Daniel Mercer only rented the car because his own hatchback had decided to die on a Tuesday, which felt like the most insulting day for a breakdown. Not dramatic enough to justify panic, not quiet enough to deal with later. He had a three-hour drive ahead of him, a folder of invoices on the passenger seat, and just enough money in his account to make the rental feel like a bad joke. The silver sedan he was given was clean, ordinary, and a little older than the glossy vehicles shown on the company’s website. Still, it smelled faintly of lemon cleaner, the tank was half full, and the clerk slid the keys over with the bored confidence of someone who had done this a thousand times.
An hour into the drive, Daniel stopped at a gas station to grab coffee. When he got back in, he noticed the glove compartment hanging open by a few inches. He pushed it shut once, twice, then harder. It clicked, then popped back open again. Muttering under his breath, he crouched toward it and pulled out the owner’s manual, insurance papers, and a crumpled local road map that looked older than the car itself. Something behind the packet was catching the hinge. He reached in deeper, fingertips brushing felt, and tugged at what felt like a small pouch jammed into the back corner.
It was dark brown, soft with age, and no bigger than a folded wallet. Daniel almost shoved it back. People forgot chargers, sunglasses, parking stubs. That was normal. But this pouch had weight to it, the kind that made him pause. Standing there between the pumps, coffee cooling in one hand, he looked around the empty forecourt and felt the faintest shift in the day, as if something routine had just gone slightly off script.