Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 80: Flamethrower [1] from Harem Apocalypse: My Seed is the Cure?!, a Action novel by JuanTenorio.

The morning air carried a bite that seed to seep through the windows of Sydney’s car as we pulled into the familiar courtyard of Jackson Township’s Municipal Office.

Putting aside, Liu i, and Ivy, Rebecca had not co with us.

The confrontation had started at breakfast when Rachel had ntioned we needed to make another trip to Jackson Township for "supply consultation." It was a carefully neutral way of describing our actual mission—hunting down a creature that could freeze anything it touched—but Rebecca had seen right through the diplomatic language.

"Supply consultation?" she’d repeated, her fork hovering over her scrambled eggs. "What kind of supplies require Rachel and Ryan to go together? Again?"

The emphasis on ’together’ had been loaded with weeks of accumulated frustration and suspicion. Rebecca had been watching the growing closeness between Rachel and with the sharp-eyed vigilance of soone who sensed her world shifting in ways she couldn’t control.

"The kind that require both of our perspectives," Rachel had replied carefully, but her sister wasn’t buying the deflection.

"Your perspectives on what?" Rebecca’s voice had risen slightly, drawing the attention of others around the breakfast table. "What’s so important that it can’t wait, or can’t be handled by soone else?"

I’d tried to intervene. "Rebecca, we’re just—"

"I wasn’t talking to you," she’d snapped, her green eyes flashing with anger that was becoming increasingly difficult to contain. "I was talking to my sister. You know, the person who used to tell things before making major decisions that could get her killed."

"Becca, it’s not like that," she’d said softly.

"Isn’t it?" Rebecca had stood from the table, her chair scraping loudly against the floor. "Because from where I’m sitting, it looks exactly like that. It looks like you’ve decided that whatever’s happening between you two is more important than your younger sister.

"That’s not fair," Rachel had protested.

"Fair?" Rebecca’s laugh had been bitter. "What’s not fair is watching my sister turn into soone I don’t recognize. What’s not fair is being kept in the dark about decisions that affect both of our lives. What’s not fair is being treated like a child when I’m the one who’s been acting like an adult while you chase after so fantasy about being a hero."

Rachel’s face had crumpled, tears threatening at the corners of her eyes.

"I’m not chasing fantasies," she’d whispered. "I’m trying to keep us all alive."

"By doing what? By following him into God knows what kind of danger?" Rebecca had pointed at with an accusatory finger. "By keeping secrets and making plans that you won’t even discuss with the person who’s supposed to matter most in your life?"

"You do matter—"

"No, I don’t. Not anymore." Rebecca’s voice had broken slightly on the words. "He matters more. Whatever this is—" she’d gestured between Rachel and "—it matters more. And I’m supposed to just sit here and pretend that doesn’t hurt."

She’d left after that, retreating to her room and refusing to co out even when Rachel had knocked softly on the door, pleading for a chance to explain things she couldn’t actually explain.

I’d found Rachel an hour later, sitting on the front steps with her head in her hands, the weight of her sister’s accusations clearly eating at her.

"She’s not wrong," Rachel had said without looking up. "I am different. I am keeping secrets. And I am putting you first in ways that must feel like abandonnt to her."

"She’s scared," I’d replied, settling beside her but leaving careful space between us. "You have been protecting her all this ti after all and she feels like you are leaving her..."

"But I am not leaving her..."

That was briefly the cinversatin we had.

Now, as we approached the Municipal Office with our reduced group—myself, Rachel, Sydney, Christopher, Cindy, Elena, and Alisha—I pushed those troubling thoughts aside. Rebecca’s anger was a problem for later. Right now, we had a Frost Walker to prepare for, and that ant convincing Mark to help us build weapons that could generate enough heat to fight a creature that could freeze anything it touched.

The challenge was doing it without revealing the true nature of what we were hunting.

