Chapter 275: The Past of Marlon and Callighan
Chapter 275: The Past of Marlon and Callighan
“We can speak freely here,” Marlon said, settling back into his seat.
I looked around, taking the place in properly for the first time since we’d stepped inside.
“It’s a kebab restaurant,” I said.
“It is,” he nodded.
Of all the places to hold a private conversation in the middle of an apocalypse, a kebab joint hadn’t exactly topped my list of predictions. But honestly? It worked. The windows were thick with grime, which meant nobody was seeing in from the street. The booths were deep and cushioned — the old kind, with padded vinyl seating that had gone a little soft with age but was still more comfortable than anything I’d sat on in weeks. The place smelled faintly of old spices and something that might have been cooking oil once upon a time, back when that sort of thing still happened.
We’d taken the corner booth, the big one near the back. Cindy and Daisy had slid in beside me without discussion, which meant I was effectively pinned against the wall with both of them taking up most of the available space. Not that I was complaining. Across the table, Marlon had settled in with Maribel beside him, relaxed and unhurried, like this was a meeting he’d been expecting for a while. Molly hadn’t sat down at all. She was leaning against the long counter near the back, arms folded, watching everything with those calm eyes of hers. And Rico was seated on the table behind.
“You don’t need to worry about ears out here,” Marlon said, glancing briefly toward the front. “Nobody from the park comes this far in unless I send them. Anything you say in this room stays in this room.”
“Good,” I said. “Because I’ve got things to say and I’d rather only say them once.”
I leaned forward slightly, resting my forearms on the table, and looked at him straight.
“Secrets, yeah, I do have some. But I don’t think I’m the only one sitting at this table with things they haven’t said out loud yet.” I held his gaze. “Callighan wants you dead. Not just out of his way, dead, specifically. That’s the driving force behind every attack he’s been running against your people maybe. So before we talk alliances, before we talk anything, I need you to tell me what’s between you two.”
The question landed and sat there.
Marlon didn’t flinch. He didn’t look away. But something shifted just slightly behind his eyes, not guilt exactly,.
“Where did you hear that?” He asked.
“Does it matter?” I said. “Is it true?”
He looked me for a moment longer. Then something in his expression settled, like a decision had been made.
“There is something,” he admitted. “And you’re right that you should know it before we go any further.” He leaned back into the cushion, one arm resting along the top of the booth, and let out a slow breath. “It’s not a short story.”
“We’ve got time,” I said.
He nodded once. Then he began.
“I met Callighan ten years ago. I was working as a senior supervisor at the Abscond Inlet State Marina, it was a civilian posting, a management role overseeing daily operations, staff scheduling, maintenance, that sort of thing. I was in my last stretch before retirement, and honestly, it felt like the right kind of transition. Still on the water, still doing something that mattered, but without the weight of active duty on my shoulders anymore. A chance to ease out slow instead of just stopping one day and having nothing.” He paused. “The role came with mentoring responsibilities. New staff, junior hires, people learning the ropes. I trained a lot of them over the years. Callighan was one of them.”
“How old was he?” Cindy asked curiously.
“Mid-twenties. Twenty-four, maybe twenty-five when he first came in. Young. Eager. And honestly—” Marlon almost smiled, but it didn’t quite reach his eyes — “clumsy as hell. The kind of clumsy where you wondered how he’d made it this far. Dropped things, miscalculated distances, got turned around on routes he’d walked a dozen times. The other staff gave him a hard time for it. Not cruelly, mostly…just the kind of ribbing that happens when someone keeps making the same obvious mistakes.”
“But he stuck with it?” Maribel asked. She’d shifted forward in her seat without realizing it, elbows on the table.
“I didn’t know you didn’t know the details of this,” I said, glancing at her.
She shrugged one shoulder. “I knew they had a history. I never heard the full version.”
Marlon continued, unbothered by the interruption. “He stuck with it. That was the thing about Callighan, the clumsiness was on the surface, but underneath it, the boy absorbed everything. Every correction, every lesson, every piece of instruction I gave him. He remembered it and he applied it and then he came back for more. After two years under me, he’d gone from someone who couldn’t file a basic report without three errors to someone who was running his own sections competently and earning real respect from the staff around him.” Marlon’s jaw tightened slightly. “He had this quality, a kind of natural magnetism, I suppose you’d call it. When he spoke, people listened. When he moved toward something, others followed without quite knowing why. I saw it early. Real leadership potential, not the loud kind that announces itself, but the quiet kind that just… pulls.”
