Share

The Clean Up

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-04-26 05:11:19

I texted him a single word.

Up.

I had developed this protocol early in my life as a man who did this work. One character, no punctuation, sent from a burner phone to a burner phone, received on a dedicated device Faraz kept in the glove compartment of the SUV and had never, in seven years, mentioned.

It meant: come in.

He had never received it before.

I heard the front foor. I heard the stairs. I heard him stop one full second at the top of the landing outside 437 the sound of a man registering, for the first time in seven years, the interior of a space he had delivered me to sixteen times without entering.

Then he came in.

He stopped in the doorway of the house.

His eyes moved. I want to tell you how they moved. Not fast. Not panicked. Faraz is not a man who panics. His eyes moved the way a professional’s eyes move when the professional has just been given a new job and is inventorying the scope. The broken front door I had stacked against the wall. The glass under the coffee table. The pink box on the coffee table. The armchair I had been sitting in. The corner chair.

His eyes stopped on the mask.

The Bauta was still on my face. I had not removed it after she left. I had not decided, consciously, to keep it on — I had simply not taken it off, and the not-taking-off had carried me through the hundred and eleven seconds at the window, and through the text to Faraz, and now into the moment where my driver of seven years was seeing, for the first time, what I wore when I did the work he had been driving me to and from.

He looked at the silver.

He did not flinch.

He did not, in any way I could register on his face, revise his opinion of me.

He said, quiet: “Mr. Reed.”

I said: “Faraz.”

He said: “What do you need.”

I gave him a list.

I gave it to him in the operational cadence I would have used to give it to myself short, efficient, sequenced. He nodded at each item. He did not write anything down. He did not need to.

Body: wrapped, cased, staged for the transport vehicle I had pre-positioned six blocks south on Day Seven.

Scene: re-set. The front door replaced with the pre-fabricated identical unit I had stored in a Brooklyn warehouse four years ago against exactly this kind of contingency. Hinges reseated. Deadbolt rekeyed to Derek’s old pattern. A small amount of scuffing around the strike plate that would pass a detective’s visual inspection without flagging.

The apartment: cleaned to the standard of ‘a man came home, drank, and left in a hurry.’ Not ‘a man was taken.’ Overturned glass righted. Rug rotated. TV left on.

Digital: handled by me, from my study, within the next four hours.

Wife’s belongings: untouched. What she had taken, she had taken. What she had left, we did not disturb.

Faraz said: “The chair.”

He had noticed it. I did not respond immediately. I let the silence sit. He was asking whether the chair went or stayed. Whether it was ‘her belongings’ or ‘apartment furniture.’

I said: “Stays. She left it.”

He looked at the chair for two additional seconds.

Then he said, with the specific economy of a man who had just, in two seconds, understood something about his employer that he was not going to ask about, ever: “Understood.”

We worked.

I am not going to describe the parts of the work I do not, as a matter of personal ethic, describe. What I will tell you is this: the disposal protocol I have developed over four years is sound. It is not elegant. It is not interesting. It is a protocol I arrived at by reading every available forensic textbook in the open literature and by building, in my head, the profile of the kind of man I was going to need to defeat, which is the kind of man who has been trained by that same literature to look for the signs the protocol erases.

The work took sixty-two minutes.

Faraz, across those sixty-two minutes, said four words.

Two of them were “lift” and “lower,” spoken at the two moments in the work when weight distribution required verbal coordination. The other two were “Mr. Reed” and “Yes,” spoken at the moment I asked him to verify that the transport vehicle’s interior was as I had left it six days earlier.

He did not look at me, during the work, in a way I could have objected to.

He did not look away from me, during the work, in a way that would have registered as avoidance.

He simply did the work.

The chair stayed where she had left it.

We did not touch it.

I noticed, at one point when I passed it, that the cushion still held a small compression in the seat where she had been sitting for ninety-one minutes. The compression would relax over the next forty-eight hours. No forensic protocol would ever register it. It was, in the narrow window of tonight, the only evidence in the apartment that she had ever been in that chair.

I wanted, for a single second, to put my hand on the compression.

I did not.

I walked past the chair four times in the course of the cleanup and each time I walked past it I registered the compression and each time I did not permit myself to touch it, and the registration was, by the fourth time, beginning to feel like a thing I was doing on purpose.

I made a note of the registration.

I did not file it.

I had, since yesterday evening, begun a second internal queue for observations I could not categorize. The not-filing was itself becoming a pattern. I was going to have to address the pattern, at some point, with the same rigor I addressed other patterns. Not tonight.

At three forty-one AM the door was back on its hinges.

At three fifty-eight the apartment was staged to the standard.

At four seventeen I sat at Derek’s kitchen table with his laptop open and I began the digital work.

