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Harem Apocalypse: My Seed is the Cure?!-Chapter 249: Atlantic City State Marina [1]
Night had fallen completely over Atlantic City, transforming the ruined urban landscape into a maze of shadows and uncertain threats.
The day had technically ended in tremendous success by every objective metric we’d established that morning when our convoy had departed from the temporary shelter in Galloway Township.
We’d successfully secured the Whitesun Hotel—all ten floors thoroughly cleared of Infected, verified safe for habitation, and prepared to receive Margaret’s entire community of sixty vulnerable survivors.
We’d secured the surrounding blocks as well, creating a defensive perimeter spanning several city blocks that was genuinely clear of wandering Infected threats. We’d even managed to strategically block the main road approaches using abandoned vehicles and debris barricades, establishing some things like choke points that would prevent large numbers of Infected from simply wandering into our claimed territory.
There had been zero casualties among either group—not from my core team, not from Martin’s experienced fighters, not even minor injuries that required significant medical intervention. 𝒻𝘳ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝒷𝘯ℴ𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝑐ℴ𝑚
By any reasonable standard, today had been an unqualified triumph of planning and execution.
But it seemed we couldn’t end this day in anything approaching happiness or satisfaction.
Because while we’d been working to create safety, danger had found the people we’d left behind.
Another Symbiote Host had appeared—someone named Gaspar, apparently allied with or working for the murderer Callighan. He’d attacked the supposedly safe group we’d positioned away from combat operations, killing one person from Margaret’s community with casual brutality, stealing the valuable Starakian Matrix device we’d recovered, and kidnapping Mei.
All of it had happened during our absence, while we’d been focused elsewhere and believing everyone was secure.
According to what Clara had explained, this Gaspar had apparently stumbled upon their position more or less randomly when he’d somehow sensed Wanda’s distinctive Starakian blood—detected her alien heritage through whatever enhanced perception Symbiotes possessed.
He’d been preparing to take Wanda as his main target when Mei had intervened, managing to save Wanda by offering the Alien Matrix device as an alternative prize worth more than a single half-Starakian girl.
A very clever decision, exactly the kind of quick thinking I’d expect from Mei’s sharp intelligence.
But the situation had spiraled out of control when Rebecca had been threatened, and Mei had made the inexplicable choice to sacrifice herself—offering herself as a hostage in exchange for Rebecca’s safety.
That decision seemed genuinely strange and out of character for Mei, who’d never shown particular fondness for Rebecca and had actually maintained a fairly hostile relationship with her. But the specific motivations didn’t matter right now.
What mattered was getting her back.
I wasn’t going to passively accept her abduction and hope for peaceful resolution through negotiation.
If I was already planning to eventually travel all the way to Europe—crossing an entire ocean and navigating a foreign continent—to rescue Elena and Alisha from their father, I absolutely wasn’t going to sit idle when Mei could be held just a few miles away in this same city.
I moved alone through the darkened streets, not using any flashlight or artificial illumination that might give away my position to distant observers.
My enhanced eyes were more than sufficient to detect the movements of wandering Infected in the darkness, and I dealt with them swiftly and silently whenever they crossed my path—quick, efficient kills that left no noise to attract attention.
From this point forward, I had to exercise extreme caution and maintain absolute stealth.
The State Marina—that was my destination, the only concrete lead I possessed.
The location sat in the southwestern section of Atlantic City relative to the Boardwalk, positioned near the Absecon Inlet that separated the main city from the smaller adjacent community of Brigantine.
According to Molly had shared during my visit to the Boardwalk Community, the State Marina was actively controlled and garrisoned by Callighan’s forces. A substantial group of his armed followers were living in the Golden Nugget Casino Hotel adjacent to the marina, using that fortified position as their main base of operations in this area.
Callighan himself apparently didn’t reside there permanently, but a large portion of his organization was stationed at that location with specific tactical objectives: monitor the Boardwalk Community’s movements continuously, prevent them from accessing or stealing the boats docked at the marina, and serve as Callighan’s eyes and ears throughout Atlantic City proper.
