Maggie Green- Joslyn -black Patrol- Sc.4- Extra Quality Access

Maggie cuts her off with a look that is not unkind, only precise. Lightning forks across the skyline, a camera shutter in the heavens. “I do.”

The others are there—three shadows that fill the darkness like a smothering blanket. Hana, with her braid loose and a camera slung at her throat; Luis, hands folded like he’s praying to a god made of stopwatch beats; and Tomas, who smokes to keep his hands steady and talks to keep his doubts honest.

He never finishes. Hana’s camera clicks once, and the sound is a visible shockwave; in that captured heartbeat, the runner’s bravado fractures. Tomas moves like someone who has practiced the delicate geometry of disabling a throat without spilling more than necessary. Luis steps forward, his presence a measured pressure; it takes only that to make the runner step one pace back, then two, then the wrong way. Maggie Green- Joslyn -Black Patrol- sc.4-

Bishop descends like a fossilized monarch—slow, deliberate, flanked by the sort of silence that has audited too many secrets. He wears a suit that cost more than some of Maggie’s apartments and a face that has never seen a ledger he couldn’t reframe. “Miss Green-Joslyn,” he purrs. “What a surprise.”

Maggie loosens her hat and lets rain touch her face. For a single breath, she allows the tide of relief to lap at her ankles. This victory is brittle; the city will wound again. But tonight something shifts. Names will circulate. People will read. The ledger will tilt. Maggie cuts her off with a look that

The officer’s jaw tightens. For a second, the world constricts to the measured breathing of five people and the rain’s steady percussion. Bishop smiles as if the decision will be his to declare. Then, without fanfare, Tomas steps forward and extinguishes a cigarette under his heel—the gesture a punctuation mark of finality.

From the alley, a figure separates from shadow like a thought resolving into a face. Connor Hales: narrow shoulders, cigarette-raw voice, the kind of man who keeps a ledger of favors he’ll call in later. He steps into the light and Maggie’s hand hovers near her hip without reaching; muscle memory more than intention. He offers no smile—smiles are currency they both learned to distrust. Hana, with her braid loose and a camera

She folds the papers and tucks them back into the folder. “We came to put this where everyone can see,” she says. “If you want to protect your town by keeping it small, you’ll have to stand on it.”

Maggie Green- Joslyn -Black Patrol- sc.4-

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