He paused, and for a moment the only sound was the distant creak of the building settling and the faint moan of wind threading through the gaps in the boarded windows.
“So I invested in him more than I did the others,” Marlon said. “I gave him more time, more access, more responsibility. I pushed him further and faster than the standard progression because I believed he could handle it. And he delivered every single time.” A short, humorless sound escaped him, not quite a laugh. “Looking back now, I should have been paying closer attention. He was almost too consistent. Too clean. Too perfectly on the right side of every line. But I wanted to believe in him, so I didn’t ask the questions I should have been asking.”
“What changed?” I said.
Marlon’s expression hardened.
“Small things at first. The small things you notice but talk yourself out of because individually they mean nothing.” He counted them off slowly, like he’d rehearsed this list in his head before. “Fuel logs that didn’t match usage patterns, not by a lot, just enough to be slightly off if you were really looking. Boat registrations filed at unusual hours, late night or early morning, times when foot traffic was low and oversight was minimal. And security camera footage with these occasional gaps, short ones, twenty minutes here, forty minutes there during late-night shifts that Callighan had specifically volunteered to cover.”
The table was quiet.
“Volunteered,” I repeated.
“Volunteered,” Marlon confirmed. “Enthusiastically. Always a good reason for it — covering for someone, picking up extra hours, showing initiative. On the surface, every explanation was perfectly reasonable. But when I started laying them out side by side in my head, the pattern was too good to be coincidence.” He looked down at his hands for a moment. “I wanted to be wrong. I want you to understand that. I had put real time and real belief into this man. The idea that he was playing me, playing all of us from the beginning was not something I could accept easily. So I watched. I kept my face neutral in front of him, kept giving him access, kept acting like nothing had changed. And I watched.”
He looked up.
“After three months of quiet surveillance,” Marlon said, “I had enough to know exactly what I was dealing with. Callighan was running an illegal smuggling operation through Absecon Inlet. Had been for a while, long enough that the infrastructure was solid, well-hidden, and genuinely difficult to untangle. He’d been using his position at the marina, and my trust specifically, to provide access. Boats moving through at night. Cargo that never appeared on any official manifest.” His voice stayed level but something underneath it had gone cold. “Drugs. Weapons. And on at least two occasions…people.”
Cindy sat back slightly. “That’s… completely different from the person you just described,” she said. “The clumsy guy trying his hardest, learning everything you taught him, earning people’s respect, that’s not the same person at all.”
“No,” Marlon agreed quietly. “It isn’t.”
Yeah. The gap between those two versions of Callighan was something I was still trying to wrap my head around.
“He really played you, didn’t he,” Molly said from the counter. She wasn’t being cruel about it, it came out almost like admiration.
Marlon’s expression darkened.
“I confronted him,” he said. “Waited until after hours, when the marina was empty and there was nobody around to perform for. I had everything laid out, the logs, the footage, the documentation trail, all of it. When I put it in front of him, he didn’t even try to deny it. Not immediately.” Marlon’s eyes had gone somewhere distant, replaying the memory. “He looked at the evidence for a long moment and then he just… started talking. Told me I didn’t understand. That he’d been drowning. His mother’s medical bills had piled up to something unmanageable. His brother had a legal situation that needed fees he couldn’t cover through legitimate means. He said the system didn’t care about people like him. Like us.”
He paused a bit.
“And honestly, he wasn’t entirely wrong about that. The system does grind people like him into nothing and keep walking. I knew that. I’d seen it. But knowing that doesn’t make what he built in the shadows any less criminal, or any less dangerous to the people caught in the path of it. People died because of what moved through those boats. I was certain of that even if I couldn’t put names to them.”
“What did he do after that?” I asked. I’d leaned forward without noticing. So had everyone else at the table, even Molly had shifted her weight off the counter slightly.
Marlon’s expression went complicated in a way that was hard to read.
“He begged me,” he said simply.
Nobody spoke.
