The Smoke of Autumn
It was a wet and windy night in Seattle, the kind that makes you want to crawl into a bottle and forget the world. Autumn had draped the city in a shroud of fog and falling leaves, the streets slick with rain that never seemed to stop. I leaned back in my chair, the dim light of my office at the Seattle Times casting shadows across the clutter on my desk—empty coffee cups, crumpled notes, an ashtray overflowing with cigarette butts. My name’s Jack Sullivan, and I’m a reporter. Not the glamorous kind you see in the movies, but the kind who digs through the muck to find a story. Lately, the muck had been piling up, just like the bills.
The war had ended a few months back, in August of ’45, and Seattle was still shaking off the weight of it. Soldiers were trickling home, shipyards were slowing down, and the city buzzed with a strange mix of relief and restlessness. I’d seen my share of it all—three years as a war correspondent, dodging bullets in Europe, watching friends die in the mud. I came back jaded, a little harder than I’d left, and threw myself into work to keep the ghosts at bay. That night, as I stared out at the gray skyline, the door swung open, and my editor, Frank Hensley, stormed in.
“Sullivan,” he barked, tossing a file onto my desk. “Got a story for you. Councilman Henry Walsh has gone missing. Last seen a week ago. Rumor has it he was mixed up in something dirty. I want you to find out what.”
I flicked my cigarette, ash tumbling into the tray. “Walsh, huh? The golden boy of city hall? What’s the angle?”
“That’s for you to figure out,” Frank said, jabbing a finger at me. “Start digging.”
I nodded, exhaling a plume of smoke. “Alright, Frank. I’ll see what I can turn up.”
The Trail Begins
The next day, I hit the streets. Seattle in autumn was a moody dame—rain drumming on my fedora, fog curling around the brick buildings like cigarette smoke. I started at city hall, where Walsh’s colleagues fed me the usual line: he was a stand-up guy, no enemies, no scandals. Their smiles were too tight, their eyes too shifty. I could smell a rat a mile off.
Walsh’s wife was next, a nervous woman in a manicured house overlooking Lake Washington. She twisted a handkerchief in her hands, more worried about her bridge club than her missing husband. “Henry was fine,” she insisted. “Just busy with work.” I left with nothing but a headache.
The breakthrough came later, at a dive bar near the docks. Mickey, an old informant with a limp and a whiskey-soaked voice, slid into the booth across from me. “Heard you’re lookin’ for Walsh,” he muttered, glancing over his shoulder. “Word is, he was a regular at the Blue Note. That jazz joint downtown. Might wanna poke around.”
I slipped him a few bucks and headed out into the drizzle. The Blue Note nightclub—it rang a bell. A place where high society rubbed elbows with the underworld, all under the cover of jazz and gin. If Walsh had been there, it wasn’t for the music.
Into the Blue Note
That night, I traded my trench coat for a suit and stepped into the Blue Note. The air was thick with cigarette smoke, the kind that clings to your skin. A jazz band wailed in the corner—saxophone weaving through the murmur of voices, the clink of glasses. Dim lights glinted off polished tables, casting the room in a haze of amber and shadow. I slid onto a barstool, ordered a whiskey, and scanned the crowd. Businessmen in tailored suits, dames in glittering dresses, a few rough types who didn’t belong. Then she took the stage.
Evelyn Moore. She stepped into the spotlight, a vision in a red dress that hugged her like a second skin. Her hair was dark, cascading over one shoulder, and her voice—God, her voice—was like honey and smoke, wrapping around me, pulling me in. She sang “Stormy Weather,” each note dripping with melancholy, and for a moment, I forgot why I was there. The war, the story, the rain—all of it faded. There was just her.
When the song ended, the room erupted in applause. I downed my drink and made my move, catching her near the bar. “Nice set, Miss Moore,” I said, lighting a cigarette.
She turned, her green eyes cool and guarded. “Thanks. But I don’t talk to reporters.”
“How’d you know I’m a reporter?”
“You’ve got that look,” she said, brushing past me. “Curious and broke.”
I smirked. She wasn’t wrong. But I wasn’t giving up that easily.
Shadows and Smokes
I went back to the Blue Note night after night, blending into the crowd, picking up scraps. I spotted Tony Rizzo, the club’s owner—a slick, dangerous type with a smile that didn’t reach his eyes. I recognized a known smuggler nursing a drink in the corner. Something was rotten here, and Walsh had been in the thick of it.