As for Callighan and the main core of his group, they were most likely positioned beyond the marina—probably across the inlet in Brigantine, which offered greater isolation and defensibility.
But attempting to cross into Brigantine and search that entire separate municipality would be genuinely suicidal, even for someone with my enhanced capabilities.
Right now, my more realistic objective was reaching the State Marina itself and conducting reconnaissance.
I was desperately hoping that Mei might be held somewhere in that area—either at the marina facilities themselves or inside the Golden Nugget hotel where Callighan’s forces were concentrated.
I genuinely wondered why Gaspar had even taken her in the first place, what strategic value she represented.
Perhaps he intended to use her as a hostage against the new survivor group that had arrived in Atlantic City—leverage against us to force cooperation or extract concessions. If that was his plan, things could become complicated very quickly.
Regardless of the specific motivations, I couldn’t believe that Callighan had managed to form an alliance with an actual Symbiote Host. That single fact elevated him from dangerous human threat to genuinely existential danger.
Now he represented a real threat that couldn’t be ignored or avoided.
My earlier hope of staying completely off Callighan’s radar and living peacefully in Atlantic City while his conflict with the Boardwalk Community played out independently—that strategy seemed utterly impossible now.
Maybe it had been hopelessly naive from the beginning, but it had represented the most peaceful solution especially for Margaret’s traumatized community. I’d mainly been thinking of their welfare and psychological state when considering that approach.
They’d already witnessed and endured more than enough horror in Jackson Township to deserve getting entangled in yet another violent conflict, this time against a human community rather than Infected. But when the community in question was this actively hostile and possessed a dangerous Symbiote Host as an ally, could you realistically still pursue peace?
Obviously not.
Lost in these troubling thoughts, I suddenly realized I’d already arrived at a large parking area.
The parking lot was positioned directly adjacent to the small harbor—the State Marina proper—where countless boats of various sizes were docked in neat rows along multiple piers extending into the dark water.
But my eyes immediately caught sight of something that made my stomach sink.
Lamps. Electric lights burning steadily throughout the area.
They somehow had functional electricity here, either through generators or having restored grid power to this section.
Damn it.
The entire front approach to both the hotel and the marina facilities was illuminated by working streetlights and floodlights—eliminating the cover of darkness that I’d been counting on for infiltration.
And even from my current position in the shadowed parking area, I could clearly see numerous armed guards making regular patrol rounds, all of them carrying military-grade rifles and assault weapons.
There was absolutely no way I could slip through that perimeter easily or undetected.
If even one of them caught sight of me and raised an alarm, it would be over. The entire compound would lock down, and if Mei was being held anywhere in this facility, they’d immediately move her to a more secure location or use her as a hostage shield.
I crouched in the darkness, scanning the defensive setup carefully.
I tried desperately to identify potential opportunities for infiltration, scanning the patrol patterns and looking for gaps in their coverage.
But it was genuinely difficult. These weren’t amateur survivors playing at security—they were conducting disciplined, professional rounds with overlapping fields of observation that eliminated obvious blind spots.
The only realistic solution for slipping past that perimeter undetected would be activating Time Freeze—using my most powerful ability to freeze the guards in place while I moved through their positions.
But deploying my best card just to gain entry to the hotel seemed recklessly premature and strategically foolish.
I wanted to preserve that specifically in case I encountered Gaspar inside the facility. Fighting another experienced Symbiote Host without my time-manipulation advantage could easily prove fatal.
"Damn it... How many people does Callighan actually have under his command?"
Looking at the sheer number of armed guards patrolling around the entire hotel complex and marina facilities, I found myself genuinely wondering about the scale of his organization.
Marlon’s Boardwalk Community numbered approximately two hundred survivors according to what we’d learned during our diplomatic visit.
But what about Callighan’s forces? How large was his army?
And contrary to Marlon’s more traditional community structure—where combatants were a minority and most people filled support roles—Callighan seemed to have significantly more personnel capable of handling weapons and actively fighting. Both women and men were visibly armed and conducting these patrols.
Long minutes passed as I remained crouched in the shadowed parking area, just observing and trying to formulate any workable plan.