“He said he would stop. All of it, immediately, completely, no conditions. He said I had been like a father to him. That what I’d given him over those years, the time, the belief, the investment meant more to him than anything else in his life, and that he would rather lose everything than lose my respect.” He shook his head slowly. “And I want to be honest with all of you. I stood there in that office and a part of me, a real part wanted to believe him.”
The silence stretched. None of us rushed it.
“I went home that night and I didn’t sleep,” Marlon continued. “I lay there until morning thinking about it from every angle I could. Redemption. What it means. Whether it’s real. Whether a person can do what Callighan did and still come back from it and be someone worth trusting again.” He looked down at the table surface for a moment. “I had cared about that boy. Genuinely. That doesn’t just disappear because you find out the truth. If anything it makes it harder.”
He looked up.
“But I was a marine before I was anything else. And a marine doesn’t bury evidence because it’s uncomfortable. People had suffered because of what he’d organized. People I’d never meet. Whatever debt I felt I owed to Callighan couldn’t outweigh what was owed to them.” His voice had gone flat and firm in the way of someone reading from a code they’d written a long time ago and never deviated from. “So the next morning I filed a complete report to the federal authorities. Every piece of evidence I’d collected over three months, documented and submitted.”
“Within a week,” he said, “Callighan was in handcuffs.”
“Wait,” Cindy said, sitting up. “Why didn’t he just run? He had money, connections, an entire network of people. He could have disappeared.”
The corner of Marlon’s mouth shifted, not quite a smile.
“Because I told him I wouldn’t file the report,” he said. “I looked him in the eye and I told him I needed more time to think. That I hadn’t decided yet. He believed me.”
Molly let out a short sound of amusement. “How cruel.”
“Cruel?” Marlon’s hand came down flat on the table, not violent, but sharp, with a crack that made Daisy jump. “He spent two years using my trust as a tool. I gave him one week of the same. That’s not cruelty.”
Nobody argued with that.
“Then what happened?” Cindy pressed, because at this point she was fully invested and not pretending otherwise.
Marlon scoffed, and for the first time a thread of something raw came through the controlled delivery. “He received a fifteen-year sentence. Federal. Airtight case, given everything I’d handed over.” His expression curdled slightly. “And then the world ended. The outbreak hit while he was still inside, and in all the chaos of prisons falling apart and containment failing and everyone scrambling just to survive the first weeks, he got out. Walked right back into the world.”
He looked at me directly.
“And the first place he came,” Marlon said, “was here.”
“To destroy your life,” I said slowly, working through it.
Marlon let out a long breath. “I let him in too far, that was my mistake. He wasn’t just a subordinate to me or a project I was proud of. He came to my home. Ate at my table. Summer grew up knowing him, called him uncle, looked forward to his visits, trusted him the way kids trust adults they see as safe.” Something crossed his face that was harder to look at than the rest of it. “I had no son. Callighan was the closest thing I had to one. And I burned it down because I had to.”
The quiet that followed that was a different kind than before.
I turned it over in my head. The sentence, the escape, the beeline back to Atlantic City. One thing still wasn’t sitting right.
“Wanting to destroy your community, wanting to make your life difficult, I can follow that logic,” I said. “But you said he wants you specifically dead. That’s personal in a way that goes past revenge for a prison sentence.”
Marlon was silent for a moment.
“His mother took her own life,” he said. “Shortly after he was incarcerated.”
The temperature in the room seemed to drop a degree.
“I had thought at first that he’d been exaggerating about her illness to make me feel guilty. Manipulating me one last time. But she was genuinely sick. She had been for a while.” He rubbed a hand slowly across his jaw. “When he went to prison, she couldn’t carry it. Couldn’t reconcile who she believed her son was with what he’d turned out to be. And she ended it.”
“So he blames you,” Maribel said quietly. “For her death.”
“Yes.”
“That’s—” I stopped, reorganized my thoughts. “That’s wrong. You didn’t put him in that position. He did. She died because of choices he made, not because you reported them.”
“That’s exactly right,” Cindy said, and her voice had lost its usual lightness. “He set every single thing in motion. The debt, the smuggling, the arrests, all of it, that was him. His mother couldn’t live with what he’d become, and that’s on him. Not you.”
Marlon looked at her for a moment, something unreadable moving behind his eyes.
“Logic doesn’t have much purchase in grief,” he said simply. “Especially when the grief is wrapped around rage. He needed someone to blame who wasn’t himself. And I was the one who pulled the trigger, even if he loaded the gun.”