I do not, in this narrative, want to explain exactly how I move a phone’s geolocation or how I spoof a credit card trace or how I cause an email client to produce a message from an IP address five hundred miles north of the sender’s physical location. I have the capacity because Arbitr AI has federal data contracts that give the platform, and therefore give me, the technical reach to do it. I had developed the specific techniques across four previous cases. I had refined them against the counterforensic capabilities of the FBI’s current computational tools, which I had access to through a separate contract and had tested against silently for approximately two and a half years.

In eighty-seven minutes, I built Derek Calloway’s next five days.

At 5:42 AM Wednesday, his phone would ping a tower in Albany.

At 6:18 AM, his Chase Visa would be used at a BP gas station in Rhinebeck.

At 9:02 AM Thursday, a short, specifically ambiguous email would be sent from his G***l account to his work address, pleading a sudden family emergency and requesting three days off.

On Friday afternoon, his phone’s geolocation would go dark in the mountains around Hunter, and a detective subsequently reviewing the pattern would conclude, with appropriate professional uncertainty, that Derek Calloway had either lost his phone in the woods or had disposed of it intentionally. Either reading would support the narrative the family would be developing by then, which was that Derek had not been himself recently and had perhaps chosen to go off-grid for some unspecified duration.

The narrative did not match the truth. The narrative did, however, match a specific narrative template the investigation would, by the time it got to it, find easy to accept.

I closed the laptop.

Faraz waited at the door.

I looked around the apartment one more time. The chair in the corner. The pink box no longer on the coffee table — it was in the van with her, in Sunnyside, and I was glad it was. The book she had been reading earlier in the evening, face-down on the floor where it had fallen. I picked the book up. I set it on the arm of the chair.

I noticed, in doing so, that my hand was on the cushion for a half-second longer than it needed to be.

I removed the hand.

I left 437 Birchwood at 5:47 AM on a Wednesday morning in November.

The sky over Park Slope was the specific deep blue that precedes sunrise by about twenty minutes. The street was empty. A cat on a stoop three doors down watched us load the last item into the SUV and did not move. The transport vehicle had left an hour earlier, driven by a third party I had contracted through the same network I used for all auxiliary logistics, who did not know whom the contents of the case had belonged to and did not know whom they had been delivered for.

Faraz drove.

I sat in the back.

I took the mask off.

I put it in the velvet case. I closed the case. I set the case on the seat beside me. I did not look at it for the rest of the drive.

I looked at the window instead at the city sliding past in pre-dawn greys, at the river flat and steel-colored as we crossed the Brooklyn Bridge, at the lights of lower Manhattan still on in the buildings of the financial district and I thought about the hundred and eleven seconds I had stood at the window of 437 watching the street after her taillights were already gone.

I had, tonight, done the work I had come to do. Derek Calloway was, as an operational matter, closed.

I had also, tonight, crossed a line I had drawn for myself four years ago without explicitly naming, which was: the subjects of my interventions were not people I knew. Not people whose voices I had heard in the living color of a real room. Not people whose hand had asked mine to stay.

I knew her now.

And in the back of the SUV at 5:58 AM on a Wednesday morning, while Faraz drove me home through the grey of the bridge, I permitted myself to say out loud, for the first and last time, one sentence that I did not, before tonight, have in me to say.

I said it low. I said it to no one.

I said: “She will not be one of the twenty.”

Faraz did not look in the mirror.

He had, I think, already known.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Day Before

    Saoirse POVMonday was the last ordinary day, and I spent it the way you spend a thing you know you are not going to have again.I did not spend it grieving. I want to tell you that, because a different woman a woman with less practice than I had gotten, that autumn, at holding more than one true thing might have spent the last ordinary day drowning in the loss of it. I did not drown. I had learned, on a kitchen floor at two AM and at a café window and in a front room in Brooklyn Heights, that the loss and the day could both be true at the same time, and that letting the loss have the whole day would be letting it steal the day, and I was not going to let it steal the day.So I lived the day.──I did the small practical things.I called my three standing clients and told them I was going to be unreachable for a few days for a family matter, and I moved what could be moved and confirmed what could not. I paid my quarterly taxes early, because I did not know what the next weeks were go

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Prosecutor

    Third POV Elena Park kept the spreadsheet on a personal laptop that never connected to the Eastern District’s network.She had started it twenty-six months earlier, on a Sunday, after a third case had crossed her desk in eighteen months that had the same wrong shape a man with a documented history of intimate-partner violence, a man whom the system had failed to convict or contain, a man who had then simply, cleanly, completely disappeared. Not fled. Not surfaced elsewhere under another name. Disappeared, in the specific way that left a digital trail just convincing enough to close a missing-persons file and just convenient enough to make a careful person’s skin prickle.Three, twenty-six months ago.Eleven, now.Elena had built the spreadsheet the way she built everything quietly, without telling anyone, on her own time, against the day when the pattern would either dissolve into coincidence or harden into a case. Eleven disappeared men. Eleven documented abusers. Eleven digital tra

