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Now reading: Chapter 272: Alliance Offer to Marlon from Harem Apocalypse: My Seed is the Cure?!, a Action novel by JuanTenorio.

Molly led us back through the Boardwalk’s interior at an unhurried pace, moving through the main stretch.

I fell into step beside her with Maribel on my other side, the two of them bookending naturally without any particular discussion about it. Behind us, Cindy and Daisy had drifted into their own orbit — I could hear them talking, Cindy pointing things out, Daisy responding with quiet interest, occasionally surprised by sothing. First ti through here for both of them, and the Boardwalk had a way of making an impression even now.

"You know," Molly said, her eyes forward, "when you walked out of here the first ti, I already had a feeling we’d be seeing you again."

"That obvious?" I asked.

"You said what you said about leaving the city." She glanced at sideways. "But the way you said it, there was no weight behind it. Like you were repeating a plan that had already quietly stopped being the plan."

"I suppose I wasn’t very convincing about it," I admitted.

"No," she agreed, pleasantly. "And then Maribel ca to us in person and told us what she knew. We were surprised but only a little. So things you see coming even when you can’t explain why."

"How many people know?" I asked.

Molly thought about it for a second, her lips pressing together lightly. "Marlon. Rico. ." She tilted her head. "Maybe that’s the full list actually."

"I noticed so faces when we ca through the gate that weren’t exactly thrilled to see us," I said, thinking of Flinn specifically, the way his expression had moved when he’d registered who we were.

"Everyone’s on edge," Molly said. "They don’t know you well enough to trust you, and the ones who are most scared are the ones who’ve been here the longest and rember what it was like before we got the barricades solid. The worry is that you’re connected to Callighan sohow. That you’re here to scout, or to build leverage, or to work so angle they can’t see yet."

"We’re not," I said imdiately.

"I know you say that." She kept her voice easy, not dismissive but clear-eyed. "And I think you an it. But saying it and proving it are two different things, and you can’t shortcut that process for people who’ve lost what they’ve lost." She glanced at again. "If you asked the most skeptical people here whether they’d rather have your group as a neighbor or have nobody at all, they’d say nobody. Every ti. Not because of anything specific you’ve done. Just because the calculation feels safer."

"I understand that," I said quietly.

And I did. It was the sa calculation we’d been running on our side for months, every new face evaluated not on its own rits but against the backdrop of everything that had already gone wrong. Trust was a resource that got spent faster than it was earned in this world.

"There was a lot of movent near your buildings yesterday," Molly said, shifting topic without making it feel like a shift. "Your people settling in fully, I’d imagine."

"Yeah," I said.

"Well." She gave a small nod. "You did the right thing coming here yourself instead of waiting for us to co to you. Draws a cleaner line."

"I didn’t only co to talk about us settling in next door," I said. "There’s sothing else."

Molly raised her eyebrows slightly but didn’t push. The smile that crossed her face was the specific kind that ant she was interested and was content to wait for the right mont to hear it, probably when we reached Marlon and she wouldn’t have to listen to it twice.

"Does the idea of us being neighbors bother you?" I asked her. "Personally."

"Not particularly," she said, honestly. "But don’t mistake that for full trust. I think you’re sincere. I also think you have a strange pull to trust you in a way you’re not entirely conscious of, and I’ve lived long enough to know that sincere and charming together is a combination worth watching carefully." She let that land for a second. "Unlike so people..."

"Stop," Maribel said, without looking at her.

"I’m just noting," Molly said warmly, "that you went to bat for him and his group quite thoroughly when you ca to speak to us."

"He saved Shannon’s life," Maribel said. "He saved mine too. What was I supposed to do, say nothing?"

"No," Molly allowed. "I suppose not."

She glanced back over her shoulder at Cindy and Daisy, who were still absorbed in their own conversation a few steps behind, Cindy explaining sothing about one of the buildings with animated hands.

"You two lovely girls don’t look like you’re here to cause trouble," Molly said to them, raising her voice slightly. "But I can’t say the sa for a whole group I’ve barely t."

"There are idiots in every group," Cindy replied without missing a beat, looking up from whatever she’d been pointing at. "I’d be shocked if yours didn’t have a few."

Maribel made a sound that might have been an almost-laugh. "She’s not wrong."

She said it with enough weight behind it that it was clearly pointed at sothing specific, but she didn’t elaborate and nobody pushed her on it.

It didn’t take long before the Brighton Park opened up ahead of us.

I recognized it imdiatel, the sa open space, the sa fountain at the center, the sa quality of light that ca through the gaps in the surrounding buildings and made the whole area feel slightly separate from the rest of the Boardwalk. Last ti I’d been here the place had been fuller, more tense, people positioned at careful distances.

Now it was quieter. A handful of people at the edges, nobody pressing in. Either Marlon had specifically asked for that or word had gotten around that this wasn’t a public event.

Marlon himself was at the sa table in front of the fountain.

But he wasn’t waiting for us.

He was sitting slightly sideways, a knife in his hand, but he wasn’t using it on anything threatening, a fish, partially cleaned, on a board in front of him. He was watching the person beside him work, pointing occasionally at sothing with the tip of his finger, and his expression was doing sothing I hadn’t seen it do before. Sothing relaxed. Open.

Very different from the stern one he had kept the last ti I saw him.

The person beside him was...Sumr.

