Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Chapter 2: Arrival to Surrey Main, ME

 Chapter Two

Arrival at Surrey Main



A small station. Covered in fog. Light from lamps flickers like candles through milk. Benches shaped like birds. A sign: “Welcome to Surrey Main, You’ve Arrived!”

Reflexively, Robert pulled out his phone. One bar. Maybe two. The screen lit up like a trap. No voicemails, but missed calls stacked up like a hit list—numbers he didn’t recognize, but knew by instinct. Reporters. Internal Affairs. Maybe even Furgo’s cowardly lawyer.

Then, out of pure masochistic impulse, he opened Twitter.

His name was trending.

A flood of memes: a cartoon chicken wearing an FBI badge, someone deep-frying a rubber hen with the caption "Duluth's Lunch Special," a TikTok of someone reenacting his takedown with toy chickens and dramatic music.

Tweets poured in: “Hey @FBI, you hiring poultry smugglers now?” “When your partner flips faster than a rotisserie.” “The Cluckening continues. #DuluthDrama”

Facebook was worse. People he hadn’t spoken to in years shared the story as if it were gospel. Cousins, exes, a former landlord—everyone had an opinion.

The digital pitchforks were out.

His throat was clenched. The humiliation wasn’t dying, it was multiplying. Online, the circus was in full swing, and Robert wasn’t the ringmaster. He was the sideshow.

He locked the screen, shoved the phone into his coat like it had insulted him, and looked up again.

He hadn’t even realized, absorbed in tweets and shame, that he was stepping into a fairytale. Cobblestones stretched in all directions as if they had been poured straight from a storybook. Gas lamps flickered like stars, with a British charm. The air was infused with the scent of cinnamon, and the silence was profound.

The train platform looked like it had been assembled from a grandmother’s dream and a BBC costume drama. Ivy vines crawled up the sides of the quaint ticket office, their tendrils wrapping around a wooden window box bursting with petunias. Inside, a tiny older man wearing a monocle and sipping tea behind the glass gave Robert a polite, yet confused, nod, as if he were both the station manager and a local ghost.

A small, enchanted water fountain burbled nearby with a spout labeled in hand-carved wood: “Push Thee.”

Park benches for waiting passengers lined the cobblestone like little shrines to leisure—each one carved from aged mahogany and polished to a royal gleam, with legs shaped like lions wearing monocles. Upon every bench sat a cushion, meticulously embroidered with Union Jacks in velvet thread, tufted and trimmed with gold piping, as though Her Majesty herself might drop in for a nap. One even bore a stitched likeness of Margaret Thatcher sipping tea beneath a parasol.

The station itself was a storybook stitched into reality, every detail dripping with curated charm. The windows were framed with delicate wood carvings—intricate spirals of ivy, crowned corgis, teacups mid-spill, and a trio of cricket bats crossed like swords. Around the sills, window boxes exploded with colour: pansies, petunias, daffodils, and wild roses, all in full, unapologetic bloom. Not a single weed dared show itself, and not one bloom was shy. Butterflies hovered like gossip, flickering from petal to petal, adding motion and magic to an already surreal scene.

Near the station door stood a grand tackboard wrapped in bunting and bordered with gold ribbon, proudly displaying fluttering hand-calligraphed flyers that flapped with intention. Each bore an official Surrey Main seal (a corgi holding a scepter) and advertised events like:

  • "Tuesday Teacup Toss" (bracing and dangerous),
  • "The Queen’s Croquet Club" (closed to left-handers after The Incident),
  • and "Ye Olde Biscuit Bake-Off", where the rules were sacred, the butter was rich, and sabotage was rumoured but never confirmed.

Beneath the board sat a brass mailbox etched with the title "Incoming Gossip", featuring a slot for anonymous notes and town secrets, decorated with two cherubs whispering behind a Union Jack fan.

Nearby, a topiary shaped like Queen Victoria stood at regal attention, complete with a shrubbed parasol and a carved marble base that read: “Do Not Trim Without Permit.”

To one side of the platform, a man jogged past wearing a powdered wig, a waistcoat over running shorts, and orthopedic loafers. He saluted the station with a cry of “Rule Britannia!” before vanishing into the fog.

Even the lampposts participated in the theatre of it all—wrought iron with flourished swan-necks, each topped with frosted globes shaped like teapots, glowing softly in the mist like ghost stories told over breakfast. Beneath them, plaques described fictional royal visits with bold confidence:

“Here, in 1883, a royal footman considered boarding a train. It was glorious.”

The entire platform had a faint scent of cinnamon and lavender, with undertones of warm shortbread and freshly polished wood. The air itself felt choreographed. Every breeze knew where to blow. Every flutter of bunting landed just so.

And at the center of it all, Robert Duluth stood frozen, his modern life dissolving like sugar in tea, swallowed whole by this lavishly embroidered illusion of British perfection—equal parts charming and unhinged.

Then, with the fury of a misplaced royal decree, Bev came flying onto the station platform like a royal hurricane in rhinestones.

It wasn’t a car. It wasn’t a cab. It wasn’t even a golf cart in the usual sense of the term. It was a fever dream on wheels.
The vehicle came careening around the corner like Cinderella’s carriage had been reimagined by a 1960s drag queen with a flair for pageantry and horsepower.