I gritted my teeth slightly, feeling an unfamiliar and deeply frustrating sense of helplessness washing over me.
"Mei..."
Clenching my fists against the cold pavement, I stared toward the illuminated hotel with mounting impatience.
Why were there so many heavily armed people concentrated around this particular hotel to begin with?
Was this location merely functioning as a forward observation post and defensive barrier—positioned strategically to prevent the Boardwalk Community from accessing the Absecon Inlet and the valuable boats docked at the State Marina?
That seemed likely as a main purpose yeah.
But maybe they were also guarding something valuable hidden inside the building itself? Some kind of strategic asset or prisoner that required heavy security?
And once again—how the hell had they managed to restore functional electricity to this entire area?
I could clearly spot lights burning not just in the exterior lamps but also within multiple rooms throughout the hotel structure, suggesting comprehensive power restoration rather than just a few generators.
Did Callighan’s organization also possess an electrical engineering genius comparable to Mark?
Too many unanswered questions kept flooding through my mind while I remained frozen in indecision, unable to identify a safe approach that wouldn’t immediately compromise everything.
"Fuck this..." I muttered under my breath, clenching my fist harder against the rough pavement in pure frustration.
"Need some help there, buddy?"
I flinched violently in startled fear, my entire body going rigid at suddenly hearing a voice speaking casually right beside me—close enough that the person could have reached out and touched my shoulder.
I snapped my head around with my hand already moving toward my axe, and found myself staring at a widely grinning Christopher crouched in the shadows barely three feet away.
"Chris?! What the fuck are you doing here?!" I managed to suppress my voice to an urgent whisper rather than shouting, quickly glancing around to make absolutely certain no guards had noticed the disturbance.
Christopher was fully equipped—dressed in dark clothing suitable for stealth work, wearing a loaded backpack, with a rifle slung casually over his shoulder and a handgun gripped confidently in his right hand.
"You were quite easy to track and follow, you know," he said with humor, apparently completely unbothered by the life-threatening situation. "But seriously—how the hell do these guys have working electricity? Do you think they’ve got their own Mark-equivalent genius somewhere in their group?"
"Christopher, I’m asking seriously—what the hell are you doing here?" I repeated angry and concerned.
"I’m here to help you, obviously," he replied simply, as if that should have been self-evident.
"I explicitly told you and everyone else to stay behind at the hotel with the others," I said through gritted teeth. "It’s dangerous here. You’re going to get yourself killed following me into enemy territory."
"Exactly the same thing applies to you, buddy," Christopher countered immediately. "I came here specifically to make sure you don’t do anything stupidly suicidal that would turn Rachel, Sydney, Elena, and Cindy into grieving widows. They don’t deserve that."
I glared at him.
But Christopher just smiled back at me with genuine warmth and concern.
"If something happens to you—if you get yourself killed trying to play lone hero—did you ever actually think about how those girls would feel?" He asked quietly. "About what losing you would do to them?"
My expression shifted involuntarily at his words, the anger draining away and being replaced by something more complicated.
"Why do you think I actually came all the way out here?" Christopher continued seriously. "First, because you’re my best friend and have been since before this nightmare started. And second, because I absolutely will not let your dumb tragic-hero mindset get you killed and make my friends cry and suffer for the rest of their lives."
He reached into his pack and pulled out a pair of binoculars, immediately beginning to scan the hotel and marina facilities with professional competence.
I fell completely silent at his words, looking away from his knowing gaze with a mixture of shame and gratitude.
"I’m sorry..." I finally muttered. "You’re right. I wasn’t thinking about them—only about getting Mei back."
"I know you weren’t," Christopher said with understanding rather than judgment. "So how about we approach this more intelligently? We conduct reconnaissance around the perimeter and gather concrete information about whether Mei is actually being held here. If she’s somewhere in this facility and we identify a realistic opportunity to extract her safely, we attempt the rescue. But if we can’t confirm her location or the risk is too extreme, we retreat with whatever information we’ve gathered and come back with an actual plan and proper support. Sound reasonable?"
I looked at him and felt a genuine smile forming on my lips.
"Yeah. You’ve got it."







