Chapter 36: The Code
Frank Miller had just closed the file on his last operation. For once, the city felt quiet. No gunfire, no late-night stakeouts, no sudden calls from dispatch. Just a simple day of paperwork, a routine patrol, and the rare peace that came after a case was done.
But peace never lasted long.
One early morning, without warning, it began.
Frank woke before dawn, restless and uneasy. No alarm. No dreams. Just that gnawing weight in his chest, a thousand thoughts scattering through his head but no answers forming. His body moved automatically: the scrape of a chair, the hiss of the kettle, the bitter smell of coffee. He poured it into a chipped mug, lit a cigar, and stood at the window.
The city still slept. Neon signs flickered in the distance, but most buildings lay dark, heavy, silent. The horizon cracked open with the first traces of light. For three hours he barely moved, smoke curling around him as the sunrise painted his reflection in the glass.
His instincts screamed something was wrong. No target. No enemy. Just silence. The kind of silence that made killers move and survivors listen.
Finally, at 7:22, he sat at the table, forcing himself through the motions of a quick breakfast. Then his phone buzzed.
The sound cut through the quiet like a gunshot. His body tensed before his mind even caught up — muscles tight, breath held, hand snapping to the phone as if it were a trigger.
Unknown Number.
He answered.
No voice. Just static. Then the line went dead.
Seconds later, a message appeared: numbers, symbols, scattered like broken glass. A code.
Frank’s food went cold. He pushed the plate aside and carried the phone to his study. Paper spread across the desk, pen scratching. He tried substitutions first, then calendar dates, then grid coordinates. Numbers became letters, letters became maps. He scribbled strings, circled patterns, crossed them out.
Nothing.
Then he shifted tactics. Military codes. Old mercenary ciphers. He marked the sequence against known GPS formats. Slowly, the pieces aligned — longitude, latitude. A location. A time.
The junkyard. 3 p.m.
That afternoon, Frank changed into plain clothes and drove out. The junkyard sprawled like a graveyard of metal, rusted shells stacked in jagged towers. Oil and gasoline bled into the mud, the stench thick and sour in the air. Stray dogs growled from the shadows, ribs sharp beneath their skin. Flies buzzed in lazy circles above pools of black water.
Frank scanned the wreckage, boots sinking into muck. He checked every alley between stacked cars, every rusting cabin. A metallic clang echoed — just a dog knocking debris aside. A faint creak — only the wind shifting a car door. Half an hour passed, his senses straining for something human, something alive.
Nothing.
Then he saw it: a mangy dog, scarred and hollow-eyed, with words painted crudely on its back in black strokes. Frank crouched low, squinting.
"8 pm Café."
He snapped a photo, lips tightening. Was it a location... or a meeting time?
That night, Frank started looking. He asked carefully, never directly.
At a corner newspaper stand, he handed over coins for a paper. "Busy night around here?" he asked casually.
The vendor shrugged. "Same as always. Factories let out, drunks fill the alleys. Why?"
"Looking for a place," Frank said, folding the paper under his arm. "Thought I heard someone mention an ’8 pm.’ Ring a bell?"
The man frowned, shook his head. "Never heard of it. Maybe you mean a happy hour?"
Later, Frank slipped into a small café. The waitress poured him coffee, and he asked, "This place ever go by another name? Something like... Eight?"
She gave him a puzzled look. "No, sir. Just ’Harbor View.’ You sure you’re not mixing it up?"
Frank smiled faintly, hiding the photo on his phone. "Yeah. Maybe I am."
But he waited anyway. The clock struck 8:00. He sipped bitter coffee, eyes roaming the faces around him. Nobody approached.
9:00. His jaw clenched. He caught himself checking the window, half-expecting to see someone watching from the street.
10:00. The staff dimmed the lights. The last customer left.
The café closed, and Frank sat staring at his reflection in the black window, his cup empty, his lead colder than the night air. Hopelessness pressed down on him like a weight. Another dead end.
Back home, Frank showered, but the water couldn’t wash away the itch under his skin. He cooked a quick dinner, barely tasted it, and sat at his work table again, staring at the photo of the dog. Something didn’t add up. He was missing a piece.
Then came the sound. A soft thud
at the door. No knock. No footsteps. Just silence.Frank’s instincts lit up. He grabbed his sidearm, crouched low, and moved fast — clearing the corners, checking the hall. He yanked open the door, weapon leveled.
Nothing.
Only an envelope lying on the floor.
Inside: a single photograph.
Frank’s grip tightened. It was him, in the junkyard, raising his phone to take the picture of the dog. Whoever had sent it had been close. Watching. Breathing the same sour air.
And now, they’d broken into his life to prove it.
His pulse slowed, not quickened — mercenary calm. He cleared the street, scanning rooftops, alleys, windows. Nothing. Professional work. Whoever they were, they knew how to vanish.
Frank secured every lock, checked the windows, searched the rooms for bugs. Clean. Too clean.
The message was clear: he wasn’t the hunter tonight.
Sitting back at his desk, Frank opened his laptop again. He typed 8 pm café into the search bar. Dozens of results. None matched.
Frustration tightened in his chest. He dug deeper, tried alternate spellings, sifted through old directories. Then — buried in the listings — he found it.
8 pm Café.
A real place. Small, tucked away on the edge of the city, a café so obscure most people wouldn’t even know it existed.
Frank leaned back, staring at the screen. Whoever was playing this game hadn’t just tested him — they’d marked him. This wasn’t random. It was deliberate.
Tomorrow, at 8, he’d be there. Armed. Ready. This time, no mistakes.
He shut the laptop and lay on the bed, eyes on the ceiling. His mind wouldn’t quiet, questions clawing at him. Who was behind this? What did they want? And how much had they already seen?
As the silence of the night deepened, Frank’s eyes finally closed.
Tomorrow, everything would begin.