Dubbed “Gloriana” in gold-leaf calligraphy that sparkled like a tiara in moonlight, the cart’s chassis shimmered in rich royal blue, polished to the point of hallucination. Every edge was lined with hand-painted scrollwork and miniature portraits of monarchs (both real and imagined). At the same time, tiny golden cherubs clung to the roof like hood ornaments in a prayer formation.

The velvet curtains—yes, actual curtains—fluttered at the sides like scandalous skirts caught in a shameful breeze, each tassel swinging with the energy of a jazz number. Chrome trim around the headlights curled upward like eyelashes, and from the rear bumper jutted a bumper sticker that read:
“KEEP CALM AND QUOTE DOWNTON.”

The horn screamed “GOD SAVE THE QUEEN” in tinny brass tones that could've rattled dentures in a three-mile radius.

The back wheels spun with glitter hubcaps, and each tire was wrapped in pristine white rubber stamped with tiny corgi paw prints. On the roof sat a fiberglass gold crown, fastened with duct tape and a hint of unearned confidence. And mounted to the front, naturally, was a miniature portrait of Queen Elizabeth II in a locket frame, which doubled as a fog lamp.

The whole thing smelled of lavender, lemon polish, and ambition.

With a final theatrical twist of the wheel, Bev slammed the brakes with the confidence of a woman who had once parallel parked on a float in a royal parade. The cart fishtailed dramatically, scattering gravel like royal confetti across the platform and coming to a halt just inches from Robert Duluth’s highly startled shins.

It didn’t stop so much as pose.

And then came the voice, thunderous and full of pageant and pride:

“WELL HELLO, STRANGER!”

Bev.

Beverley Titcomb-Smythe was not a woman you met.

She endured.

A category five personality in rhinestones and orthopedic footwear, Bev didn’t enter rooms—she commandeered airspace. Standing at an unapologetic five feet tall (without the beehive), she made up for her lack of height with a presence so commanding, the fog parted when she approached. Her hips swayed with the rhythm of a royal anthem, and her voice—a brassy, unstoppable, Margaret Thatcher-meets-Eastenders battle cry—carried over hedgerows, hillsides, and time zones.

Her hair was a phenomenon unto itself: a tornado of blonde curls stacked like ambition, lacquered to withstand hurricanes and scandal alike. Her eyebrows had opinions, and her eyeliner could slice through lies faster than a parliamentary debate. A cascade of glittery scarves wrapped around her shoulders like a decorative offense strategy, and her outfit—a shimmering Union Jack caftan layered over navy culottes—was accessorized with a corgi-shaped brooch, wearing pearls and a fascinator, of course.

On her feet: New Balance trainers—bright white and bedazzled within an inch of their warranty.

“Because arch support, my darling, is the one true religion left in this godforsaken world!” she would say, kicking up a leg like a chorus girl and nearly taking out a flower cart.

Her fingers—adorned with sovereign rings, charm bracelets, and one very questionable tattoo from “a regrettable cruise in 1987”—fluttered constantly as she spoke. Or shouted. Or belched the national anthem mid-conversation because it was “time-appropriate and patriotic.”

Her voice could be heard three lanes away at a farmer’s market, bellowing about the price of parsnips, the Council’s weekly dress code violations, or which neighbor had suspiciously un-British curtains.

Her husband, Barry Smythe, hadn’t been seen since 2003. He was rumored to still be alive and living in the attic by choice—or possibly trapped beneath a collection of antique royal commemorative plates. Bev maintained he was “on sabbatical from his senses.”

Their three children? Gone. Flown the coop the moment they could spell "escape."
“One's in accounting, one’s in therapy, and the last one married a Canadian.” Bev would whisper the last word like she was naming a curse.

So why was Beverley Titcomb-Smythe picking up Robert Duluth, disgraced detective from Chicago, from a fog-soaked fairy tale train station?

Because the Council had asked her to.
Because she volunteered before they finished asking.
Because she wanted to be the first person to see his face when he realized where he’d landed.
And—though she’d never admit it aloud—because she liked to collect gossip while it was still warm.

She had been briefed—and by briefed, we mean eavesdropped with a glass against the Council Chamber door—on Robert's scandal. Knew all about the chickens, the cocaine, the photos, the betrayal. And most importantly: she’d memorized his Wikipedia page and skimmed the Reddit thread.

She was expecting him like a cat expects a mouse with headlines.

So as Gloriana, her royal cart of excess, skidded to a halt in a flurry of velvet and powdered gravel, Bev leapt from the driver’s seat with the enthusiasm of a woman about to host a televised bake sale for vengeance.

Her arms flew open.




“ROBERT DULUTH! MY GOOD GOD, IT’S YOU!” she cried. “Come to start over? Or run away? Or find a hobby in fog maintenance? Doesn’t matter—you’re here now, and you’re OURS.”

She grabbed his suitcase like it owed her money, flung it into Gloriana’s carriage compartment, and seized him by the elbow.

“No time for questions, confessions, or midlife crises—this is your official, unofficial, possibly council-unapproved tour of Surrey Main! I’ve got five minutes, a full tank of lavender mist, and at least seven unverified rumors about your love life!”