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Hand Off

    Marcus POV I gave the machine three days, and on the fourth I gave it Lena.The three days compressed into a kind of work I had not done in years sustained, total, uninterrupted, the work of a man assembling a thing whose deadline was real and whose specification was unforgiving. The statement reached its final form: eighteen pages, every sentence routing culpability to me and away from everyone else. The evidence package neared completion the records of the twenty, sourced individually, structured so that a prosecutor receiving them would have a complete case requiring no further investigation, and therefore no subpoenas, and therefore no threads pulled through Priya’s compliance question or Saoirse’s three sentences or the data of a company that was about to belong to someone else.Saoirse worked beside me for most of it. Not on the package the package was mine, the twenty were mine, and I was not going to let her hands touch the record of them but in the room, at the second desk,

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Shorten Clock

    Marcus POV Saoirse came back from Priya’s at eleven forty PM.I had been at the desk in the study with the statement, which was now eleven pages and most of the way to complete. I heard the van. I heard Faraz let her in. I heard her come up the stairs, and I turned in the chair, and I read her face, and her face told me two things before she said either of them.The first thing her face told me was that she had done it. She had told Priya everything. The telling had cost her something, and the cost was visible in the specific exhaustion of a woman who has spent an evening handing the worst truth of her life to the person she loves most.The second thing her face told me was that something had changed about the timeline.I said: “Sit down. Tell me.”She sat. She told me.──She told me that Priya now knew all of it. The night, the count, my name, the second queue, the fact that her own escalation fourteen months ago had been the first link in the chain.She told me what Priya had said

  • The Killer Who Found Me    Everything

    Saoirse POVI went to Priya’s apartment on Tuesday night.I did not bring curry. I did not bring wine. I brought nothing, because I had understood, lying awake on Monday night beside the man who was writing his own confession in the next room, that what I was going to do at Priya’s apartment on Tuesday was not a thing you brought food to. I drove to her place in Kensington and I climbed the stairs to the third floor and I knocked, and when she opened the door I said, before I was even inside: “I’m going to tell you the whole thing. The thing I couldn’t tell you Saturday. I need you to let me get all the way through it before you say anything.”Priya looked at me for a long moment in her doorway.Then she stepped back and let me in, and she said: “Okay.”──We sat at her kitchen table.And I told her.I told her about the night. The door coming off its hinges. The man in the silver mask. Derek on the kitchen floor. I told her what I had asked the man for not to kill Derek, not at first

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Board, Cleared

    Marcus POV Saoirse was at the house when I got back from the lunch.She had not gone home after Sunday. She had, on Monday morning, driven to a job in Red Hook and then come back to Brooklyn Heights rather than to Ditmas Park, and Faraz had let her in, and when I came through the door at two forty PM she was in the front room with the book her book, the one she had bought open on her knee, not reading it, waiting.She looked up when I came in.She read my face the way she had learned to read my face.She said: “He didn’t take the story.”“No,” I said. “He didn’t take the story.”I sat down across from her. I told her the lunch. I told her about Anneke Vos the woman Doyle had buried in 2009, the case the system failed, the fifteen years Doyle had been carrying her. I told her that Doyle was not, it turned out, trying to catch me, but was trying to determine whether I was a man who deserved to be allowed to stop on his own terms. I told her what I had told Doyle, which was the whole tr

  • The Killer Who Found Me    His Voice

    Saoirse POVOn Sunday afternoon I went to the bookstore on Cortelyou Road.I want to tell you why, because the why was not what a reasonable woman would have said if you had asked her on Sunday morning. The reasonable woman would have said *I needed to get out of the apartment.* She would have said

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Variable

    Marcus POVI sat at the terminal in my study and I watched the pin.It was a small red dot on a map tile of Ditmas Park, parked in the middle of Argyle Road eighty feet from the front of Saoirse’s building, a

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Man At The Door

    Saoirse POVEddie Doyle came to my apartment on a Saturday at seven-eighteen PM.I had been home for two hours by then. I had eaten dinner at the small kitchen table I had bought myself the week before. I had put my grandmother’s photograph on the windowsill. I had been, in the slow careful way a w

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Acceleration

    Marcus POVI was at the café before her.I want to tell you why, because the why matters. I had not engineered the encounter. I had in the eleven days since the burial of the tulips stopped engineering. The folder had grown to twenty-one entries, and the entries had begun, without my having decided

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status