Thursday, April 2, 2026

Brogan: The Long Way Home

Brogan: The Long Way Home

James Brogan hated travel.

He’d hated it since the night in 2019 when he spent three weeks chasing a Nazi memorabilia ring through Los Angeles back alleys and forgotten film vaults — “Nazis in Hollywood,” the boys still called it when they wanted to needle him. Planes, rental cars, cheap motels, and the constant feeling that someone was watching the exits. After that, Brogan swore he was done. He’d served his time overseas, done more than his share in deserts and mountains that still showed up in his sleep. Stateside was enough. A truck, a stretch of open road, and the ability to sleep with a pistol under the seat — that was his speed.

Then the case walked into the dingy office he kept above a Phoenix pawn shop.

The client was a clean-cut man in his late thirties named Richard Harlan — no relation to the Ghost Platoon sergeant, or so he claimed. Soft hands, expensive watch, nervous eyes that wouldn’t quite meet Brogan’s. He said his ex-wife had kidnapped their two young children during a custody dispute and fled the country. He had court papers, bank records, and a fat retainer check. “I just want my kids back safe,” Harlan said, voice cracking at all the right places. “Money is no object.”

Brogan hated clients who started with half-truths even more than he hated travel. Something in the man’s story smelled off — too polished, too rehearsed. But the photos of the kids were real enough, and the money cleared. Against his better judgment, Brogan took the case.

The trail started in Seattle, where the ex-wife had last used a credit card. From there it zigzagged: a flight to London under a false name, then on to Dubai. Brogan followed on commercial flights, jaw tight the entire way, sleeping in airports when he could. Each stop revealed another layer of lies. The “kidnapped” mother wasn’t fleeing with the kids — she was running from something darker. Bank records Brogan quietly accessed showed large transfers from Richard Harlan’s accounts to offshore shells right before the disappearance. The kids weren’t being hidden by a bitter ex. They were being moved like cargo.

The real break came in Bangkok.

Brogan hated Southeast Asia. The heat, the noise, the way every alley reminded him of old patrol routes he’d rather forget. But that’s where the trail led — a private school that catered to wealthy expats and a discreet orphanage run by a Catholic order that asked few questions. The mother had left the children there three months earlier with instructions to keep them safe “until the father stops looking.” She’d paid in cash and vanished.

Brogan sat in a sweltering back room with an old Vietnamese nun who spoke perfect English and even better silence. She slid a single photograph across the table: the two kids, healthy but scared, standing beside a man Brogan recognized from the initial file photos — not the client, but a different face entirely. A fixer. A trafficker who specialized in “relocating” children for the right price.

The nun’s voice was quiet. “The mother believed the father intended to sell them. Not to loving homes. To people who collect pretty things.”

Brogan’s knuckles whitened around his coffee cup. He hated people who lied at the start of a case. This one had lied about everything.

From Bangkok the trail jumped continents again — this time to Africa. Tanzania. Brogan flew into Dar es Salaam, then took a series of increasingly rough buses and boats north along the coast until he reached Bukoba, a small, dusty lakeside town on the western shore of Lake Victoria. It was the kind of place where electricity flickered and everyone knew everyone else’s business except the outsiders.

There, in a modest cinderblock house near the water, lived the man Brogan had crossed half the world to find: an aging former UN peacekeeper named Captain Joseph Mbezi, now running a small network that helped relocate at-risk children away from predators. Mbezi had served in the Balkans in the late ’90s — the same theater as the Ghost Platoon. He remembered the name Harlan. Not Richard. Elias.

“The sergeant,” Mbezi said over warm beer on his porch as Lake Victoria lapped at the shore. “He came through here once, years after Bosnia. Looking for something he lost in that mountain ambush. Artifacts, he said. Pieces of the past that funded newer evils. He left some names behind. Names that are still moving money today.”

Mbezi handed Brogan a worn envelope. Inside were photocopies of shipping manifests and bank transfers — the same shell companies that had appeared in Dave’s super-corn lab data. The same network that once moved looted Bosnian icons and manuscripts was now moving children and biotech contraband. Richard Harlan wasn’t a desperate father. He was a mid-level facilitator in that network, using custody disputes as cover to traffic kids for wealthy clients who wanted “exotic” adoptions or worse.

Brogan sat on that porch until the sun went down, smoking and staring at the lake. The case had dragged him through old haunts he never wanted to revisit: the heat of Southeast Asia, the ghosts of Bosnia via Mbezi’s stories, and now this quiet African lakeside town that felt too peaceful for the evil it was hiding.

He made two calls that night.