And just like that, he was swept away in a tidal wave of glitter, gossip, and New Balance confidence, with Bev steering the cart, shouting facts, opinions, and limericks about the town’s elite while barreling toward the fog-draped horizon like a royal decree on fire.

She waved at the cart with the kind of pride reserved for pageant moms and trophy cases. "All electric! No fumes, no noise. Quiet engines, quiet minds! That’s the motto. We don’t truck; we glide!"

She ran a hand lovingly across the dashboard. "This here’s Gloriana. My pride, my joy, my chariot of fog. If she had a birth certificate, it'd be laminated and framed. She’s not just a cart—she’s my only child. You treat her gently, or I’ll run you over in reverse."

She slammed the seat—solar fog panels. Don’t ask how. You’ll taste metal.”

She snapped on a pair of driving gloves that sparkled with rhinestones and grinned. “Now hold onto your hat—unless it’s a bowler, in which case salute it first.”

With a whir and a dramatic puff of lavender-scented mist, Gloriana pulled away from the station.

They cruised through town in what Bev insisted was "a Grand Coronation Parade, minus the ponies." The cart rattled cheerfully over cobblestone, every bump punctuated by Bev’s enthusiastic narration. This was not a silent ride. It was a full-volume, open-air documentary—written, directed, and starring Bev herself.

“Right, there’s the Hemsworths. They’re not royal, but they think they are, don’t tell ‘em I said that. House to the left? That’s Lady Puddlewhack’s cottage.. real name’s Cheryl, but she’s got a thing for lace doilies and monarchy fan fiction.”

She pointed with gusto at each building, lawn, and confused-looking townsperson. “That shop? ‘Crumpet or Leave It.’ Best Earl Grey cupcakes in the county. Across from it, Sir Nigel’s Pet Emporium only sells pets with titles. Don’t ask.”

Each home had a story. Each window box had drama. Robert sat low in the seat, doing his best impression of being invisible. He wasn’t prepared for any of this. Not the accents, the waving townsfolk, or Bev’s encyclopedic knowledge of his life.

He leaned slightly toward her. “How do you know my name?”

Bev winked like a magician about to saw someone in half. “Oh, sweetie, word travels fast in places that don’t exist on regular maps.”

Robert pressed himself further into the velvet cushion, uncertain if the growing knot in his stomach was curiosity or fear.

Shops lined the cobblestone streets like parade floats. Each storefront is more committed than the last. A bakery called “It’s Scone Time!” displayed mannequins dressed as crumpets. Next door, “Proper Socks for Improper Occasions” promised hosiery for every imaginable social misstep.

Hand-painted signs danced slightly in the breeze, their wooden arms swaying with more personality than most small-town mayors. Even the doorbells played a ragged chorus of God Save the Queen—on triangle chimes.

Everyone they passed waved. And bowed. And curtsied. Each with an accent worse than the last.

“Top o’ the pudding to ya!” cried one man, tipping a top hat stapled on top of his head.

“Cheers, govnah!” screeched a child from atop a corgi the size of a compact car—or at least it looked that way. If it wasn’t a corgi, then Surrey Main had perfected the art of breeding every dog to look like one.

Bev responded to every greeting tossed her way with a wave, a grin, or a cheerful "And to you!" all while raising her gloved hand like a parade queen and grinning at Robert.

“They’re rehearsing,” she said casually. “Big celebration coming up. Founding Day. The council insists on tradition.

She leaned closer.

“But tradition makes people feel safe. And safe is profitable.”

Then, as if emerging from the pages of a haunted children’s book written by a retired royal florist, it appeared.

A red-brick cottage. Chimney puffing rhythmically like it was exhaling judgment. Lace curtains twitching in time with invisible clockwork. A wrought-iron gate creaked open without being touched.

Bev hit the brakes like a drag racer in a tiara and extended a sequined arm toward the odd little house, her voice dropping into a stage whisper thick with prophecy:

“Here we are. The In-Between House.”

She didn’t elaborate—just let the name sit there, ominous and vague, like it was supposed to mean something. Like the walls had secrets. Like the furniture took notes.

The house was impossibly cute. Aggressively cute. The kind of cute that made Robert’s instincts bristle. Its roofline curled slightly at the edges like a smile you couldn’t quite trust. The path to the door was paved in teacup-shaped stones, and small signs lined the walkway with phrases like:

  • “Mind the Gnomes.”
  • “Biscuit Delivery Only.”
  • “No Sadness Past the Garden Gate.”

Over the door, painted in delicate calligraphy with intentional wonkiness, was a wooden sign:
“Temporary Lodgings for the Recently Disgraced.”

Bev beamed. “Charming, innit?”

Robert stared. “It’s… terrifying.”

“Oh, don’t be daft,” Bev said, already climbing back into Gloriana. “The place is practically alive with charm. And crocheted tea cozies. And possibly Mr. Greaves, but do be careful, he’s a bit... much.”

She winked, hit a button that released a puff of glitter from the tailpipe, and offered a final salute.

Then she vanished into the fog, horn blaring Rule Britannia at half-speed, leaving Robert alone at the gate of a house that looked like it had opinions about his soul.

And the door?