Martin was the first to greet us, erging from the main building with his characteristic warm smile despite the early hour. His weathered face showed genuine pleasure at seeing us, though I caught a flicker of concern when he noticed our reduced numbers.

"Back again so soon?" He said, approaching with his hands thrust deep into his jacket pockets against the morning chill. "Not that I’m complaining, but you folks were just here two days ago. I see that Elena and Alisha decided to finally co. And where’s young Rebecca? She feeling alright?"

"She’s fine," Rachel replied quickly, though I could hear the strain in her voice. "Just... needed so ti to herself today."

Martin’s expression suggested he wasn’t entirely convinced by the explanation, but he was too polite to press. "Well, what brings you back? Another supply run, or are you here for Margaret’s famous coffee and Clara’s even more famous gossip?"

Sydney laughed. "Tempting as that sounds, we actually need to consult with Mark about so technical issues."

"Mark?" Martin’s eyebrows rose slightly. "What kind of technical issues? That old coot’s got more electronics knowledge than the rest of us combined, but he’s not exactly known for his people skills, especially this early in the morning."

"Electrical equipnt," Christopher said carefully. "So things that need... modification."

"Modification," he repeated. "What kind of modification?"

"The kind that requires soone with Mark’s expertise," Elena said diplomatically.

Martin studied our faces for a mont, clearly weighing whether to push for more details. Finally, he shrugged with the resignation of soone who’d learned that so questions were better left unasked in the current world.

"Fair enough," he said. "He’s in his usual spot—what used to be the planning office. Fair warning though, he’s been in a mood since yesterday. Sothing about running low on his preferred brand of cigarettes, and you know how that affects his temperant."

"We’ll take our chances," I said.

As we made our way toward the main building, other community mbers began to notice our arrival. I saw faces I recognized from previous visits—Clara waving from near what had once been the reception area, several of the younger n who helped with periter defense pausing in their morning routines to nod in acknowledgnt.

The Municipal Office had taken on the character of a small village over the weeks since we’d first arrived. People had claid spaces, established routines, created the kind of informal social structure that erged naturally when groups of survivors were forced to live in close proximity. It was impressive how quickly they’d adapted to their circumstances, how efficiently they’d organized themselves for long-term survival.

We found Mark in what had once been the township’s planning office, now converted into a combination workshop and electronics laboratory. The transformation was remarkable—filing cabinets had been repurposed as parts storage, drafting tables had beco workbenches, and the walls were lined with salvaged tools and components that Mark had organized with the thodical precision of soone who understood that order was the difference between success and catastrophic failure.

The acrid sll of cigarette smoke hung in the air like a permanent fog, and I could see at least three different ashtrays scattered around his work area, all of them well-used. Mark himself was hunched over what looked like a disassembled radio, a cigarette dangling from his lips as he prodded at the internal components with a small screwdriver. He looked up as we entered, his eyes imdiately narrowing with the suspicion of soone who’d learned to be wary of groups bearing requests.

"Well, well," he said, not bothering with pleasantries. "The young pioneers return. Let guess—you need sothing built, sothing that requires my particular expertise, and you need it built with materials we don’t have and a tiline that’s completely unrealistic."

Sydney grinned at his directness. "You’re good at this guessing ga."

"Forty years of dealing with people who want the impossible will do that to you." Mark took a long drag from his cigarette, studying our faces through the smoke. "So what is it this ti? Communication equipnt? Defensive systems? Sothing that goes boom in the night?"

Christopher and I exchanged glances, both of us suddenly aware of how difficult this conversation was going to be. We needed Mark’s help to build portable heating elents—essentially weaponized flathrowers—but we couldn’t explain what we intended to use them against without revealing information that would either get us laughed out of the room or cause widespread panic.

"Heating elents," Elena said carefully. "Portable ones. Sothing that can generate sustained, concentrated heat."

Mark’s eyebrows rose slightly. "Heating elents. For what purpose?"

"General survival applications," Rachel replied.