One to Major John Rush: “I need an extraction team that doesn’t ask questions. Two kids in Bangkok. Clean and quiet.”

The second to the mother, whose burner number he’d finally traced: “Your ex won’t be looking anymore. Not after tonight.”

Brogan flew back the long way — Dar es Salaam to Dubai to Seattle to Phoenix — never sleeping more than two hours at a stretch. When he finally walked into the client’s office in Scottsdale, Richard Harlan was waiting with a smug smile and a second check ready.

Brogan didn’t smile back.

He laid the envelope from Mbezi on the desk, followed by printed photos of the shell companies, the trafficking manifests, and a single Bosnian icon that had surfaced in a Zurich auction the week before — the same piece listed in the missing 1998 Ghost Platoon cargo.

“You lied from the first sentence,” Brogan said quietly. “I hate that.”

Harlan tried to reach for the desk drawer. Brogan’s hand was faster. One punch — clean, professional — and the man crumpled.

By the time the local authorities arrived (tipped off anonymously with ironclad evidence), Richard Harlan was already singing about the network, the super-corn connections, and the quiet investors who still moved artifacts and people like chess pieces. The kids were safely reunited with their mother in a secure location arranged by Rush’s people. The mother finally told the full truth: she’d run because she discovered her husband was using the children as leverage in a larger operation tied to the same Balkans-to-biotech pipeline Brogan had been chasing since the Santos case.

Brogan never cashed the final check. He burned it in the ashtray of his truck outside the pawn shop.

Travel still wasn’t his bag. He still hated the idea of leaving the States, still carried the weight of old duties he’d already fulfilled. But some cases dragged a man through every ghost he thought he’d buried — from Hollywood Nazis to Bosnian mountains, from Bangkok alleys to the shores of Lake Victoria.

In the end, very little truth had been told at the start.

But Brogan made sure the truth came out in the finish.

He lit a cigarette off the dashboard lighter and pointed the Ford toward the Rusty Nail. The boys would be waiting. Dave would want the notebook entries. Rush would want the names. Marmalade would probably just flick an ear and claim the best seat.

Brogan exhaled smoke toward the windshield.

“Next time,” he muttered to the empty cab, “they can find their own damn kids.”

But he knew he’d take the case again if it meant cutting another thread in the same old network.

Some ghosts didn’t stay buried. And Brogan had gotten very good at making sure they stayed gone when he finally caught up to them.

 

The Reign of Marmalade, King of Cats


 Before the Dumpster: The Reign of Marmalade, King of Cats

In the glittering world of championship cat shows, before the rain-soaked alleys and the sour smell of yesterday’s takeout, there was Marmalade.

He was born in a climate-controlled cattery outside Chicago, a long-haired orange tabby Persian whose bloodlines traced back through three generations of Grand Champions. From the moment his eyes opened—wide, copper-gold, and imperious—the breeders knew they had something special. His coat wasn’t just orange; it was liquid fire, deep marmalade with darker striping that caught the light like polished amber. His face was the perfect flat Persian dish, expressive without being extreme, and his massive ruff framed him like a lion’s mane.

They named him GC, NW Marmalade Monarch of Maplewood—King for short, once the titles started piling up.

His days were a carefully orchestrated symphony of luxury and discipline.

Mornings began with grooming. His human, a precise woman named Eleanor Voss (no relation to the disgraced DA, or so she claimed), would carry him to the marble grooming station in the sunlit conservatory. First, a gentle bath in hypoallergenic shampoo scented with faint vanilla and chamomile—never more than once a week, to preserve the natural oils, but always thorough. Then the endless combing: wide-tooth for the undercoat, fine-tooth for the top, working section by section while Marmalade reclined on a heated pad like a pharaoh receiving tribute. Powder to fluff the ruff. A soft cloth to polish the tear ducts so no stains marred that perfect face. Nails trimmed to elegant points. Teeth brushed with enzymatic paste he tolerated with regal disdain.

Breakfast was measured: a precise blend of high-protein kibble and wet food formulated for coat health, served in crystal bowls. No scraps. No treats that might dull the luster. Then play—structured, of course. Feather wands to maintain muscle tone, puzzle feeders to keep the mind sharp. Eleanor believed a bored champion was a losing champion.

Afternoons were for travel or rest. When a show loomed, they loaded into the custom van—climate-controlled crate lined with faux mink, classical music playing softly. Marmalade had seen the country from the best hotels: suites in New York, private grooming rooms in Houston, the grand ballroom at the CFA International Cat Show in Cleveland.

The shows themselves were his kingdom.