It was already creaking open.
The cottage looked as if a Victorian gift shop had exploded and been lovingly reassembled by elderly witches.
The path was lined with hand-painted signs reading “Mind the Petunias” and “Enter If Ye Must.”

Inside was crochet central.
The couch, the curtains, even the chandelier wore snug yarn cozies.
There was a fireplace filled with hand-tied bundles of cinnamon sticks and a wall of antique teaspoons arranged like a conspiracy map.
The floor creaked in places where the carpet had given up trying to hold secrets.

Robert took two steps and froze.
A rustling noise. A cough. Then… movement.

Mr. Greaves didn’t enter.
He manifested.
All elbows and knees, slithering like a lizard auditioning for Hamlet.
He emerged from behind a curtain with the slow, deliberate grace of a man who had practiced unsettling entrances.



“Welcome, welcome, welcome,” he hissed. “We don’t usually get outsiderss thisss ccentury.”

He twisted when he spoke.
Smiling like his teeth were being punished.
His cardigan rippled with fog motifs.

“Napsss longer than twenty-ssssix minutesss are consssidered invitationsss.”

“To what?” Robert asked.

“The Misst,” he said flatly. “She notices. She rememberss.”

Then he leaned in.
“You botched it. Ruby Lukasss. Chickensss full of cocaine. The Council knowsss. The Mist knowsss.”

“Do you ssstill hear it? The scream? The one you didn’t know wassss yoursss?”

Then:
“If your thoughts turn dark, or your soul turns grey,
The Mist might asssk your name today!”

He twisted out of the room like a snake,
Moments later, Mr. Greaves popped his head back into the room, upside-down from the top of the doorframe, no less.

“Sssso sorry to disssappoint, but thisss issn’t your final dwelling,” he purred, descending like a Victorian spider.
“We merely needed a transssitional hovel for the introdssuction. Your true cottage awaitsss.”

Robert followed him outside through a back door, half-expecting the ground to give way beneath him.
They walked past identical hedges and rows of corgis nodding in unison.
Mr. Greaves led with arms flailing and knees oddly locked, as though he was performing an interpretive dance about taxes.

“I—hold on. Wait,” Robert stammered. “Is this place… for rent? How am I paying for this?”

Mr. Greaves froze mid-stride and turned slowly, his neck crackling like bubble wrap.
“The fog hasss covered your down payment, sssir. But payment is exssspected. In deedsss. In wordsss. In ssservice. In… sssecrets.”

Robert blinked.
“I’d rather pay cash.”

“Too late!” Mr. Greaves chimed. “We only accept metaphorsss and regretsss.”

He pointed at a cottage two mailboxes down, nearly identical but with a door shaped like a spoon.

“Here we are! Home sssweet home!”

As the door creaked open by itself, Robert glanced around at the neighborhood. Everyone on the block managed to be outside, staring at him.
Every single one of them was waving in unison, as if rehearsed.
One man tipped a top hat that was clearly glued to his head.
A woman curtsied so deeply she disappeared behind her picket fence.

Mr. Greaves bowed dramatically, his entire spine curving like a Victorian question mark. The key he produced was ornate and absurdly oversized, shaped like a treble clef with a tiny corgi carved into the handle. He offered it to Robert with both hands as if bestowing a knighthood.

“Pleassse do enjoy your ssstay,” he hissed, lips curling into a grin that looked borrowed from a taxidermied eel. “The Council isss ever watchful. The Missst… even more ssso.”

With that, he twirled—somehow both elegant and insectoid—and began muttering his way down the cobblestone path, his words tumbling behind him like breadcrumbs of madness: “Spoons above twelve grams are to be shelved separately… No cinnamon after solstice… Oolong must never touch peppermint…”

He vanished into the mist like a magician late for a sΓ©ance.

Robert, still clutching the key like it might explode, turned toward the house. The front door had opened of its own accord—a warm, cinnamon-scented breath curling out from the threshold like the cottage itself had exhaled in invitation.

He stepped inside.

The first thing that hit him was the smell: a confounding blend of chamomile, lavender, old lace, and something suspiciously like baked ham. It wasn’t unpleasant, but it was undeniably assertive—like the air had been steeped in elderly intentions.

The interior looked like a Victorian bed-and-breakfast had swallowed a library, belched up a tea room, and then rolled itself in doilies for good measure. Every surface was upholstered. The floorboards were hidden beneath layers of patterned rugs, each more floral than the last. A chandelier made entirely of teaspoons twinkled overhead, rotating slowly of its own volition.

A wall-mounted cuckoo clock chirped “God Save the Queen” on the half-hour.

On the mantle sat a collection of porcelain cats, each dressed as a different member of Parliament.

The couch looked edible—stuffed so thick with cushions it resembled a dessert—and the armchair was wearing what could only be described as a tea cozy tuxedo.

He placed his suitcase down, not entirely sure where the floor was.

A fireplace crackled to life without being touched.

And somewhere—perhaps in the walls, perhaps in his imagination—came the faint sound of… whistling. Cheerful, but deeply out of tune.

Robert turned in a slow circle.

“This place is…” He paused. “...aggressively welcoming.”