Her dirty blonde hair pulled back in a practical ponytail. She was wearing a plastic apron with old bloodstains along the front and working through the fish with a knife of her own, moving with a clean movents. She was talking as she worked, and whatever she was saying had the light easy quality of soone comfortable enough in a conversation to not be performing it, and Marlon was listening with his full attention and that expression I still couldn’t quite categorize on him.

I found myself staring slightly longer than I should have, just trying to reconcile the two images.

"Marlon. They’re here."

It was Rico’s voice.

He was standing off to the right like he’d been planted there, arms crossed and sharp and suspicious eyes on .

Marlon lifted his eyes slowly from the table.

The mont they found , the soft unguarded expression he’d been wearing bled away, not hostile, not cold exactly, just returning to the composed and carefully neutral face I rembered from our first eting.

Sumr followed his gaze a half second later, turning from her fish to see what had pulled his attention. When she landed on her eyes went wide, with genuine surprise.

She clearly hadn’t known I was coming. Honestly, I hadn’t planned to co this soon either. When I’d spoken to her and asked her to stay quiet about us settling in the area, I’d intended to give things more ti to breathe first. But that was before i. Before everything shifted overnight into sothing that couldn’t wait for a comfortable mont.

Marlon wiped his hands on a towel, slow and unhurried, and walked toward us. The knife stayed on the table.

"You ca back," he said. His eyes moved past to Cindy and Daisy. "Not alone either."

"I ca to talk," I said. "Privately if that’s possible."

Marlon looked around the park briefly, the handful of people at the edges, Rico, Sumr, Molly, Maribel and then back at . "This is private enough. So talk. Tell why you changed your mind. You stood there and made it very clear you wanted nothing to do with what’s happening in this city. Now your whole group has settled themselves right next to us. That’s quite a shift."

"Have you never changed your mind about sothing?" I asked. "Things happen. Plans stop making sense. You adjust."

"Cut the crap," Rico said, stepping forward from where he’d been standing. "You said you were leaving. Simple. Clean. So what happened? Did Callighan get to you first? Make you so kind of offer?" His eyes had narrowed down to sothing close to an accusation. "Because that would explain a lot about why you’re suddenly planted right on our doorstep."

"No deal with Callighan," I said, looking at him steadily. "I’m here because I’ve decided to fight him."

The silence that dropped over the park was quick and shocked.

Molly went still. Maribel turned toward with her mouth slightly open. Even Sumr had stopped what she was doing, the knife resting forgotten against the board, her eyes fixed on .

Marlon said nothing. He just looked at with an expression that was doing careful, quiet work behind its surface.

"I’m not leaving this city until Callighan is dealt with," I continued, keeping my voice even and direct. "My people are settled here now and they’re staying. That man is a threat to everyone living in Atlantic City, your community included, and mine. So I’m here to offer you an alliance. A real one. We work together, we take him down properly, and this city stops being sothing everyone has to survive rather than live in."

Marlon took one slow step closer. "Your whole group agreed to fight?"

"Not my whole group," I said. "That’s not what I’m offering. I’m not putting sixty civilians into a war they didn’t sign up for." I held his gaze. "A few of us, the ones who can actually fight, the ones who have the ability to make a real difference, we put ourselves alongside your people. You have everything to gain and nothing to lose. I’m asking for nothing except that we fight the sa enemy in the sa direction."

The silence stretched again.

Rico made a sound low in his throat and walked forward until he was close enough that keeping my eyes front ant looking directly at him.

"That’s enough," he said, shaking his head and his expression twisted into annoyance. "We’ve heard enough. Take your group and leave the city before you get everyone around you killed. That’s the smart play. That’s the only play."

"We cleared the area we’re in," I said, shifting my gaze to him without giving any ground. "With our own hands and our own blood. You don’t own this city. You don’t get to tell us to leave it."

"What did you just say you—!""

Marlon’s hand ca up, sharp and clean, and Rico stopped imdiately, mouth still open, jaw tight, but stopped.

Marlon looked at .

"You’re not wrong that we want Callighan gone," he said quietly. "Everyone here wants that. But wanting it and doing it are two very different things. I won’t send my people into a fight we can’t win just because soone I barely know showed up and told he’s ready to help." He paused. "I won’t spend my people’s lives on a losing war."

"Is it the numbers that make it unwinnable?" I asked. "Or is it human shaped monster, Gaspar?"

Sothing moved in Marlon’s expression at the na. His eyes widened slightly hearing my last words.

That told everything I needed to confirm.

"If it’s Gaspar you’re worried about," I said, letting a small smile settle, "then that’s exactly why you should take my hand. Because he’s the one problem in this equation that your people alone cannot solve." I held his gaze. "I can."

Rico made a sharp sound and stepped forward again, talking to Marlin whispering if you could call it like that.

"Marlon. For fuck’s sake. He’s a teenager. You’re really going to stand here and listen to this?" He turned back toward the group with his hands out. "A teenager is going to walk in here and tell us how to handle a man who’s been running this city for months with an army behind him? Co on."

The vein in my forehead made its feelings known.

I took a breath.

"Alright."

Let it out slowly.

Then I stepped back from them, putting a few feet of clear space between and everyone else.

Every head turned.

Rico and Marlon both looked at .

"You," I said, pointing directly at Rico. "Fight ."

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