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Chapter 15 - The Divide

No one moved for a long time after they left.

The forest swallowed the last trace of the masked figures—

And the silence they left behind felt heavier than their presence.

"They're controlling this."

The words came sharp.

Immediate.

The shoreline man again.

But this time—

Others nodded.

"They're deciding who stays," another added. "Who goes."

"And we're just standing here letting it happen?" someone snapped.

Jules stepped forward.

"We're not 'letting' anything happen," he said.

Controlled.

But firmer than before.

"We adapt. That's the only way through this."

"That's exactly what they want," the man shot back.

"They said it themselves."

"They want results," Jules replied. "So we give them better ones."

"Or we stop playing."

That shifted everything.

Jules turned.

Slowly.

"And how exactly do you plan to do that?"

The man didn't hesitate this time.

"We don't follow their conditions. We don't change for them."

A few murmurs of agreement followed.

Growing.

"They only have power if we accept it."

Susan stepped forward.

"Not accepting it doesn't stop it," she said.

Calm.

But firm.

"It might," the man argued.

"We don't know that."

"And we don't know that your way works either," he snapped back.

Susan didn't flinch.

"My way keeps people connected."

"And that didn't save anyone," he said.

That landed.

Hard.

Jules stepped in again.

"Enough," he said.

Not loud.

But cutting.

"We're not debating philosophy while people disappear."

"That's exactly what you're doing," the man replied.

"Just dressed up as control."

The tension snapped tighter.

Not breaking.

But close.

Mike watched it unfold.

Not the words—

The alignment.

People were choosing now.

Not randomly.

Not quietly.

Those closer to Jules—

Stayed behind him.

Those uncertain—

Gravitated toward Susan.

And a third group—

Formed at the edges.

Watching.

Not committing.

The fracture had shape now.

"You think structure saves us," the man said, looking at Jules.

"You think connection saves us," he added, glancing at Susan.

"Maybe both are wrong."

Silence.

Because that possibility—

Was worse.

"Then what?" Susan asked.

The man stepped forward.

"Individual survival."

The words were simple.

Clear.

Dangerous.

"You focus on yourself. Stay alert. Don't rely on anyone."

"That's exactly how people disappear," Susan said immediately.

"Or maybe that's how the weak disappear," he shot back.

That did it.

A sharp shift in the air.

Voices rising.

People reacting.

"We're not leaving people behind—"

"Then stay with them and see what happens—"

"Stop—just stop—"

Jules moved between them.

Physically now.

"This doesn't help," he said.

"It helps me," the man replied.

"And anyone who doesn't want to be dragged down."

A few stepped toward him.

Not many.

But enough.

That was all it took.

The group split.

Not fully.

Not cleanly.

But clearly.

Jules turned to those behind him.

"We stick to structure," he said.

"Rotations. Coverage. No gaps."

Susan shook her head slightly.

"That's not enough anymore."

She looked at the others.

"We stay connected. No one fades. No one gets overlooked."

"And what happens when that fails again?" someone asked.

Susan hesitated.

Just for a second.

"I adjust," she said.

The third group didn't speak.

They just… stepped back.

Choosing distance.

Not sides.

Mike stood where he was.

Between all of it.

"Pick a side," the shoreline man said, looking at him.

Mike didn't answer.

Not immediately.

His gaze moved across all three groups.

Structure.

Connection.

Isolation.

Three responses.

Same problem.

"They're all incomplete," he said finally.

That drew attention.

From everyone.

"What does that mean?" Jules asked.

Mike met his gaze.

"It means none of these work alone."

Susan watched him.

Carefully.

"And together?" she asked.

Mike didn't answer right away.

Because the answer wasn't simple.

Sara stepped closer beside him.

Not speaking.

Just there.

"They want us to choose," Mike said.

"That's the point."

"Choose what?" someone asked.

Mike's gaze shifted toward the forest.

Where the masked figures had disappeared.

"How we respond," he said.

"And they measure it."

Silence followed.

Different this time.

Less chaotic.

More… focused.

Jules crossed his arms slightly.

"So what do you suggest?"

Mike exhaled slowly.

Then—

"We don't split."

A few scoffed immediately.

"That's already happening," the shoreline man said.

"Physically, yes," Mike replied.

"But not strategically."

Confusion.

Visible.

"We use all three," Mike continued.

"Structure for coverage. Connection for awareness. Independence for reaction."

"That's not possible," someone said.

"It is," Mike replied.

"But it requires coordination."

"And trust," Susan added quietly.

Jules didn't respond.

But he didn't reject it either.

The shoreline man shook his head.

"You're overcomplicating it."

"No," Mike said.

"You're simplifying something that isn't simple."

That held.

No one moved.

Not yet.

Because for the first time—

There was a fourth option.

Not division.

Not control.

Not isolation.

Balance.

Sara looked at Mike.

Not at the group.

Not at the forest.

At him.

"You're pulling them together," she said quietly.

"Trying to," he replied.

She studied him for a moment.

Then—

"Be careful," she said.

Mike glanced at her.

"Why?"

Sara hesitated.

Then smiled faintly.

"Because now they'll start watching you too."

Mike didn't respond.

Because he already knew.

The group hadn't fully come back together.

Not yet.

But the lines had shifted.

And this time—

They weren't just reacting anymore.

They were becoming something.

Something the island was waiting for.

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