The Sequence Left by the Dead Genius / Chapter 2: Disappearance
The Sequence Left by the Dead Genius

The Sequence Left by the Dead Genius

Author: Bradley Lopez


Chapter 2: Disappearance

← Prev

A month later, my son Brian got his entrance exam results. Against all odds, he’d scored high enough for regular high school—a miracle in our house. I asked what reward he wanted. He just grinned and said, “Take me to the mall, Dad. I wanna play in the inflatable castle—like when I was little.”

I sighed, but took him anyway. The scent of Auntie Anne’s pretzels drifted from the food court, and the sound of the high school marching band practicing outside echoed faintly through the glass. While Brian played, I stepped out to buy cigarettes. When I got back, he was gone.

I searched every inch of the mall—upstairs, downstairs, the arcade, even the bathrooms. Nothing. He had his phone with him, but every call went straight to voicemail. I called my wife. Carol’s voice was tense: “Wait, I thought you had him at the mall. He’s not with you?”

A cold weight settled in my gut. In my job, the thing you fear most is someone coming after your family. Thirty years as a cop, and I’ve put away enough monsters to fill a prison wing: murderers, kidnappers, predators, traffickers. Their faces flickered through my mind like a cursed slideshow. A shiver crawled up my spine.

I dialed my partner, Jeff Wallace, and told him to bring the team. The officers split up to search while Jeff and I pored over the security footage. We spotted a shadowy figure lurking behind the inflatable castle. The back door was right there. In the alley, we found Brian’s broken keychain, his phone smashed, and a length of scaffolding pipe—clear signs of a struggle.

The pigsty reeked of ammonia and fear. Forensics lifted prints off the pipe. The database spat out a match: David Carter. I remembered him all too well. Four years ago, I arrested him for sexual assault. After he got out, he opened a scaffolding shop in the next county. His son? Alex Carter—the very kid who’d jumped a month ago. Now he was our prime suspect.

We hauled David Carter in. He barely blinked. I should’ve recused myself, but I didn’t care. I used every trick in the book, but he wouldn’t budge. Time was running out—half an hour left before the 12-hour limit expired. If we didn’t charge him, we’d have to let him walk.

Desperate, I shut off the surveillance and barked at Jeff to get out. He hesitated. “You gonna do something stupid?”

“Get out! Now!”

Jeff held his ground, but then David Carter spoke, his voice low: “Officer, you go. I want to talk to Detective Miller. Alone.”

Now it was just the two of us. “Detective Miller, long time no see.”

“David Carter, what do you want? Where’s my son?”

He leaned in. “You care about your boy. But what about mine? Have you figured out why Alex really died?”

I snapped back, “He took his own life. The hospital confirmed depression. You saw the prescription records.”

David’s eyes narrowed. “Even if he was depressed, why die during the exam?”

I had no answer. He pressed on: “Do you really think your son passed that test on his own?”

My heart clenched. “What are you getting at?”

His face twisted. “You have a son. Maybe you’ll understand what it’s like to lose a child. Didn’t you ever wonder why a kid with no pressure would kill himself? Shouldn’t someone pay?”

We’d considered bullying before, but the victim was gone, and his parents never pressed charges. Easier to let it go. But David Carter never let it go. He wanted justice—or revenge. And his target was my son.

Twenty-five minutes left. David was calm. This was all part of his plan. I took a deep breath, lit a Marlboro, and offered him one. He accepted.

“Let’s talk about the exam,” I said.

After Alex died, I’d gone through his things and found his note. It read:

Dad, I don’t want to die. But I have no choice. You and I are both outcasts, misfits. You told me stories of Benjamin Franklin, Nathan Hale, Socrates—to stay true to myself, not to live for others’ approval. But—Nathan Hale was hanged. Socrates drank poison. Franklin was never truly understood. Dad, you were wrong. We aren’t sages. We’re patients. We have Asperger’s. You never saw a psychologist, so you don’t know. It’s a form of autism. We both live in our own worlds. Counselor Grant explained it. I tried to change, to fit in. They pretended to accept me, but only used me to help them cheat. When things got messy, they turned on me. I refused to help, and they started bullying me, trying to break me.

In the cafeteria, they’d pretend to invite me, then stick thumbtacks on my chair. The pain made me want to scream, but they shushed me. They shoved me into the girls’ bathroom, then accused me of being a pervert. One of them stole his dad’s handcuffs—locked me in a pigsty all night. Later, they found my secret. They threatened to expose me unless I helped them cheat. I had no choice. Their worst subject was math. So I helped with math. But with strict proctors, how could cheating work? Unless—someone created chaos. The best chaos is a student jumping from a building. While the teachers are distracted, pass the answers around. This secret is everything to me. I’ll protect it with my life. Besides, I don’t want to live anymore. Let the entrance exam be my last performance. I’ll get the best grades, then disappear, like fireworks at their brightest.