"General survival," Mark repeated, his tone suggesting he found the vagueness less than convincing. "In case you folks haven’t noticed, we’re in the middle of June, not the middle of December. And this building has perfectly functional heating systems for when the weather actually turns cold."

"It’s for... outdoor use," Cindy added. "Ergency situations where normal heating wouldn’t be practical."

Mark leaned back in his chair, the springs creaking ominously under his weight. His eyes moved from face to face, clearly recognizing that he was being fed a carefully constructed half-truth.

"Outdoor ergency heating," he said slowly. "The kind of outdoor ergency heating that requires multiple portable units that can generate sustained, concentrated heat." He took another drag from his cigarette. "You know what that sounds like to ?"

None of us answered, waiting to see how far his deduction would go.

"That sounds like weapons," he said bluntly. "Specifically, it sounds like you want to help you build flathrowers."

The directness of his assessnt caught us all off guard. That old man was very smart as expected but that’s exactly why we ca to see him.

"Mark—" I started, but he held up a hand to stop .

"I’m not stupid, and I’m not naive," he said. "Portable heating elents that can generate sustained, concentrated heat? There’s only a handful of legitimate uses for that kind of equipnt, and most of them involve setting things on fire. So the question is: what exactly are you planning to burn, and why should I help you do it?"

The silence that followed was profound and uncomfortable. We’d prepared for skepticism about the technical feasibility of what we were requesting. We hadn’t prepared for soone to cut straight through our careful euphemisms and demand to know our actual intentions.

It was Sydney who broke the silence.

"We need to kill sothing that can freeze people solid with a touch," she said matter-of-factly, as if discussing the weather.

The workshop went dead silent. I felt my blood turn to ice, staring at Sydney in horror. She’d just revealed exactly what we’d been trying to conceal, delivering the truth with the casual directness that was her trademark but which could destroy any chance we had of getting Mark’s help.

Christopher’s mouth hung open in shock. Elena and Alisha both looked as if they’d been physically struck. Even Rachel, who was usually prepared for Sydney’s unpredictability, stared at her with wide-eyed disbelief.

Mark blinked once, twice, then threw back his head and laughed—a deep, hearty sound that seed to fill the entire workshop.

"Oh, that’s good," he said, wiping tears from his eyes. "That’s really good. Sothing that can freeze people solid with a touch. Like so kind of monster from a horror movie." He continued chuckling, shaking his head in apparent delight. "I have to hand it to you kids—most people who want weapons built try to co up with boring cover stories. Bandits, wild animals, maybe other survivor groups with hostile intentions. But you? You go straight for the science fiction approach."

"Mark—" I began, but he was still laughing.

"No, no, I appreciate the creativity. Really, I do. It shows imagination." He stubbed out his cigarette in the nearest ashtray, his expression still amused but his eyes sharpening with professional interest. "But here’s the thing—I don’t actually care what you want to use them for. You want portable fla units, I can build portable fla units; I got everything in my hands. Whether you’re planning to barbecue so imaginary ice monster or just want to be prepared for hostile humans who might threaten your group, that’s your business."

The casual dismissal of our truth as creative fiction was both a relief and a frustration. Mark didn’t believe us, but he also didn’t seem particularly concerned about our actual motivations.

"You’ll help us?" Rachel asked, her voice careful.

"Kid, I’ve been building things that burn, cut, shoot, and explode since before you were born. The world’s gone to hell, dangerous things are roaming around out there—infected, hostile survivors, maybe even so military units that have gone rogue—and you want to be prepared to defend yourselves with sothing more effective than baseball bats and kitchen knives." He shrugged. "Makes perfect sense to ."

Christopher found his voice. "So you don’t... you don’t think we’re crazy?"

"Oh, you’re definitely crazy," Mark replied cheerfully. "But crazy in the good way. The kind of crazy that keeps you alive when everything else is trying to kill you." He stood up, brushing ash from his work shirt. "Besides, building fla units sounds like a hell of a lot more interesting than fixing another broken radio."

