Monday, May 25, 2026

James Brogan: Missing Child

James Brogan: Missing Child

The rain was coming down in sheets when the woman walked into my office above O’Malley’s bar. She was mid-thirties, eyes red from crying, clutching a damp photo like it was the only thing keeping her alive.

“Mr. Brogan, my son… he’s been gone three days.”

I took the picture. Cute kid, maybe eight years old, gap-toothed smile, wearing a red hoodie. Name was Tommy Delgado. Single mom, worked two jobs, no dad in the picture. The kind of case that usually ends in heartbreak.

“Tell me everything,” I said, pouring her coffee that had been sitting on the hot plate too long.

She told me Tommy had gone to the park after school like always. Never came home. Cops had already written it off as a runaway or custody thing, even though there was no custody to fight over. I hate when they do that.

I started with the park. Found a couple of old-timers playing chess under a shelter who remembered seeing Tommy talking to some guy near the swings. Description was vague: tall, dark coat, baseball cap. Not exactly helpful in a city full of tall guys in dark coats.

The next lead came from a kid on a bike who said Tommy had been bragging about a “secret fort” he found near the old railyard. Kids and secret forts. My stomach tightened.

I spent the night walking those railyard tracks with a flashlight, rain soaking through my coat. Around 2 a.m., I found it — an old maintenance shed half-hidden by overgrown weeds. Inside were candy wrappers, a sleeping bag, and one small red sneaker.

My heart dropped.

Then I heard it. A small voice.

“...hello?”

Tommy was in the corner, curled up, dehydrated and scared but alive. Turns out he’d been playing hide-and-seek with some older kids who took the game too far and left him there as a prank. He got lost in the dark, twisted his ankle, and couldn’t make it home. The “tall man in the dark coat” was just the park maintenance guy emptying trash.

I carried the kid out on my back. Called his mom from the car. She met us at the hospital, sobbing so hard I had to look away.

Later, sitting in my office with a much-needed whiskey, I watched the sunrise over the city. Another missing child who got lucky. Too many don’t.

The phone rang. Another case.

I answered it.

“Brogan Investigations. What’s missing this time?”

 

James Brogan and the Missing Pet

James Brogan and the Missing Pet

The rain was doing that annoying half-assed drizzle that soaks you slower than a full pour, like the sky couldn’t decide whether to commit. I was nursing a lukewarm coffee in my office above the dry cleaner when the door opened and in walked Mrs. Eleanor Hargrove, all pearls and quiet desperation.

“Mr. Brogan,” she said, clutching a handkerchief like it owed her money. “It’s Mr. Whiskers. He’s gone.”

I raised an eyebrow. “Mr. Whiskers being…?”

“My Persian. Fourteen years old. He’s never missed dinner in his life.”

I almost told her to check the neighbor’s garage or the local tomcat circuit, but something in her eyes stopped me. Not just worry—fear. The kind that says more than a cat is missing.

I took the case. Hell, rent was due and the dry cleaner downstairs had started playing passive-aggressive music about unpaid bills.

Mrs. Hargrove lived in one of those old-money neighborhoods where the lawns look combed and the secrets are buried deeper than the septic tanks. She showed me the sunroom where Mr. Whiskers spent his days glaring at birds. No broken glass, no forced entry. Just an open window and a missing fat, entitled cat.

I started with the obvious. The husband, Reginald Hargrove, was a retired hedge fund guy who spent most days pretending to play golf while actually drinking at the club. He didn’t seem broken up about the cat. In fact, he seemed a little too relieved.

“Damned thing always shredded my leather chair,” he grumbled. “Probably off terrorizing the neighborhood.”

But when I asked him where he was the night Mr. Whiskers disappeared, he got cagey. Said he was “at the club.” His eyes didn’t match his mouth.

I spent two days shaking the usual trees. Animal shelters, local kids with reward flyers, even the weird lady three blocks over who feeds every stray within a five-mile radius. Nothing.

On the third night, I was sitting in my car watching the Hargrove house when I saw something strange. Reginald slipped out the back door at 1:17 a.m. carrying a small cooler and a flashlight. I followed him at a distance.

He drove to an old abandoned warehouse on the edge of the industrial district. The kind of place where bad decisions go to die. I parked behind a dumpster and crept closer.

Inside, I heard voices. Reginald… and another man. Then a very familiar, very pissed-off meow.

I kicked the side door open, gun drawn but low. Reginald spun around, looking like a kid caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Next to him stood a skinny guy in a leather jacket holding Mr. Whiskers in one of those fancy cat carriers.

“Evening, gentlemen,” I said. “Nice night for a catnapping.”

Turns out Reginald had racked up some serious gambling debts with the wrong people. The kind that break legs. They’d taken Mr. Whiskers as leverage, knowing Eleanor would pay anything for her precious baby. Reginald was supposed to deliver the final ransom payment tonight.

The skinny guy reached for something. I put a round into the wall near his head.

“Easy,” I said. “We’re all gonna walk away calm. You get your money from Reginald tomorrow, plus interest for emotional distress. I get the cat. Everybody lives.”

They weren’t happy, but they weren’t stupid. Ten minutes later I was driving back with Mr. Whiskers yowling indignantly in the passenger seat like I’d personally offended his ancestors.

Eleanor cried when I handed the carrier over. Actual tears. She paid me double my rate and threw in a bottle of 30-year-old scotch.