Dad, you’ve been to prison once. Don’t do anything stupid. Don’t worry about who did it. Don’t worry about the secret. At the end of the math problem, I left a sequence of numbers. In those numbers is what I most want to tell you.

I was stunned. My mind reeled. My own son—the boy I’d sworn to protect—was no better than the monsters I locked up. Shame burned through me, sharper than any wound. My handcuffs had been taken by Brian to play with. He’d brought them back, but they still smelled faintly of pig. I’d even smacked him for it. I never imagined he’d used them on Alex Carter. Before the exam, Brian bragged that he was sitting behind Alex, so he’d pass for sure. I’d written it off as a joke. I never dreamed he’d force Alex to help him cheat.

But something still didn’t add up. I called Jeff Wallace and had him bring me Alex Carter’s autopsy report. I read it in front of David Carter. No old injuries—just the trauma from the fall. I threw the report at David. “You’re lying! The exam was thorough. There were no old injuries.”

He finished his cigarette, spat out the butt, and looked at me with a twisted grin. “Is there always evidence of bullying?”

I snapped. I yanked out my handcuffs, clenching them tight. “David Carter, don’t play games. Where’s Brian? Talk, or you’ll regret it.”

He just grinned, blood on his teeth. “Oh, the upright Detective Miller, ready to break the rules for his own kid? If you’re a man, hit me. If not, you’re a coward—no wonder your son bullies the weak.”

I lost it. I punched him hard. The cuffs split his cheek open; blood poured out. He licked it, smiling. “Detective Miller, the secret to your son’s disappearance is in that string of numbers. If you can’t solve it, let’s make a deal.”

“What deal?”

“Clue for evidence.”

“What evidence do you want?”

“The audio and video of Captain Anderson interrogating me on March 25 and 27, 2000.”

Until now, I’d almost sympathized with him. If my own son had been driven to death, maybe I’d seek revenge too. But David Carter wasn’t the man I’d imagined. He was a scoundrel. A beast. “You want to use your son’s death to overturn your assault conviction?”

He glared at me. “Yeah. You convicted me on my confession. If you prove it was coerced, I walk.”

I stared at him. “You think any cop is dumb enough to coerce a suspect under surveillance?”

David Carter smirked. “Detective Miller, are you sure you didn’t?”

I said, “No.”

He leaned back. “Fine. I’ve given you your first clue. You weren’t calm. You didn’t listen. Think like me: if you were in my shoes, what would you do?”

I stared at the cuffs in my hand. Suddenly, it clicked. “You mean the pig farm?”

David Carter glanced at the clock. “Detective, your twelve hours are up. Let me go.”

I ignored him. Jeff and I rushed to the county’s only pig farm. The place was huge. We called in backup and searched every filthy corner. In the farthest pen, we found Brian’s watch, a pile of what looked like his feces, and a dark red stain. Forensics took samples. Brian had been held here. But where was he now?

We rushed back. David Carter was gone. I shouted, “Who let him go?”

Deputy Chief Anderson replied, stone-faced, “I did. Twelve hours were up. The law’s the law.”

I gritted my teeth. “Brian wasn’t at the pig farm. He must have moved him.”

Anderson asked, “Do you have direct evidence?”

“His fingerprint was on the pipe, wasn’t it?”

“Was it only his?”

Of course not. Scaffolding pipes are everywhere. Fingerprints too. Anderson was right. Forensics couldn’t pin it on him. I was desperate. “David Carter told me Brian was at the pig farm. We found his watch. That proves he knows. He’s our guy. Let’s get a warrant.”

Anderson shook his head. “Evidence? You turned off the surveillance. The prosecutor won’t go for it based on your word. Carter can deny everything.”

The world felt suddenly cold and hollow. I’d walked right into his trap. He’d made me break the rules, then revealed clues. Step by step, he’d set me up.

Anderson twisted the knife: “After you left, Carter reported that you assaulted him and demanded a medical exam. I sent Lisa with him. Miller, you’re in big trouble.”

As Anderson spoke, I felt the weight of the room press down on me. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead, casting my shadow long against the grimy linoleum. In the hallway, police radios crackled and a file cabinet slammed shut—ordinary sounds that now felt threatening, as if the world itself was closing in. My knuckles still throbbed, the taste of adrenaline sharp in my mouth. Somewhere out there, my son was missing—and the last thing I had was time.