As Mark began moving toward his collection of parts and components, I beca aware of other voices in the hallway outside the workshop. Word of our arrival had clearly spread, and it sounded like several community mbers were gathering to see what we were up to.

Margaret appeared first in the doorway, her expression curious but not alard. She’d clearly learned to trust our judgnt, even when she didn’t understand our requests.

"Is everything alright in here?" she asked. "Mark’s laughter was loud enough to wake the dead."

"Just discussing so technical specifications," Mark replied, already pulling components from various boxes and shelves. "These youngsters have so interesting engineering challenges they want to solve."

"What kind of engineering challenges?" The question ca from Brad, who pushed past Margaret with his usual complete lack of regard for personal space or social courtesy. His eyes swept across our group with obvious suspicion. "Let guess—more mysterious equipnt for your mysterious missions?"

"Sothing like that," I replied, trying to keep my tone neutral.

Brad’s expression shifted to his familiar sneer. "Right. Because that worked out so well last ti." He gestured vaguely toward the window. "What was it you claid you were doing when you disappeared for that whole night? Fighting so kind of weapon that shoots fireballs?"

I felt my temper flare, but before I could respond, Clara appeared with her usual impeccable timing, carrying a tray laden with coffee cups and what appeared to be fresh pastries.

"I thought you might need so caffeine if you’re going to be doing technical work," she said cheerfully, as if the construction of potentially dangerous equipnt was a perfectly normal morning activity. "And these are the last of the apple turnovers I made yesterday—figured they shouldn’t go to waste."

The arrival of food and coffee had the imdiate effect of defusing the tension in the room. Brad’s confrontational posture relaxed slightly in the face of Clara’s motherly efficiency, and even Mark paused his component gathering to accept a cup of coffee with genuine gratitude.

"Clara, you’re a saint," he said, taking a appreciative sip. "This is exactly what I needed to tackle so serious engineering problems."

As coffee was distributed and the morning pastries were shared around, I found myself approached by soone I hadn’t expected to see.

"Ryan?" Jasmine’s voice was tentative, uncertain. She stood in the doorway, clearly wanting to speak but hesitant to interrupt the group dynamic. "Could I... could I talk to you for a minute? When you have ti?"

I glanced around the workshop, where Mark was already deep in explanation about fuel mixture ratios with Christopher and Elena, their heads bent over what appeared to be a technical manual. Sydney and Cindy were engaged in animated conversation with Clara about the relative rits of different pastry recipes, while Alisha listened to Margaret discuss the community’s recent improvents to their water purification system.

"Sure," I said, following Jasmine out into the hallway.

She led to a small office that had been converted into a quiet eting space—probably where the community handled disputes and personal issues that required privacy. She closed the door behind us, then turned to face with an expression that mixed determination with profound anxiety.

"It’s about Jason," she said.

"What about him?" I asked, imdiately feeling a spike of concern. Had sothing happened to him? Was he sick, injured, having so kind of breakdown from the trauma of Lexington Charter?

"He... confessed to yesterday," she said, the words coming out in a rush as if she’d been rehearsing them but still couldn’t quite manage to deliver them smoothly.

I fell silent for a mont until my brain processed it fully. Jason confessed to Jasmine? The quiet, nervous Jason had finally worked up the courage to tell her how he felt?

"I... I see," I managed, though I wasn’t sure I actually did see. Jason and Jasmine had been spending ti together, that was obvious. They seed comfortable with each other, compatible in the way that two introverted, intellectual people often were. But why was she telling this now? And why did she seem so concerned rather than happy? From what I’d observed, they got along very well. Wasn’t this good news?

"I rejected him," she said then.

You are reading Harem Apocalypse: My Seed is the Cure?! Chapter 80: Flamethrower [1] on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Same genre

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

Lord of the Truth cover
Same genre

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.