From the window, he could just make out a topiary waving at him. He wasn’t sure if it had always been shaped like a waving corgi or if it was just being polite.

With a sigh, he collapsed into the tufted armchair. It swallowed him whole.

“I am either safe,” he muttered, “or I’ve been kidnapped by colonial cosplay.”

Somewhere outside, a foghorn let out a sound like a distant trombone attempting jazz.

Robert closed his eyes.

For the first time in weeks, the noise in his head went quiet—replaced by a stranger, more confusing sensation.

He felt... watched.

But not in a bad way.

Not yet.


The moment his foot crossed the threshold, he was hit with an overwhelming scent of cinnamon and chamomile—like a tea shop trying to cover up a crime scene.
The cottage looked like a fairy tale estate agent had curated it—if Goldilocks had been eaten by the bear, and the bear then jailed for murder; this would be the cozy aftermath.
It was disgustingly adorable.

Every corner glowed with a warm lamplight.
A fireplace crackled politely.
The couch was tufted and floral, and so plush it looked like it would swallow a man whole.
The wallpaper shimmered faintly with dancing foxes in waistcoats, and a grandfather clock ticked 3/4 time like it was waltzing with regret.

Robert dropped his bag and stared.
“Alright, Robert,” he muttered to himself, pacing the cottage like a man rehearsing a courtroom defense.
“You’re not hallucinating. This is real. This is absolutely, undeniably INSANE.”

He pointed at a crocheted owl perched at the fireplace.
“You see this? Do you see that, Robert? That is not normal. That is aggressively not normal.”

The owl didn’t respond.

From the window, a neighbor watched curiously.

A voice floated in from across the hedge:
“Oi, Mr. Talking-to-Himself! You alrigh’ there, luv?”

Robert flinched, then gave a sheepish wave.
“Just thinking out loud.”

“Out loud an’ sidewayz, looks like!” the neighbor giggled, adjusting a tiara on her corgi.

He was unsettled.
None of this made sense.
The town was too perfect. The people are too cheerful. The accents too painfully fake.
And Mr. Greaves—what was with that man? Did he live in the crawlspaces? Was he the concierge of the town’s collective delusion?

He didn’t feel welcome.
He felt like a character placed in the wrong play.

Sitting on the edge of the couch, he rubbed his temples.

“Okay, Duluth,” he muttered, tapping his temple. “You’ve lost it. This is what rock bottom looks like—with flowered throw pillows and a ticking clock judging your every life choice.”

He paced again.
“I’m talking to myself.” Like that’s going to help. Maybe I’ll start answering. Maybe I already am.”

He paused.
“Shut up, Robert.”

He sighed.
“Don’t tell me what to do.”

Then he stopped and looked at the floor.

“Oh my God. I’m arguing with myself inside a dollhouse run by powdered-wig people and a snake-man landlord.”

He slumped onto the couch.

“This is just… a transition. A layover. I’ll be out by Monday.”
“I’ll be out by Monday.”

Somewhere outside, a foghorn whined a little tune that sounded eerily like a lullaby.

Robert stood up and checked the window.
The neighbors were still waving.

“Why are they always waving?” he whispered.

Then he pulled the curtain shut, hard.

Friday, June 27, 2025

Crime Gone Wrong- Chapter 1

 Robert Duluth was not simply born; he was meticulously crafted in the fiery depths of Chicago's most shadowy neighborhoods. In this unforgiving city, where grit and resilience were the only currency, weak men were devoured by its relentless pace, spat out onto the bleak, underground corridors of Lower Wacker Drive. There, they emerged bruised, with darkened eyes that told tales of their struggles, often burdened with the weight of a parking ticket, a stark reminder of their place in a city that demanded everything and offered little in return.

Robert was not one to take insults or threats lightly; he firmly believed in fighting back. A stoic figure, he wore a demeanor that rarely cracked a smile, reserving any hint of joy for the moment when justice was served and the perpetrator was locked away behind bars. He abstained from alcohol until he had completely closed a case, finding solace only in the finality of his work. When it came to sleep, the demands of his job compelled him to stay alert even when he was forced off duty by the Bureau. And when he did succumb to slumber, he kept one eye open, ever vigilant, with a gleaming Smith & Wesson resting on his nightstand, their presence a comforting reminder of his commitment to safety and control in a chaotic world.

He was not merely an agent; he was an unstoppable analytical powerhouse. A bulldozer cutting through the bureaucratic jungle of red tape and endless coffee breaks, Robert Duluth was the name whispered when a case stubbornly refused to find its conclusion. 

Having navigated the complex realms of the FBI, Special Task Force, and counter-mob operations, he held black-badge clearance that opened doors few dared to approach. His file was heavily redacted, resembling a secretive CIA document, and within it lay the thrilling narrative of his takedowns—each one a gripping chapter featuring the most notorious figures in Chicago's underworld.

Alfonse “Needles” Mancini? He caught him trying to smuggle heroin in a hearse. Big Rita Morelli? He arrested her mid-wedding, dress, veil, and all, for laundering church donations. The Bramble Street Butcher? That was Robert’s first major collar. Everyone said he would never crack it. Robert found the guy’s hideout in a condemned meat locker and dragged him out by his ears, covered in blood.