“Are you feeling guilty about it?” I asked him.
It was a blunt question. Maybe too blunt. But we were past the point of dancing around things.
Marlon was quiet for a moment, his eyes fixed somewhere on the middle distance between us.
“Guilty about Callighan?” he said finally. “No. Not even slightly. He made his choices with full knowledge of what they were. He used me, he used people he’d never even met, and he built something ugly with his own two hands. I don’t carry guilt for that. His mother is a different matter.”
He said the last part quietly.
“You couldn’t have done anything for her, Marlon,” Molly said from behind the counter.
“Perhaps,” he said. “But that doesn’t stop the feeling. And now everyone around me is paying the price for what happened between us. People who had nothing to do with any of it. People who just needed somewhere safe to land.”
“You’re also the reason all of us found somewhere safe to land.” Rico’s voice came from the table just behind ours, he’d been so quiet I’d half forgotten he was there. He was leaning forward now, forearms on the table, looking at Marlon. “Three months, Marlon. Three months since this whole thing fell apart, and most of us are still here. Still breathing. That’s not luck. That’s you.”
Marlon looked at him but didn’t respond to that.
“When he first arrived with his group,” Marlon said, redirecting, “the very first thing he did was to tell me to hand myself over, and he’d let everyone else go. Walk away, leave the whole community standing, no further violence.”
“He said that?” Cindy said.
Marlon nodded. “Offered it clearly. Me for everyone.”
The table was quiet for a beat.
“And we told him no.” Molly’s smile had returned, small and certain. “That was our choice to make, not yours. Every single one of us made it. And honestly, who believes a word that man says? Hand over our leader and just trust he keeps his end of the deal?” She shook her head. “We’d have been leaderless and still under attack within a week.”
“You can’t trust anything that comes out of his mouth,” Maribel said, her voice harder than usual. Her hand had drifted up while she spoke, fingers closing around the necklace she always wore, a shark tooth on a simple cord, worn smooth from handling. I’d noticed it before but never said anything. She was turning it between her fingers now without seeming to realize she was doing it.
“Something happened with you too?” I asked, the question coming out before I’d thought it through.
Maribel’s hand stilled on the necklace. Her expression shifted in a way that was quick and involuntary, a small flinch, something tightening behind the eyes and I felt the question land wrong the moment it left my mouth.
“Sorry,” I said. “You don’t have to—”
“Now.” Marlon’s voice came in cleanly, redirecting the room without making a scene of it. He looked at me with those sharp eyes. “You’ve heard everything between me and Callighan. All of it. So it’s your turn.” He folded his hands on the table. “Tell me exactly what you want from this alliance, and what you’re planning to do about him.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 298: Rebecca Wants it...
- Chapter 297: Back to the Whitesun with Another Hostage
- Chapter 296: Callighan’s and Gaspar’s Disagreement
- Chapter 295: Meeting Callighan
- Chapter 294: Zakthar
- Chapter 293: Rebecca’s Blundering
- Chapter 292: Christopher’s Watch
- Chapter 291: Margaret, Martin and Clara meeting Kunta
- Chapter 290: Ryan Vs Penny
- Chapter 289: Symbiote Threat
