Harem Apocalypse: My Seed is the Cure?!-Chapter 195: Meeting Marlon Lane

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Chapter 195: Meeting Marlon Lane

Then I saw him.

A man stood with his back to us near a fountain that clearly no longer functioned, its basin empty and dry, its decorative sculptures stained with mineral deposits and weather damage. He was positioned at what looked like an improvised workbench—a flat section of stone that had probably once been decorative edging, now repurposed as a preparation.

Even from behind, the man projected presence. Broad shoulders stretched the fabric of a faded work shirt, the kind of width that came from decades of physical labor rather than gym workouts. Thick, powerful arms moved with precision as he worked, manipulating something on the stone surface in front of him. His hair was gray—not the dull gray of age but the silvered steel-gray that some people’s dark hair turned into, still thick and cut military-short.

He stood tall, probably six-two or six-three, his posture perfectly straight despite what must be at least fifty years of age. Everything about his bearing screamed military background even before factoring in what Molly had told me.

As we approached, the sound resolved into clarity: he was cleaning fish. A small pile of freshly caught specimens lay on one side of his makeshift table, and he was systematically gutting and filleting them with true expertise, the knife in his hand moving with the confidence of someone who’d performed this task thousands of times.

"Marlon," Molly called out as we came within comfortable speaking distance. "I’ve brought him."

The man—Marlon—completed the cut he was making with unhurried precision before setting down his knife and turning to face us.

And for the first time, I got a clear look at the leader of Atlantic City’s Boardwalk community.

His face looked like it had been carved out of weathered rock—hard planes, deep lines at the corners of his mouth and eyes, the kind of features that came from years of squinting into harsh light and not enough sleep. A rough beard darkened his jaw and cheeks, only a couple of days old but already thick, threaded with silver that matched the steel-gray stubble cut close along his scalp.

Everything about him said former military. Not the weekend-warrior kind, but the real thing.

He held my eyes for a moment, then let his gaze travel down to my boots and back up again, measuring, weighing. After that silent inventory, he picked up a towel from beside the dead fountain and began wiping the fish blood from his hands, slow and thorough.

"So you’re Ryan," he said as he worked, tone flat but not unfriendly.

"I am," I answered.

"Molly tells me you saved little Shannon," he went on, still watching me even as the towel moved between his fingers.

His eyes were hard and direct, that higher‑officer stare designed to strip away bravado and see what was underneath. It was clearly not dramatics or ego; it was habit. The way people got when they’d spent too much time being responsible for lives and learning that mistakes cost blood.

I guessed he was just wary—like everyone else here had been—but concentrated into something sharper. If he was the person holding this fragile, two-hundred‑plus‑soul community together, it would have been strange if he weren’t cautious to the point of paranoia.

"She told you right," I said. 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖

"Rico also tells me you were planning to join Callighan," he added, and at that, whatever faint warmth there had been in his gaze vanished. His eyes went cold.

"I don’t recall saying I was going to join Callighan," I replied.

Marlon didn’t react immediately. He just watched me for a beat longer, then started walking toward me.

His boots rang softly against the stone path, each step measured. Around us, people who had been working in the park—or pretending not to listen—began to glance over. Not openly circling, but angling their bodies just enough that they could see what was happening without dropping what they were doing.

When Marlon stopped, he was close. Close enough that I had to tilt my chin slightly up to meet his eyes. He was taller than me by a little and broader across the chest, the kind of solid, functional bulk that came from a lifetime of actual work rather than weight training.

"You’re telling me Rico lied to me?" He asked quietly.

"I didn’t lie, Marlon," Rico’s voice came from behind me.

I turned my head just enough to see him standing a few steps back on the path, arms crossed, jaw tight. He gave me a sideways look that was half defensive, half accusatory, like he was daring me to contradict him.

"Then?" Marlon asked, his attention sliding back to me.

"I said I might consider joining him," I clarified. "That’s different."

"And why," Marlon asked, "did you say that at all?"

"My friend took a bullet," I said. "She was bleeding out. Your man refused to let her be treated inside your territory. I needed leverage. So I told him that if your people wouldn’t help, I’d have to go to the other community and see if Callighan would."

That landed. I could see it in the slight tightening at the corners of Marlon’s eyes, the way his jaw shifted. He glanced over my shoulder again—toward Rico, toward Molly—then back to me, recalculating.

"And now?" he asked. "Do you still consider joining him? Our doctor treated your friend. She’s sleeping upstairs instead of dead on a street."

"We have no intention of joining anyone," I said, holding his gaze. "We’ve already got enough to deal with. We’re not interested in picking a side in someone else’s war."

"Someone else’s," he repeated mildly, though there was an edge under it. "You really think Callighan’s war stops at our barricades? That if he wins here, he won’t start looking outward for the next thing to conquer?"

I didn’t answer that directly. Not yet.

"You came here looking for a place to settle down, didn’t you?" he went on. "A new home for your people. Somewhere safer than wherever you were last."

"We did at first," I admitted. "But it looks like the best spot on the beach is already taken."

That earned the faintest ghost of a smile—gone as quickly as it appeared.

"The Boardwalk is ours," he said. "We bled for every meter of it. We cleared the infected building by building, hallway by hallway. Good people died to make this stretch of wood and concrete livable. I’m not giving that up, not for anyone. I don’t expect you to like it, but I expect you to understand it."

