
Letter from the dead
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
The café sat at the end of a narrow street, its walls weathered, its sign nearly eaten away by rust and rain. A faint outline of the words Time Stops Café still clung above the doorway, letters chipped and half-swallowed by the years. Michael parked across the road, engine ticking in the silence, his hands gripping the wheel longer than necessary.
Clara shifted uneasily in her seat. “This is it?” she whispered.
“This is it,” Michael said flatly.
He stepped out first, scanning both ends of the street before circling the car to help her. Clara leaned on his arm, her body still heavy with fatigue, but her eyes remained fixed on the peeling paint of the café’s door. When she pushed it open, the bell above gave a sharp, metallic chime that rang too loud in the empty space.
Inside, the café felt like a room caught between life and abandonment. Two small tables stood in the middle, their surfaces scarred by years of cups and careless hands. The smell of stale beans clung to the air. Behind the counter, a man in his forties looked up quickly, his face pale, his jaw tight as if they had just caught him mid-crime.
Michael gave a small nod. “Afternoon.”
The bartender swallowed, his hand hovering near the cash register. His voice cracked when he spoke. “We’re… closed.”
“No,” Michael said calmly, stepping closer. “You’re not closed. You’re scared.”
The man’s eyes darted between them, then to the window as though expecting someone to burst in. Clara noticed his hands trembling. She exchanged a quick look with Michael, but he was already reading the man’s fear like a page.
Finally, the bartender exhaled shakily. “He told me you’d come. Gave me a picture. Said if I didn’t hand over the letter when they arrived—that if I breathed a word to the police—my daughter… my daughter would die.” His voice broke on the last word. “She’s in the hospital. She’s only twelve.”
Clara’s breath seized at that moment. She saw his desperation in every line of his face, the helplessness of a man trapped in someone else’s cruelty.
Michael rested his hand on the counter, his voice low but steady. “Your daughter is safe. I promise you that. But I need you to answer a few questions, and you’ll answer them truthfully. Do you understand?”
The bartender looked torn between disbelief and fragile hope. “You don’t know these people. They—”
Michael cut him off, eyes sharp. “I know enough. And I know they count on your fear more than your silence. If you want your daughter safe, you’ll talk. Right now.”
Clara reached into her bag, pulled out a thick ward of cash, and set it quietly on the counter. The sound of the bundle hitting the wood made the man freeze. “This will help with her care,” she said softly, though her own voice shook. “But you have to trust us.”
The bartender’s shoulders dropped low. He reached beneath the counter and drew out a sealed envelope. His fingers lingered on it for a moment, as though letting go would seal his fate whether good or bad. Then he slid it across.
“She—she’s all I have, please don't let them harm her” he whispered and begged silently.
Michael took the letter, slipping it into his jacket without opening it. His eyes stayed focused on the man. “Your daughter will be fine. But you need to disappear for a while. Close this place, take her somewhere safe. So that If they come back, they won’t find you. Understood?”
The bartender nodded quickly, tears at the edge of his eyes. “Yes. Yes, I understand.”
Clara looked at him, her heart twisting. She wanted to say more, to give him a piece of the comfort she wished someone had given her. But her throat tightened and no words came. All she managed was a faint, “Take care of her.”
Michael placed a steadying hand on Clara’s back. “We’re done here.”
As they turned to leave, the bell over the door rang again, sharp and jarring. Outside, the street was nearly empty, except for a lone figure leaning on a lamppost at the far corner. Michael’s eyes narrowed, tracking the man’s outline until they slid behind a passing truck.
He didn’t say anything, just opened the car door and guided Clara inside. The letter felt like it burned his chest through his jacket. Whatever was inside, it was pulling them deeper, and he could feel the weight of it tightening around them like a noose.
As the car pulled away, Clara looked out the window, her reflection pale against the glass. Her voice was thin, but steady. “Every time we open another letter, I lose another piece of him. And yet… I can’t stop.”
Michael tightened his grip on the wheel. “That’s because you’re not just chasing Daniel. You’re chasing the truth. And the truth won’t let you go.”
The café disappeared behind them, its rusted sign swaying in the wind. Ahead lay only more questions—and one more envelope waiting to be opened.
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