- Chapter 288: New Glasses for Daisy
- Chapter 287: Love Moment with Cindy
- Chapter 286: With Cindy in the Optical Center [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 285: With Cindy in the Optical Center [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 284: On Way to the Optical Center
- Chapter 283: Keith’s Plan
- Chapter 282: Keith
- Chapter 281: Mei’s Dream
- Chapter 280: Doctor Shawn’s Crush
- Chapter 279: Half Costa Rican
- Chapter 278: Alliance Talk with Marlon [3]
- Chapter 277: Alliance Talk with Marlon [2]
- Chapter 276: Alliance Talk with Marlon [1]
- Chapter 275: The Past of Marlon and Callighan
- Chapter 274: Marlon Has a Daughter Complex
- Chapter 273: Fighting Rico
- Chapter 272: Alliance Offer to Marlon
- Chapter 271: Back to the Boardwalk [3]
- Chapter 270: Back to the Boardwalk [2]
- Chapter 269: Back to the Boardwalk [1]
- Chapter 268: Getting Rid of the Jacket
- Chapter 267: Anxious Ryan
- Chapter 266: Talking to Lucy
- Chapter 265: Bringing Mark in
- Chapter 264: Discussion With Mark
- Chapter 263: Sydney’s Instincts
- Chapter 262: Talk with the White Lady
- Chapter 261: Ivy’s Grip
- Chapter 260: Doing Rachel in the Whitesun Hotel [2] [R-18 Contents]
- Chapter 259: Doing Rachel in the Whitesun Hotel [1] [R-18 Contents]
- Chapter 258: An Alliance With Kunta [4]
- Chapter 257: An Alliance With Kunta [3]
- Chapter 256: An Alliance With Kunta [2]
- Chapter 255: An Alliance With Kunta [1]
- Chapter 254: Whitesun Hotel as New Home
- Chapter 253: Lucy The Hostage
- Chapter 252: The Golden Nugget Hotel [2]
- Chapter 251: The Golden Nugget Hotel [1]
- Chapter 250: Atlantic City State Marina [2]
- Chapter 249: Atlantic City State Marina [1]
- Chapter 248: Emily’s Fall
- Chapter 247: Callighan [2]
- Chapter 246: Callighan [1]
- Chapter 245: Mei Kidnapped [2]
- Chapter 244: Mei Kidnapped [1]
- Chapter 243: End of The Clearing Day
- Chapter 242: You Cannot Save Everyone
- Chapter 241: Summer Time [8]
- Chapter 240: Summer Time [7]
- Chapter 239: Summer Time [6]
- Chapter 238: Summer Time [5]
- Chapter 237: Summer Time [4]
- Chapter 236: Summer Time [3]
- Chapter 235: Summer Time [2]
- Chapter 234: Summer Time [1]
- Chapter 233: Clearing The Whitesun Hotel
- Chapter 232: Kunta [2]
- Chapter 231: Kunta [1]
- Chapter 230: A Starakian in the Whitesun Hotel
- Chapter 229: New Encounter at the Whitesun Hotel...
- Chapter 228: Claiming Atlantic City [6]
- Chapter 227: Claiming Atlantic City [5]
- Chapter 226: Gaspar [2]
- Chapter 225: Gaspar [1]
- Chapter 224: Rebecca’s Confusing Thoughts
- Chapter 223: Claiming Atlantic City [4]
- Chapter 222: Claiming Atlantic City [3]
- Chapter 221: Claiming Atlantic City [2]
- Chapter 220: Claiming Atlantic City [1]
- Chapter 219: On the Final Way to Atlantic City
- Chapter 218: Last Speech Before Atlantic City
- Chapter 217: Waking With Sydney in the Camping Van
- Chapter 216: Night Store Time with Sydney [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 215: Night Store Time with Sydney [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 214: Questions and Hesitation
- Chapter 213: Making The Decision
- Chapter 212: Daisy’s Situation
- Chapter 211: Telling About Emily
- Chapter 210: Back to Galloway
- Chapter 209: Discussion in the Camping Van
- Chapter 208: Back to Boardwalk with Maribel
- Chapter 207: Discussion With Maribel [2]
- Chapter 206: Discussion With Maribel [1]
- Chapter 205: Maribel’s Suspicions
- Chapter 204: Emily?
- Chapter 203: Familiar Shadow...