← Prev

You may also like

The Wife Who Came Back From the Dead
The Wife Who Came Back From the Dead
4.8
Declared dead, Sarah returns to find her husband remarried to a woman who looks just like her—and her children calling the stranger 'Mom.' When her own son rejects her and her ex accuses her of being a mistress, Sarah must fight for her place in a family that’s moved on. But she’s got secrets of her own—and this time, she won’t back down, even if it means burning every bridge to reclaim her daughter.
The Oscar Winner Sent Me a Million
The Oscar Winner Sent Me a Million
4.7
On live TV, Rachel calls her Hollywood arch-nemesis for a humiliating game—only for him to wire her a million dollars and dare her to answer his video call. The cameras, the jealous rival, and the entire internet are watching as their flirty feud explodes into scandal. If she picks up, her secret feelings and his wild intentions could destroy both their careers forever.
The CEO’s Wife Strikes Back
The CEO’s Wife Strikes Back
4.6
Rachel always played by the rules—until her husband’s new assistant slid into the passenger seat and stole the necklace meant for her. Humiliated and furious, Rachel unleashes a storm of office drama, but as the lines blur between loyalty and revenge, her perfect marriage threatens to shatter. When her husband accuses her of cruelty, Rachel must face a chilling question: is she fighting for love, or becoming the villain in her own story?
The Guide’s Secret: Sold to the Night Crew
The Guide’s Secret: Sold to the Night Crew
4.6
Ten city strangers, one wild mountain, and a local guide who sells more than adventure. When a secret trade turns the camp into a web of desire and lies, I’m forced to choose between loyalty to my cousin and the truth about what really happens after dark. In the wild, everyone’s hiding something—and some secrets burn hotter than the campfire.
The Hunter Who Saw Through the Humanoid
The Hunter Who Saw Through the Humanoid
4.6
When a clever hunter lets a stranger into his tribe’s cave, he senses something is horribly wrong—yet every feature matches, every smile is perfect. Haunted by dreams and ancient warnings, he’s desperate to expose the impostor before it’s too late. But the real horror isn’t what the humanoid looks like—it’s the secret flaw only fear can reveal, a flaw that might mean none of us are truly human after all.
The Victim’s Father: Accused of Vengeance
The Victim’s Father: Accused of Vengeance
4.7
When a brutal crime against his daughter goes unpunished, David Lewis becomes the prime suspect in a horrifying revenge killing that shakes the town to its core. With his life in ruins and his daughter’s trauma consuming them both, the town demands blood—but all evidence says David never left her side. As suspicion turns neighbor against neighbor, the real killer is still out there, and no one is safe from the secrets that refuse to stay buried.
The Corpse Bride Under the Red Veil
The Corpse Bride Under the Red Veil
4.8
On the happiest day Main Street has seen in years, a stranger crashes the wedding, claiming the bride is undead—and when night falls, the entire town will die. Grandpa Joe stands between his family and a nightmare out of legend, desperate to protect his own, but the bride in crimson never moves or speaks. As a storm traps everyone inside, the truth beneath her veil could unleash a blood-soaked massacre no one will escape.
The Town Chose Silence Over Justice
The Town Chose Silence Over Justice
4.9
When twelve-year-old Emily Carter dies in childbirth, her small Ohio town erupts in rage, lies, and mob justice. As lawmen dig deeper, innocence is destroyed—first by a wrongful accusation and a suicide, then by a web of cover-ups and hush money that protects a predator within their own ranks. Every clue points to a horrifying secret: in this town, the real monsters wear familiar faces, and the truth is the deadliest threat of all.
The Doctor Accused Me of Betrayal
The Doctor Accused Me of Betrayal
4.6
On the day of our IVF egg retrieval, I was publicly accused of breaking my wife’s trust—and destroying our only shot at a family. The whole hospital thinks I cheated, but I know the truth: we haven’t touched each other in months. As secrets unravel and suspicion grows, I must uncover what really happened before my marriage and career are shattered forever.
The Overlays Exposed My First Lady’s Secret
The Overlays Exposed My First Lady’s Secret
4.7
On the day I became President, I planned to divorce my wife for Rachel—until mysterious comment bubbles started exposing my darkest secrets and deepest betrayals. Now, every move I make is judged by a supernatural audience, and the overlays insist Rachel’s unborn child isn’t even mine. As the White House becomes a battlefield of love, power, and lies, I must choose: trust my heart, or the ruthless overlays that know every truth I wish I could hide.
The Evidence Walked In: My Father’s Crime
The Evidence Walked In: My Father’s Crime
4.7
On the eve of a death sentence, a desperate young woman bursts into my law office, claiming she is not a witness—but the evidence itself. Her father died in a fireworks explosion twenty years ago, branded a thief and a traitor, and the whole town buried the truth. Now, as the final verdict looms, her secret threatens to unravel everything—because if her story is real, the wrong man is about to die.
The Night Grandma Swung the Dead Girl
The Night Grandma Swung the Dead Girl
4.8
When a call reports a little girl and her grandmother swinging in the dark, officers arrive to a nightmare: the child is dead, but the old woman keeps pushing her, lost in a memory loop. As grief, guilt, and dementia blur reality, a video reveals the girl’s final moments—her face twisted in terror, her corpse letting out an impossible, haunting laugh. Was it just a tragic accident, or did something unspeakable happen on the playground that night?