He didn’t collaborate with partners. Partners slowed him down. Partners got emotional. Robert had one once, Agent Stanley Coen, who got sentimental during a raid and hesitated for one second. Robert took a bullet to the ribs because of it. Stanley never got another assignment, and Robert never took another partner.

Robert followed protocol like it was scripture and bent it like origami when no one was watching. Paper trails? He made them vanish. Witnesses? He didn’t need them. Motives? Who cared? If you were guilty, Robert could smell it before you opened your mouth.

The press called him The Bureau’s Blade. To his face, they called him "Sir." And in the office, they called him what he was: a goddamn legend.

He didn’t wear suits like the rest of the force. His attire consisted of a black trench coat, scuffed boots, and button-down shirts always a little wrinkled, as if he had just been in a scuffle—because he had. His badge hung from a lanyard around his neck, not for easy access but so people could choke on their own respect when they saw it.

He walked like a bouncer who read crime novels, talked like a noir film, and got drunk on the police scanner. His voice was gravelly and threatening yet just smooth enough to make you wonder whether to shake his hand or call your lawyer.

His office—back when he had one—was a shrine to the cases nobody wanted. Clippings, photos, pins in maps, arrows and strings, whiteboards with equations that looked more like prophecies than evidence. The man didn’t just work cases; he became them, lived them, and breathed them in until he could tell you what the perpetrator had for lunch three Thursdays ago. His longest case? Three hundred eighty-two days undercover with the Churro Syndicate. He ate nothing but sugar and fear and busted thirty-eight criminals on Easter Sunday.

He didn’t do politics. He didn’t do press briefings. He didn’t do awards ceremonies or office potlucks. He did the job, and then he went home—alone—to his condominium overlooking the lake: sleek, cold, and spotless, just like him.

Neighbors said he rarely smiled, never had guests, and always left at 4:57 a.m. sharp. His landlord once joked that Robert was more predictable than the sunrise. But the truth? Robert Duluth was haunted—not by ghosts, but by justice left unfinished. Every name he crossed off his list left another inked in blood.

His instincts were too sharp for retirement, and his record was too clean for promotion. He was an apex predator in a department full of lapdogs. Until the chickens. Until Ruby Lukas. Until the one case—the dumbest, weirdest case of his career—blew everything up like a cigar box full of dynamite.

 

Long before the Bureau, before the headlines, before the hammer and the chickens, there was a boy standing outside a bank in Oak Park, waiting for his parents to cash a check. He was nine. They had gone in smiling, saying they would be right out. He remembers his mother’s perfume—it smelled like lilacs—and his father’s hand on his shoulder. He remembers the sound, too: gunshots, screams, and then, nothing but sirens and the click of a pen signing forms that made him an orphan.

The robbers were never caught. They took everything: money, lives, and his childhood. From that day on, Robert made a vow. He would never be weak, never wait for justice to show up late. He would become the one who knocked, the shadow behind the badge, the protector who never flinched.

He didn’t have family, didn’t date, never married, and had no kids. The FBI was his only constant. His loyalty wasn’t to people; it was to purpose. And that, dear reader, is where our story begins.

 

Chicago never slept; it barely blinked. On that particular evening, it shivered in its trench coat of fog and streetlamp steam. The El rumbled like an old man’s cough, and Robert Duluth stood beneath it, hands in his pockets, eyes scanning "Benny’s Liquor Cabinet" storefront, its battered neon flickering like a dying lie. 

Inside, Ruby Lukas ran the show: kingpin of the Northside. He loved bingo, despised cats, and smuggled cocaine in novelty rubber chickens.

“We’ve been watching this place for months,” Robert muttered, his words curling out like smoke from a Lucky Strike. “Every delivery, every duck call. Lukas thinks he’s clever. He ain’t.”

Dennis Furgo had gone under six weeks ago. Clean-cut, with a Boy Scout face, he could cry on command. The brass called him dependable; Robert called him doomed.

Tonight was supposed to be the bust. The Big One. The end of rubber poultry narco-trafficking in the Midwest.  Then it all went to hell.

 

Dennis Furgo, Robert's undercover agent, got caught. They had arranged a simple handoff behind Benny’s. But Furgo panicked, or maybe he was compromised. Either way, he got sloppy, and Ruby's people grabbed him. Cameras were rolling before he hit the pavement.

Faced with a choice between witness protection and a bullet, Furgo folded like a cheap suit. He named Robert as the mastermind, claiming the operation was a front, that Robert had orchestrated the whole bust to eliminate competitors and take over the rubber poultry route himself.

Ruby planted evidence,  Dennis slipped files into Robert’s drawer, swapped labels on evidence bags, and together they even doctored surveillance tapes to show Robert loading crates himself.

 

The Tribune dropped the bomb at sunrise. Front page, all caps: “ROBERT DULUTH: DETECTIVE OR DRUG LORD?”
Beneath it? A photograph so poorly doctored it looked like satire—Robert, grimacing mid-blink, mid-motion, as if cramming white powder into the hollow belly of a rubber chicken. The lighting was all wrong. The angle? Suspiciously perfect. The whole thing stunk of a setup.
The byline read “Elliot Grieves, Investigative Correspondent.” But Robert knew better. Elliot wasn’t a reporter. He was Ruby Lukas’s inside man—press pass and all. A smear merchant in a tailored suit.