- Chapter 202: Fighting The Hybrid Infected of Atlantic City [2]
- Chapter 201: Fighting The Hybrid Infected of Atlantic City [1]
- Chapter 200: Unknown Threat
- Chapter 199: A Warm Meal with Carmen and Shannon [3]
- Chapter 198: A Warm Meal with Carmen and Shannon [2]
- Chapter 197: A Warm Meal with Carmen and Shannon [1]
- Chapter 196: Carmen and an Invitation
- Chapter 195: Meeting Marlon Lane
- Chapter 194: Boardwalk At Day
- Chapter 193: Visions of Wars
- Chapter 192: Boardwalk Night
- Chapter 191: Doctor Shawn
- Chapter 190: Talk with Molly
- Chapter 189: Finding a Solution
- Chapter 188: Tensions in the Memorial Building
- Chapter 187: Discussion With Maribel and Shannon
- Chapter 186: Maribel
- Chapter 185: Shannon
- Chapter 184: Scouting Atlantic City [7]
- Chapter 183: Scouting Atlantic City [6]
- Chapter 182: Scouting Atlantic City [5]
- Chapter 181: Scouting Atlantic City [4]
- Chapter 180: Scouting Atlantic City [3]
- Chapter 179: Scouting Atlantic City [2]
- Chapter 178: Scouting Atlantic City [1]
- Chapter 177: Atlantic City Scouting Group [2]
- Chapter 176: Atlantic City Scouting Group [1]
- Chapter 175: Margaret’s Doubt
- Chapter 174: Galloway Time With Cindy [5]
- Chapter 173: Galloway Time With Cindy [4] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 172: Galloway Time With Cindy [3] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 171: Galloway Time With Cindy [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 170: Galloway Time With Cindy [1]
- Chapter 169: Galloway [6]
- Chapter 168: Galloway [5]
- Chapter 167: Galloway [4]
- Chapter 166: Galloway [3]
- Chapter 165: Galloway [2]
- Chapter 164: Galloway [1]
- Chapter 163: Vladislav Petrov
- Chapter 162: Farewell Jackson Township [3]
- Chapter 161: Farewell Jackson Township [2]
- Chapter 160: Farewell Jackson Township [1]
- Chapter 159: End of the Screamer Incident!
- Chapter 158: The Scream [23]
- Chapter 157: The Scream [22]
- Chapter 156: The Scream [21]
- Chapter 155: The Scream [20]
- Chapter 154: The Scream [19]
- Chapter 153: The Scream [18]
- Chapter 152: The Scream [17]
- Chapter 151: The Scream [16]
- Chapter 150: The Scream [15]
- Chapter 149: The Scream [14]
- Chapter 148: The Scream [13]
- Chapter 147: The Scream [12]
- Chapter 146: The Scream [11]
- Chapter 145: The Scream [10]
- Chapter 144: The Scream [9]
- Chapter 143: The Scream [8]
- Chapter 142: The Scream [7]
- Chapter 141: The Scream [6]
- Chapter 140: The Scream [5]
- Chapter 139: The Scream [4]
- Chapter 138: The Scream [3]
- Chapter 137: The Scream [2]
- Chapter 136: The Scream [1]
- Chapter 135: The Call of the Screamer
- Chapter 134: Jasmine’s Request
- Chapter 133: Promise To Elena
- Chapter 132: In The Storage Room With Elena [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 131: Elena’s and Alisha’s Father
- Chapter 130: Reunion Between Christopher and Cindy
- Chapter 129: Reading Time with Liu Mei
- Chapter 128: Ivy Found
- Chapter 127: Searching Ivy
- Chapter 126: Solar Panel finally?!
- Chapter 125: Strategic Countermeasures Against The Screamer
- Chapter 124: Rachel’s Confession and Jason Called
- Chapter 123: Stabilizing Rachel? [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 122: Stabilizing Rachel? [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 121: Unspoken Truths
- Chapter 120: The Screamer [5]
- Chapter 119: The Screamer [4]
- Chapter 118: The Screamer [3]
- Chapter 117: The Screamer [2]
- Chapter 116: The Screamer [1]
- Chapter 115: Mending With Christopher
- Chapter 114: Complicated Truths
- Chapter 113: Are you a Host, Wanda?
- Chapter 112: What Solutions Against the Screamer?
- Chapter 111: To The Municipal Office!
- Chapter 110: Sydney’s Tease and Cindy’s Wearing it!
- Chapter 109: Staring-Admiring Rachel’s Stretchings
- Chapter 108: Stabilizing Cinderella [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 107: Stabilizing Cinderella [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 106: Aftermath of the Electrical Expedition
- Chapter 105: The Electrical Expedition [4]
- Chapter 104: The Electrical Expedition [3]
- Chapter 103: The Electrical Expedition [2]
- Chapter 102: The Electrical Expedition [1]
- Chapter 101: Morning Confessions and Unexpected Companions
- Chapter 100: Evening Rituals
- Chapter 99: With Sydney in an Empty Field [2] [R–18 Contents!]
- Chapter 98: With Sydney in an Empty Field [1] [R–18 Contents!]
- Chapter 97: Back to Home
- Chapter 96: Echoes in Empty Rooms
- Chapter 95: Spikes in the Dawn
- Chapter 94: Cindy’s Confession?