He entered the ring with the calm certainty of a monarch reviewing his court. Judges in white coats would lift him, turn him, run fingers through that glorious coat, check the bite, the tail plume, the ear set. Marmalade never squirmed. He never yowled. He fixed them with those copper eyes and allowed himself to be admired, purring just enough to show benevolence, never desperation.

“Best of Color… Best of Breed… Best in Show.”

The rosettes piled up. Blue ribbons the size of dinner plates. Silver bowls engraved with his name. Photos in Cat Fancy magazine, then online forums, then national breed publications. “Marmalade Monarch—undefeated in his division for two straight seasons.” Breeders offered stud fees that could buy a small car. Eleanor turned most down; she wanted to keep the line pure and the legend growing.

At the peak of his glory, Marmalade was more than a cat. He was the King of Cats.

Crowds gathered at the benching area just to see him. Children pointed. Serious fanciers whispered about his bone structure and coat texture. Rival Persians—exotics, Himalayans, even the occasional Maine Coon giant—eyed him with envy from their own grooming tables. He accepted it all as his due. In the quiet hours between rings, he would stretch on his velvet cushion, surveying the chaos of blow dryers, excited meows, and frantic owners, and feel the deep satisfaction of being exactly where he belonged: at the absolute top.

He had never known hunger. Never known cold. Never known a night without soft bedding and a human whose entire purpose seemed to revolve around his perfection.

There were quiet moments, though—rare cracks in the crown.

Late at night in a hotel suite, after Eleanor had gone to sleep, Marmalade would sometimes pad to the window and look out at the city lights. Something ancient stirred in his Persian blood: the memory of ancestors who hunted in barns, who climbed trees, who fought for territory under the moon. A faint itch for the wild that no amount of grooming could quite erase.

He pushed it down. Kings did not wander alleys. Kings reigned.

Then came the night everything changed.

It was after a triumphant Best in Show at a major regional in Indianapolis. Eleanor had celebrated with champagne. She left the carrier door unlatched while packing the van in the dark parking garage—just for a moment, while she answered a call about stud bookings.

Marmalade, curious and still riding the high of victory, slipped out to explore the concrete jungle of parked cars. A sudden car alarm blared. Eleanor panicked, dropped her phone, and in the confusion the carrier tumbled. Doors slammed. Engines roared.

When the chaos settled, the van pulled away without him.

Marmalade waited by the curb for hours, calling in that imperious yowl that had once summoned judges and admirers. No one came. Rain began to fall, soaking the glorious coat that had won so many ribbons. The perfect ruff matted. The copper eyes narrowed against the downpour.

By dawn he was no longer the undefeated King of Cats. He was a wet, hungry, bewildered orange tabby navigating storm drains and dumpsters, his championship titles meaning nothing to the rats and raccoons who now shared his new kingdom.

But that is another story.

This one ends on the glittering peak—when Marmalade Monarch of Maplewood still ruled the catwalks, when his coat shone like sunrise, when the world bent to acknowledge that yes, here was true feline royalty.

The King, in all his glory, before the fall.

Major John Rush and the Mouse in the Walls

 


Major John Rush and the Mouse in the Walls

Major John Rush kept the Montana ranch mostly empty by design. No full-time staff. No groundskeepers who asked questions. Just wide-open pasture, a sturdy log house with reinforced doors, and enough encrypted comms gear to run a small war from the basement if he ever needed to. He liked the silence. It let him think.

He was out on the porch at dusk, cleaning the .45 with slow, practiced strokes, when the anomaly appeared.

A tiny fedora—no bigger than a shot glass—bobbed across the gravel drive like it had a mind of its own. Under it walked Dave the Little Detective, plastic-straw cigar clenched between his teeth, notebook tucked under one arm, and a miniature backpack that looked suspiciously like it had been stitched from an old glove.

Rush didn’t reach for the pistol. He’d learned years ago that the smallest threats were sometimes the most useful.

The mouse stopped at the bottom step, looked up, and tipped the fedora. “Major. Brogan said the door might be open if a small guy needed a quiet place to lay low. Hope I’m not interrupting your evening constitutional.”

Rush studied him for a long second. Dave was exactly as described from the boys-around-the-table nights: sharp eyes, steady voice, and an air of professional calm that belonged on a man three feet taller.

“Come up,” Rush said. No smile, but no hostility either. “Coffee’s inside. Black. You’ll have to make do with a thimble.”

Dave climbed the steps with surprising agility, using the grain of the wood like handholds. Inside, Rush set a porcelain thimble on the heavy oak table and poured a careful drop of coffee. Dave hopped onto a coaster and settled in like he’d been invited to board meetings all his life.