 

The office was quiet. Too quiet—the kind of quiet that follows a firing squad's exit.

 

Robert was still in his suit, creased from sleep—or maybe from not sleeping at all—when the call came to go upstairs. He hoped, maybe, just maybe, someone was going to say sorry. Perhaps this was where the cavalry rode in. Maybe someone finally checked the evidence and realized it was doctored.

 

It wasn’t.

 

He walked into the Sergeant’s office. Sgt. Max Brenner was a lifelong lawman and ex-Marine—the kind of guy who called his own kids “Cadet” for fun. Brenner didn’t look up; he just stared at a manila file on his desk.

 

“Sit down, Duluth.”

 

Robert sat and didn’t speak.

 

Brenner finally looked up, eyes red. “You know, I always thought if you went down, it’d be in a blaze. Not... chickens, Bob. Not chickens.”

 

Robert’s jaw clenched. “It’s not real.”

 

Brenner nodded slowly. “I know that. You know that. But Twitter doesn’t. The Tribune doesn’t. Half the damn state doesn’t.”

 

He pushed a piece of paper across the desk.

 

“What’s this?” Robert asked.

 

“Administrative leave,” Brenner said. “Pending full investigation. Effective immediately.”

 

“You’re putting me on desk duty?” Robert asked, almost hopefully.

 

Brenner shook his head. “No desk. No duty. No gun. No badge.”

 

There was a pause, heavy enough to fill the room like smoke.

 

“I’m sorry, Bob,” Brenner said quietly. “But you're radioactive. If we keep you in the building, it looks like we're defending it. And HQ isn’t looking to take any hits. Not for you. Not for anyone.”

 

Robert stood slowly, reaching into his jacket. He laid down his badge first, then the holster, then his ID.

 

Brenner looked like he wanted to say something—maybe even reach across the desk. But he didn’t.

 

As Robert turned to leave, the Sergeant said, “You were the best damn agent I ever had.”

 

Robert paused at the door.

 

“That’s what makes this worse,” he replied. “I was.”

 

Dennis disappeared into Witness Protection—or Cancun. No one knew. No one cared.

 

Robert’s condominium still had clean sheets and the best view on the lake. But sleep became a myth. Food turned to ash in his mouth. Every face on the street wore judgment like cheap cologne, and every whisper behind his back twisted into the hiss of “chicken man”—a nickname that dripped with ridicule.

He worked the desk for a week, a temporary duty, Sarge said, just until things cooled off. Robert filed reports, logged evidence, and sorted incident slips like a ghost in an office full of whispers. He kept his head down, tuned out the news, and told himself it was temporary.

But it wasn’t. They didn’t want him back on the streets. They wanted him to remain quiet, boxed away, and ultimately forgotten.

He attempted to deny the situation. Watching old crime procedurals, he convinced himself that everything would eventually blow over. Yet, the silence of his condo, once a comforting refuge, now resonated with guilt. The TV felt like a constant reminder of his mistakes, and the framed commendations on his wall no longer represented pride; they felt like hollow lies. He spent countless hours at his kitchen table, fists clenched and heart racing, trying to understand how everything had spiraled so wrong.

 

At 3:17 a.m., he reached for his phone and typed a message. 

“Hey Sarge. Taking an extended break. Do what you need to do.”

 

He stared at the screen for a long moment before hitting send. No response was expected, and indeed, none came.

For over an hour, Robert sat in profound stillness—no movement, no thoughts, no plans. Just the steady hum of the refrigerator and the overwhelming weight of his spiraling reality pressing down on him.

Eventually, his gaze fell on a flier on the table. It was vibrant, almost absurd, and entirely out of place. 

 

**Surrey Main, Maine.** 

A charming corgi in a bowler hat. 

The tagline read: “The Most British Neighborhood in America.”

 

As he examined it, his bloodshot eyes struggled to focus; the words blurred before him as emotions of sleepless rage and shame buzzed in his chest. Before he knew it, his phone was back in his hand. It rang twice before his landlord answered.

 

“Robert? It’s 6 a.m. Are you okay?”

“Yeah, hi,” he replied, his voice shaky. “I’m not keeping the place.”

“What are you talking about, Robert?” she asked, concern creeping into her voice.

He picked up the flier and read aloud, almost incredulously. “Surrey Main, Maine. What the—?”

“Robert?” she pressed. “What are you talking about?”

“I have to go. I’ll leave the key on the counter. Please just rent the place out. Get rid of whatever’s left behind.”

 

He hung up, swiftly packed one suitcase, and resolved to leave everything else behind—no souvenirs, no keepsakes, no backward glances. The condo, once his command center, now felt like a tomb of lost credibility and expired takeout. He took the flier from the table, smoothed out its creases, and gave the corgi in the bowler hat one last look of whimsical nostalgia.

Then, with determination, he pulled out his phone and booked the next available train ticket. A one-way journey to a quiet place—somewhere far from headlines, hashtags, and feelings of betrayal.

Upon arriving at Union Station just after dawn, he was struck by the echoing marble floors filled with footsteps and muffled announcements. He moved through the crowd like a ghost, his zip-up hoodie pulled tight, his suitcase trailing behind him with a stubborn wheel.

