Paper Cuts and Gun Metal - Chapter 4
Paper Cuts and Gun Metal Chapter 4 Donnelly didn’t meet me at his main office. He had me come through a side entrance off the alley behind the warehouse on 47th. No secretary. No framed photographs of ribbon cuttings. Just a steel door, a narrow stairwell, and a second-floor back office with a desk too large for the room and a single lamp burning low. Men choose rooms like that when they’re ready to stop pretending. He was standing when I came in. Jacket off. Sleeves rolled. Tie loosened like he’d finally admitted he was human. “You said this couldn’t wait,” he said. “It can’t.” He shut the door himself and turned the lock. That was new. The room smelled of stale coffee and wet wool. Outside, trucks idled in the yard, their engines rumbling like distant thunder. I didn’t sit. “Michael Ruiz,” I said. The name hung between us. Donnelly’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t look surprised. “You found the clipping,” he said quietly. “Yes.” “And you went to his mother....