They sat in silence for a minute while the fire crackled.

“You’re the one who tied the pigs, the raccoons, and that super-corn mess together,” Rush finally said. It wasn’t a question.

Dave nodded, chewing the end of his straw. “And you’re the tall quiet one who moves money and men without leaving footprints. Brogan trusts you. That’s good enough for me. But I’ve got a problem that’s too big for the farm and too small for most of your usual contacts.”

He opened the notebook. The pages were filled with neat, tiny handwriting and sketches. “The super-corn strain showed up in the feed bin again. This time it’s not just making animals docile—it’s got a secondary compound. Makes them suggestible. Easy to lead. The pigs aren’t just hoarding anymore. They’re building an operation. Using the raccoon crew as muscle and distributors. But here’s the wrinkle: the seed stock is coming from a secure agrotech lab in Colorado. Corporate. Federal grants. The kind of place that has layers of security even your old teams would respect.”

Rush leaned back, arms crossed. “And you want me to… what? Burn the lab?”

Dave shook his head. “No. I want in. Quietly. I need to see the records, the manifests, who’s really funding the side deals. But I can’t get past the perimeter fences or the motion sensors. Too small to trigger most of them, sure—but I still need eyes on the inside and a way to move data out without leaving a trace.”

Rush almost smiled. Almost. “You’re asking a man who once secured rare-earth sites in places that don’t exist on maps to play getaway driver for a few ounces of fur.”

Dave met his gaze without flinching. “Few ounces of fur that already cracked the hot-sauce trap on the pigs, flipped a couple of raccoons, and put the ledger in Brogan’s hands that started this whole Ghost Platoon thread unraveling. I know my stuff, Major. And I don’t waste anyone’s time.”

The Major had to hand it to the little guy. Dave knew his stuff. Not bad for a few ounces of fur.

Rush stood, walked to a locked cabinet, and pulled out a slim black case. Inside was a custom micro-drone rig—encrypted, palm-sized, with a tiny claw attachment and high-res camera. He set it on the table next to the thimble.

“You ride in my truck. I get you to the outer fence line after dark. You go in alone—through the vents, the walls, whatever mice do. Plant this where it can siphon the server logs overnight. I’ll extract you at 0400. No heroics. No noise. If you get made, I’m not coming in guns blazing. Too many questions.”

Dave examined the drone with professional interest, then looked up. “Fair. But if I find proof the funding loops back to old Balkans players—the ones tied to your ghost from ’98—I expect you to let me through the door again. Real talk. No layers.”

Rush regarded the mouse for a long moment. Most people who asked for that kind of access got shown the exit. But Dave had already earned a seat at the table with Brogan, Vinny, Mike, and Ellie. And the little detective had done it without ever raising his voice or asking for a cut.

“Door stays open for results,” Rush said. “Not promises. Those I really care about—and the ones I trust—get that much. Everyone else stays outside.”

They left at midnight. Rush’s truck rolled silent on back roads, no lights until they were deep in the national forest bordering the agrotech campus. Dave rode in a modified ammo can strapped to the dash, notebook ready.

At the fence line, Rush killed the engine. Dave slipped out, fedora tilted low, drone secured to his back like a parachute.

“Four hours,” Rush reminded him.

“Copy that, Major.”

The mouse vanished into the tall grass like he’d never been there.

Rush waited in the dark, .45 loose in its holster, listening to the wind through the pines. He thought about all the big operators he’d worked with over the decades—Delta, contractors, warlords—and how none of them had ever made him feel quite this quietly impressed.

A few ounces of fur. A plastic-straw cigar. And a mind that saw the same gray spaces Rush had spent his life navigating.

At 0357 the grass rustled. Dave reappeared, notebook fuller, drone back in its case, a single kernel of super-corn tucked in his vest pocket as evidence.

“Got it,” the mouse said, climbing back into the truck. “Manifests show transfers to a shell company linked to a certain retired JAG officer who used to serve in Bosnia. Same network that made your Ghost Platoon file disappear. And the pigs are getting their cut through raccoon intermediaries tied to the Iron Horsemen’s old routes.”

Rush started the engine, turned the truck toward the mountains. “Not bad, Detective.”

Dave lit the end of his straw and exhaled a tiny puff. “Told you I knew my stuff.”

The Major allowed himself the ghost of a smile as the ranch lights appeared on the horizon. He’d let one more through the door tonight.

A small one. But one who belonged.

And in Rush’s world, that was rarer than most people ever understood.

The Gang on the Cape

The Gang on the Cape For once, nobody was chasing anyone, nobody was bleeding, and nobody was trying to save the world. James Brogan had dec...