asking questions.”
Frankie went pale.
Brogan leaned in. “Tell your boss the next time he leaves a black rose on my doorstep, I’ll deliver something bigger than a flower. Tell him the detective who doesn’t stop is watching.”
Two nights later, the real strike landed.
Rush intercepted a major shipment coming down from Canada. Not by force — by information. He tipped the right customs agent at the border crossing. The truck was seized with enough product to make headlines in the Globe the next morning.
The Bishop’s clean reputation took its first public hit.
Vinnie Capello, smelling blood in the water, began quietly reaching out to Brogan again — not as a friend, but as a man who hated losing ground even more than he hated ex-cops.
Slick Eddie Malone, ever the opportunist, started positioning his Vipers to pick off The Bishop’s weaker territories.
The war The Bishop thought he could control was already fracturing.
Late Night at the Brownstone
Brogan sat in his chair with a single scotch, Dave curled on the armrest, Marmalade sprawled across his lap.
Rush stood by the window, looking out at the falling snow.
“He’s smart,” Rush said. “But he’s proud. He’ll come at us again — harder this time.”
Brogan raised his glass toward the photo of Carol-Ann on the mantel.
“Let him come,” he said quietly. “We’ve been fighting smarter men than him since Vietnam. And we’re still here.”
Dave chattered once, low and determined. Marmalade flicked his tail once, then purred deeply — a sound that felt like agreement.
Angelo “The Bishop” Moretti had declared war.
He just didn’t realize yet that he had declared it on the one crew in Boston that specialized in dismantling quiet, disciplined machines from the inside out.
The detective who doesn’t stop. The quiet man who still walked point. The scruffy hamster with a grudge. And the big orange cat who was finally learning the value of friends.
The board was set.
The game had begun.
To be continued…
