Maggie Green- Joslyn -black Patrol- Sc.4- -

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 tucks the folder under her arm. She does not gloat. There are no triumphant cackles, no cinematic reveal of triumphant justice. The city does not operate in dramatic crescendos; it is a ledger that flips slowly. She hands the folder to Hana. “Make it public,” she says.

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

A runner laughs—a wet aftersound. “You think you can walk in here and—”

“You sure?” Hana asks, eyes flicking to Maggie’s fingers where a tremor wants to speak. Cameras are badges now; her lens can cradle truth or crush it. “You don’t have to—” She folds the papers and tucks them back into the folder

The officer looks at Maggie as if searching for a lever he can pull. He finds only a woman with a coat that looks like it has seen too many winters and a conviction that has been boiled down to a singular, salvific intent. He withdraws—not surrender, but an alignment with something he does not yet name. Bishop’s mouth thins.

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.” She does not gloat

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 pieces them together with a glance. Each carries scars that rewrite their faces differently: Hana’s left cheek is a map of a night that would not forget her; Luis’s knuckles carry the pale script of things he would not speak aloud; Tomas limps slightly on the right as if the city had once claimed his stride. They are the Black Patrol—self-appointed custodians of a law that the city won’t admit exists—and tonight, like every night that has led them to this corner, the city needs them to decide.

She watches the intersection. Two blocks over, the station clock beats ten steady knocks, each one a small hammer in her ribs. The city moves in rhythms she’s learned to read: the staccato of late cabs, the susurrus of umbrellas, the impatient clack of heels. Tonight those rhythms are arranged into a pattern she recognizes—anxious, on-edge, waiting to be broken. She waits for the break.