One rainy evening, I stepped outside for a smoke and saw Evelyn in the alley, arguing with a hulking figure. His voice was low, threatening. I flicked my cigarette into a puddle and strode over. “Everything alright, miss?”
The man glared at me, then slunk off into the fog. Evelyn shivered, wrapping her arms around herself. “Thanks,” she muttered.
I pulled out my pack of Lucky Strikes, offered her one. She took it, her fingers trembling as I lit it for her. We stood under the awning, rain tapping around us, smoke curling between us. “You know something about Walsh, don’t you?” I asked.
She took a long drag, staring at the ground. “I can’t talk about it.”
“I’m trying to help,” I said, stepping closer. “Whatever it is, I can protect you.”
Her eyes met mine, searching. “Maybe,” she whispered. “But it’s dangerous.”
“I’ve handled dangerous before.”
She almost smiled. Almost.
Digging Deeper
The pieces started coming together. Walsh had been neck-deep in a smuggling ring—booze, black-market goods, maybe even weapons—funneled through Seattle’s docks. The war’s end had shifted the game, and he’d wanted out. The Blue Note was the hub, a place where deals were sealed over martinis and jazz. Evelyn had been close to him—too close, maybe. A mistress? A confidante? I couldn’t tell yet.
I tailed Rizzo, talked to a cop buddy who owed me a favor, found a matchbook from the Blue Note in Walsh’s abandoned office. Every lead pointed back to Evelyn. One night, I confronted her outside the club. “You were Walsh’s girl, weren’t you?”
She flinched. “It wasn’t like that. He was kind to me, that’s all.”
“Then why’s Rizzo watching you like a hawk?”
She looked away, voice barely audible. “Because I saw something I shouldn’t have.”
Before I could press her, two goons jumped me. Fists flew, and I took a beating—cracked ribs, a black eye—but I gave as good as I got. They left me in the gutter with a warning: “Drop the story, Sullivan, or you’re next.” I spat blood and grinned. They’d just confirmed I was onto something big.
Evelyn had disappeared when those goons got the jump on me. I nursed my aching ribs and staggered home.
Love in the Rain
I showed up at Evelyn’s apartment the next day, bruised but stubborn. She let me in, her face pale. “They’re after me too,” she said, pouring me a coffee with shaky hands. “I saw them kill Walsh. He wanted out, and they shot him. Dumped his body in the Sound.”
“Why didn’t you go to the police?”
“They’re in on it,” she said. “I didn’t know who to trust.”
I set the coffee down, met her gaze. “Trust me.”
She nodded, and something shifted between us. Over the next few days, we grew closer. I took her for a walk in Volunteer Park, the leaves crunching underfoot, the air crisp. She told me about her small-town roots, her dreams of singing on bigger stages, how Walsh had promised to help before it all went sour. I opened up too—about the war, the friends I’d lost, the cynicism that had settled in my bones. One night, outside the club, I pulled her close under a streetlamp, the fog swirling around us. Our lips met, tentative at first, then hungry. For the first time in years, I felt alive.
The Reckoning
I worked fast, gathering evidence—photos of Rizzo with known crooks, a ledger I swiped from the club’s back room. But they were onto me. One night, Evelyn didn’t show for her set. A note arrived at my office: Pier 54, midnight. Come alone, or she’s dead.
I went, knowing it was a trap. At the docks, the rain poured, the Sound lapping at the pilings. Rizzo’s men were waiting, Evelyn bound and gagged beside them. “You should’ve listened, Sullivan,” Rizzo sneered, drawing a gun.
I dove behind a crate as bullets sparked off the wood. My own revolver was in my hand, a relic from the war. I returned fire, picking them off one by one—Rizzo took a slug to the shoulder, another goon went down screaming. I untied Evelyn, her eyes wide with fear and gratitude. “Let’s go,” I said, pulling her into the night.
With the evidence, the police had to act. The smuggling ring collapsed, corrupt cops included. My story hit the front page: “Councilman’s Murder Exposes Seattle Underworld.” I left Evelyn’s name out, kept her safe.
A New Dawn
A week later, we stood outside the Blue Note, the rain finally easing. The club was shuttered, the jazz silenced, but the city hummed with possibility. Evelyn slipped her hand into mine. “What now, Jack?”
I lit a cigarette, passed it to her, our fingers brushing. “Now we start over. Together.”
As the last leaves fell, I knew she was my redemption, my reason to keep going. The war was over, the story was done—but ours was just beginning.