 

At Platform Nine, the train hissed and groaned as if it, too, were hesitant to embark on this journey.

 

He climbed aboard and found his compartment—simple and sparse, with a bench that doubled as a bed—and sat down slowly. For the first time in weeks, he felt a sense of tension begin to release. He laid back, arms folded behind his head.

 

The train ride lasted one day, eight hours, and twenty minutes.

 

For nearly all of his journey, he slept soundly. He didn’t fidget or dream; he simply sank into unconsciousness like a stone sinking in deep water. Occasionally, he would wake and make his way to the dining car, where he sat beneath dim lights with plastic-encased menus. The food was unremarkable, gray eggs, questionable stew, and a biscuit so dry it could have doubled as a coaster, but he ate it with gratitude and hunger. He didn’t interact with the staff, and they didn’t pry.

Afterward, he returned to his bunk and fell asleep again.

 Hours slipped by. States blurred together outside the window as the sky transitioned from day to night, eventually settled into a pale gray dawn.

Then, with a sudden jolt, the train screeched like it had second thoughts.

Robert shot upright. His heart jackhammered in his chest as the compartment shuddered to a halt. Light—strange, gray, and far too polite—filtered through the smeared window. Outside, nothing looked real. Just soft edges and postcard colors, like the world had been water colored by a maniac.

He blinked. Sat perfectly still.

What the hell was I thinking?

His hand tightened around the stupid flier in his pocket. Surrey Main, Maine. The bowler hat. The corgi. The promise of peace.

He’d run. He’d burned it all to the ground and booked a one-way train to goddamn Disneyland with a British fetish.

The regret hit like a gut punch.

He rubbed his face. Exhaled slowly. “Jesus Christ, Duluth,” he muttered to himself, “you just moved to a brochure.”

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Surrey Main, Me Cover


 

πŸŒ€ Welcome to Surrey Main, ME


πŸŒ€ Welcome to 

Surrey Main, ME




A Twisted, Fog-Soaked Adventure — and How It Came to Life






✍️ About the Author: Andy Coulter



Hi there! I’m Andy — a writer, dreamer, community organizer, and a firm believer that storytelling should be dramatic, funny, emotional, and maybe just a little weird. I’ve lived in small towns and big cities. I’ve worked in banking, festivals, and the arts. I’ve worn ball gowns while holding shovels (long story), and I’ve spent years bringing people together through events, connection, and creativity.


But deep down, I’ve always wanted to write a book.


Not just any book. A wild book. One with fog that might have feelings. A psychic stripper. A town that insists on speaking in fake British accents. And a tired detective who ends up in the middle of it all.


That dream turned into Surrey Main, ME — a novel I’m writing here, in real time, with a very unexpected co-author.





πŸ€– About My Co-Author: ChatGPT



Yep. You read that right.


This story is being written in collaboration with ChatGPT, the AI assistant developed by OpenAI. Think of it as a digital ghostwriter, editor, brainstorming buddy, and British accent consultant all rolled into one.


Every chapter is the result of our creative back-and-forth. I bring the heart, the ideas, and the chaos — and ChatGPT helps me shape it into something that (hopefully) makes sense. Together, we’re building a world that’s both strange and familiar, charming and unsettling. A story that’s never quite what you expect.





πŸ“– What Is 

Surrey Main, ME

 All About?



Surrey Main, ME is part mystery, part satire, part fever dream.


The story follows Robert Duluth, a burnt-out detective who leaves the city behind and moves to a quiet coastal town in Maine — a town that seems peaceful, but quickly reveals itself to be… deeply weird.


The locals all speak in terrible British accents (by choice). The fog rolls in with a mind of its own. There’s a cryptic town Council, a lizard-like innkeeper named Mr. Greaves, and a former ballerina-turned-stripper-turned-choir-soloist named Tracey (stage name: Wendy).


Robert just wants peace and quiet. What he gets is a ceremonial welcome involving bagpipes, a cult-like town meeting, a public family meltdown, and a whole lot of secrets.


It’s Twin Peaks meets Clue, with a splash of BBC melodrama and a wink of musical theater.





πŸ’» Why This Blog?



Because Surrey Main isn’t just a book — it’s an ongoing adventure. I’ll be sharing chapters as they’re written, behind-the-scenes notes, character sketches, and maybe even original songs and stage directions. This is storytelling as a living, evolving process. You’re invited to read along, react, laugh, gasp, and maybe scream “WHAT IS HAPPENING?!” (That’s the correct response.)


You’re not just a reader. You’re part of the journey.





πŸ›Ž️ Ready to Begin?



If you love:


  • Unpredictable plots
  • Eccentric characters
  • Strange small towns
  • And a little mystery with your mayhem…



Then welcome to Surrey Main, ME.

The train has just arrived. The fog is thick.

And no one gets out the same way they came in.


Let’s begin. πŸ”



Chapter 1 releases on 6/27/25

 

Chapter 2: Arrival to Surrey Main, ME

  Chapter Two Arrival at Surrey Main A small station. Covered in fog. Light from lamps flickers like candles through milk. Benches shape...