As I left, Reginald watched me from the window. He gave me a small, grateful nod. Sometimes the villain isn’t the guy you think. Sometimes he’s just a weak man who got in too deep and was trying, in his own pathetic way, to fix it.

I lit a cigarette on the porch and looked up at the clearing sky.

“Another happy ending,” I muttered. “Sort of.”

Mr. Whiskers watched me through the window with ancient, judgmental eyes, like he knew I was full of shit.

He probably was right.

 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Josef Gunther: The Armored Shadow

 

Josef Gunther: The Armored Shadow

Berlin, January–February 1985

The first armored truck robbery happened on a grey January morning in Kreuzberg. Diamond-tipped drills cut through the reinforced glass in under ninety seconds. Flashbang grenades and smoke turned the inside of the truck into hell. The guards were left blind and deaf while the robbers cleaned out nearly 2 million Deutsche Marks in cash and valuables. They were gone before the first siren sounded.

Three more robberies followed in rapid succession. The pattern was professional, ruthless, and impossibly efficient. Insurance companies were bleeding money. The police were embarrassed. And so, in late January, Josef Gunther was hired.

Gunther, now 58, took the case with his usual grim silence. He knew this was no ordinary crew. This had the smell of old professionals — men who had learned their trade on both sides of the Wall.


The Long Hunt Begins

For the next month, Gunther disappeared into the shadows of Berlin.

He started at the bottom. He interviewed the traumatized guards, studied the drill marks on the glass, and walked every robbery route at the exact same time of day. He noticed small details others missed: the same black Mercedes with East German plates appearing near two different sites, a faint scent of Russian cigarettes at one dump site, and a guard who suddenly started wearing expensive new boots after the second robbery.

Gunther spent long, freezing nights in his small apartment reviewing files, smoking endless cigarettes, and drinking black coffee. He crossed the Wall multiple times using old contacts, risking everything to talk to former Stasi informants who had gone private. The picture slowly emerged.

The gang was led by a former Stasi colonel named Kessler — a man Gunther had clashed with years earlier. Kessler had built a sophisticated network that used old smuggling tunnels under the Wall, routes through Poland, and corrupt checkpoints. Weapons and drugs came from the East. Cash and luxury goods flowed back. The “freedom” of reunification preparations had created perfect chaos for men like Kessler to exploit.

Gunther tracked one of the drivers for twelve days straight. He slept in his car, followed the man through icy streets, and watched him meet with Polish smugglers near the border. The cold was brutal. Gunther’s old war wounds ached constantly. Twice he was nearly caught. Once he had to hide in a freezing dumpster for three hours while Kessler’s men searched the area.

He met informants in smoky bars in Kreuzberg and dark alleys in Wedding. One old contact, a former Stasi logistics officer, whispered over cheap vodka:

“Kessler isn’t just robbing trucks. He’s moving girls too. Young ones from poor villages in Poland and Romania. Tells them they’ll have good jobs in the West. Instead, they end up in private clubs. The money funds everything.”

Gunther’s face hardened. He hated human trafficking more than anything else. It reminded him of the worst days in the gulag.


The Breaking Point

By the third week, Gunther was exhausted but closing in.

He discovered the main warehouse — an old Stasi safe house in a quiet industrial area of East Berlin, just a few hundred meters from the Wall. Through a frozen night of surveillance, he watched trucks coming and going. He saw young women being moved like cargo. He saw crates of guns and heroin being loaded.

One night, while hiding on a rooftop in the biting cold, Gunther allowed himself a rare moment of doubt. His hands were shaking from the frost. His back screamed with pain. He wondered if he was too old for this life. Then he thought of the girls. Of the guards who had been beaten. Of the city trying to heal while parasites like Kessler fed on its wounds.

He crushed the doubt like a cigarette under his boot.


The Raid

On the night of February 28th, Gunther led the assault with a small, trusted team of West German police and his own contacts.

The raid was violent and chaotic. Gunther moved like a man half his age — kicking in doors, disarming guards, and pushing through smoke-filled rooms. He found Kessler in the back office counting money while two terrified girls huddled in the corner.

Gunther slammed the ex-Stasi colonel against the wall with years of pent-up rage.

“You call this freedom?” Gunther growled. “Selling girls and poison while wearing a suit? You’re not a businessman. You’re a parasite.”

Kessler sneered. “The Wall is coming down soon, Gunther. And when it does, men like me will own this city.”

Gunther’s reply was cold steel: “Not if I have anything to say about it.”

The raid was a major success. They rescued 19 young women, seized millions in stolen cash, large quantities of heroin and weapons, and gathered enough evidence to dismantle Kessler’s entire network. Several politicians and businessmen on both sides of the Wall were later implicated.


Aftermath

Two days later, Gunther stood alone near the Wall at dawn, smoking a cigarette as the snow fell softly.

He was exhausted. His body hurt. His soul felt heavy. But he had done what he set out to do.

He thought of Finland. Of Mikael Eino. Of all the times he had walked the line between duty and conscience. Some days the weight felt crushing. But he kept going.

Because someone had to.

The Wall would eventually fall. But until that day, Josef Gunther would continue his quiet, brutal work — protecting the idea of a better Germany from those who would corrupt it, no matter which side they claimed to stand on.

Josef Gunther – Bank Robbery

  Josef Gunther – Bank Robbery (Munich, West Germany, 1991) Josef Gunther was a grizzled Kriminalhauptkommissar in the Munich Kripo, a man s...