- Chapter 93: Whispers in the Heat
- Chapter 92: Fractured Foundations
- Chapter 91: Bitter Aftermath
- Chapter 90: The Weight of Necessity [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 89: The Weight of Necessity [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 88: In the Cold Silence
- Chapter 87: The Unbearable Choice
- Chapter 86: Frost Walker [3]
- Chapter 85: Frost Walker [2]
- Chapter 84: Frost Walker [1]
- Chapter 83: The Morning of Fire and Farewells
- Chapter 82: Flamethrower [3]
- Chapter 81: Flamethrower [2]
- Chapter 80: Flamethrower [1]
- Chapter 79: Revelations and Decisions
- Chapter 78: Revealing To The Group
- Chapter 77: Alien Device Discovered!
- Chapter 76: Christopher’s Discovery!
- Chapter 75: Treated By Miss Ivy
- Chapter 74: Alisha’s Decision
- Chapter 73: Ryan Takes Steroids?
- Chapter 72: Explaining to Alisha
- Chapter 71: Stabilizing Elena [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 70: Stabilizing Elena [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 69: The Drive Home
- Chapter 68: Cleanup and Sydney...
- Chapter 67: Ten Days Later
- Chapter 66: Dawn’s Uncertain Light
- Chapter 65: After the Pharmacy Night
- Chapter 64: Pharmacy Night With Rachel [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 63: Pharmacy Night With Rachel [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 62: Taking Down The Fire Spitter!
- Chapter 61: Night Attack On The Municipality Office!
- Chapter 60: Small Meal With Rachel
- Chapter 59: Rachel’s Concern [2]
- Chapter 58: Rachel’s Concern [1]
- Chapter 57: Jackson Township Group [3]
- Chapter 56: Jackson Township Group [2]
- Chapter 55: Jackson Township Group [1]
- Chapter 54: Infected Dog!
- Chapter 53: Center Town of Jackson Township
- Chapter 52: A Peaceful Waking
- Chapter 51: Night with Sydney
- Chapter 50: Eating Sydney [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 49: Eating Sydney [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 48: Settling In!
- Chapter 47: Telling Rachel
- Chapter 46: Who Is Abraham Lincoln?
- Chapter 45: Grocery Store Aftermath
- Chapter 44: Jackson Township
- Chapter 43: Leaving New York!
- Chapter 42: Leaving Lexington Charter [3]
- Chapter 41: Leaving Lexington Charter [2]
- Chapter 40: Leaving Lexington Charter [1]
- Chapter 39: Escape from the Library
- Chapter 38: Dullahan
- Chapter 37: Suspicion and Secrets
- Chapter 36: Short Waves Radio And Gun Obtained!
- Chapter 35: Second Power [2]
- Chapter 34: Second Power [1]
- Chapter 33: Curing Elena [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 32: Curing Elena [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 31: Elena Bitten
- Chapter 30: Suicide Mission
- Chapter 29: Suicide Squad
- Chapter 28: The Dangerous Plan
- Chapter 27: Lexington Charter: Library
- Chapter 26: Lexington Charter: Third Floor
- Chapter 25: Lexington Charter: Second Floor
- Chapter 24: The Russian Twins [2]
- Chapter 23: The Russian Twins [1]
- Chapter 22: Entering Lexington Charter!
- Chapter 21: Arrival at Lexington Academy
- Chapter 20: Mending With Rachel And Leaving Sydney’s House
- Chapter 19: Last Dinner At Sydney’s
- Chapter 18: Sydney Teasing Ryan
- Chapter 17: Lexington Charter
- Chapter 16: Leaving With The Sisters
- Chapter 15: Curing Rachel [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 14: Curing Rachel [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 13: White Threat
- Chapter 12: First Floor Neighbours
- Chapter 11: Motherless
- Chapter 10: Sydney
- Chapter 9: Parting With Emily
- Chapter 8: Finding Schoolmates!
- Chapter 7: Escaping The Infected School!
- Chapter 6: Power Revealed
- Chapter 5: The Awakening
- Chapter 4: Let’s Have Sex [4] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 3: Let’s Have Sex [3] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 2: Let’s Have Sex [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 1: Let’s Have Sex [1]