"I do," I said. "You clear a place, you hold it. That’s how it works now."

"Then I suppose," Marlon said, voice going almost conversational, "you’ll be leaving Atlantic City soon. Finding somewhere else to plant your flag."

"I wonder," I replied, letting the ambiguity hang.

Because after talking with Martin, leaving no longer felt like the only option.

Before, the equation had seemed simple: Boardwalk taken, inner city contested by a warlord, too dangerous, we move on. But Martin had pointed out something important—that Atlantic City was more than just the Boardwalk and Callighan’s turf. There were other neighborhoods, residential blocks, side streets, smaller commercial zones. Dead zones neither faction was using, because they were too busy fighting over the crown jewel.

If we cleared one of those forgotten pockets ourselves—killed the infected, fortified the perimeter, made it livable—then by the unspoken law of this new world, we’d earn the right to claim it. We wouldn’t be leeching off Rico’s hard work or trying to muscle into his territory. We’d be creating something separate.

Marlon’s eyes narrowed at my vague answer. It wasn’t the casual narrowing of someone mildly annoyed; it was the focused tightening of a man trying to decide if what he’d just heard was evasion, disrespect, or simple caution.

"How exactly am I supposed to take that answer, boy?" He asked, voice quiet but edged.

"Take it however you want," I said, keeping my tone level. "We’re from a different community. We don’t owe each other full disclosure about our long‑term plans. There’s no reason to share more than what’s necessary."

For a moment, his expression stayed hard. Then the corner of his mouth curled up just slightly, like he’d heard something he respected even if he didn’t like it.

"You’ve got some backbone," he said. "Tell me—are you the leader of your people?"

He turned and started walking, clearly expecting me to follow. I did, matching his pace while Molly drifted a step behind us, silent.

"No," I said. "I’m not the leader."

"Then it was a collective decision for your group to come here and attempt to settle," he said.

"Yeah," I replied briefly.

Not entirely true, of course. Some of Margaret’s people had hated the idea from the start, muttering about moving inland instead, or trying to push toward a different state. But the majority had supported coming to Atlantic City—the promise of the sea, the fishing, the defensible coastline. In the end, that majority had carried the vote. That was how it worked now.

"Where are you from, boy?" Marlon asked after a few steps.

"We came from Jackson Township," I answered out of habit.

"Not your convoy," he said. "You. Where were you before all this?"

"New York," I replied.

He scoffed softly. "Thought so. I saw it in your eyes."

I wasn’t sure what that was supposed to mean—city hardness, maybe—but I didn’t bite at the bait. Instead, I shifted the focus.

"I heard you pushed a lot of your people to clear Brighton Park because it was your favorite spot before the outbreak," I said. "You sent whole teams in there at the start, right? I hope no one died for sentiment."

The words came out sharper than I’d planned—closer to a provocation than a neutral observation. Behind us, I heard Molly wince slightly, the sound small but clear in the quiet park. Even I knew I’d stepped on a raw nerve there.

Marlon stopped walking.

He turned and stepped back into my path, planting himself directly in front of me again. Up close, the air between us felt charged, like the moment before a storm breaks.

"Did your father never teach you how to speak to your seniors?" He asked, looking down at me with a stare that would have made most people flinch.

"My father taught me everything there is to know about pain," I replied pausing a bit. "Respect wasn’t really on the curriculum."

For a heartbeat, we just stood there, locked in a silent contest. Then he looked away first—not in defeat, but as a man who had decided this particular exchange had gone as far as it needed to.

He turned back toward the Boardwalk and resumed walking. I fell into step beside him again as we exited Brighton Park and rejoined the broader coastal path, the sound of waves growing louder ahead.

"Everyone handles this pandemic their own way," Marlon said after a while, his voice more reflective than confrontational. "Some manage well. Others don’t. Even among the ones who do, there are big differences between those who’ve thrown away their morals and those who kept something intact. Which side would you say you’re on, boy?"

I lowered my gaze for a moment, thinking before answering.

"I think sometimes you really don’t have a choice except to kill," I said. "If you’re attacked, if someone is actively trying to hurt your people, you defend yourself. That hasn’t changed from the old world—call it legitimate self‑defense."

I lifted my head again and met his eyes.

"But killing someone because they might pose a danger someday? Because they could become a problem? That’s not the same thing as stopping someone who’s actually threatening your people. One is necessity. The other is fear dressed up as logic."

He watched me as I spoke, his expression unreadable.

"You speak well," Marlon said finally. "So I’m guessing you’ve seen your fair share of things before you ended up here. It’s been almost three months since this all began, after all. Nobody’s innocent anymore, not really."

We reached the Boardwalk again, the wooden planks under our boots creaking softly as we stepped onto them. Ahead, the beach opened out in a sweep of pale sand, the noon sun painting the water in bright shards of light. I could already see movement down near the tide line—figures walking, clusters gathered, people going about the business of surviving another day.

"Hey!"

The call came from our right.

I turned and saw Shannon waving at me energetically, her face lighting up in a broad smile when our eyes met. She was walking carefully with the help of a stick, her injured ankle still bound, her steps cautious.

She wasn’t alone.

Beside her walked a woman in her late twenties, maybe early thirties, with the same flaxen hair and clear blue eyes as Shannon. The resemblance was immediate and striking—the same jawline, the same tilt to the smile, the same way they held their shoulders when they moved.