Showing posts with label The Orange That Stayed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Orange That Stayed. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2026

Marmalade Joins the Gang: The Orange That Stayed

 

Marmalade Joins the Gang: The Orange That Stayed

It all started with a simple missing cat case.

Elena Voss walked into Brogan’s office with legs for days and worry in her eyes. “Mr. Brogan, my cat Marmalade is gone. He’s big, orange, and far too proud for his own good. I’ll pay anything.”

Brogan took the case. Five hundred dollars and a photo of a very smug-looking orange tabby later, he was out on the streets.

He had no idea this particular cat would change everything.


The First Meeting

Marmalade had escaped the cat show life weeks earlier. He was done with ribbons, carriers, and people calling him “Best Boy.” He wanted freedom, rooftops, and spicy chicken from dumpsters. He was living like a king of the alleys — until he followed the strange smell to Tuttle’s Happy Hog Farm.

That’s where he first saw Dave.

The scruffy brown hamster was running for his life from a couple of Vinnie’s goons during the hamster-smuggling operation. Marmalade, curious and a little bored, decided to investigate. When one goon tried to stomp Dave, Marmalade pounced on the man’s leg like it was a personal insult.

Dave, never one to miss an opportunity, launched himself at the other goon’s face.

For the first time, a cat and a hamster fought on the same side.

Brogan and Major Rush arrived just in time to see the chaos: one big orange cat clawing a goon’s leg, one tiny hamster latched onto another’s nose, and Vinnie’s crew in full panic.

Brogan stood there, cigarette dangling from his lips, and actually laughed.

“Well, I’ll be damned.”


The Reluctant Alliance

After the raid, Marmalade could have disappeared back into the alleys. He had his freedom. He had spicy chicken. He didn’t need anyone.

But something kept him around.

Maybe it was the way Brogan didn’t try to put a collar on him. Maybe it was Dave’s ridiculous bravery despite being four ounces of fur and attitude. Maybe it was Rush’s quiet respect — treating him like a fellow soldier instead of a pet.

So Marmalade started showing up at the office.

At first, he acted like he was doing them a favor. He’d lounge on the windowsill like a furry orange king, flicking his tail dismissively whenever Dave chattered at him. He’d disappear for hours on spicy chicken runs and return smelling like garlic and triumph.

But he always came back.

One night, during a stakeout near the Velvet Lounge, things got ugly. Two of Slick Eddie Malone’s Velvet Vipers cornered Brogan in an alley. Dave launched himself at one man’s face. Marmalade — who had been pretending not to care — dropped from a fire escape like an orange thunderbolt and went full feral on the second Viper’s leg.

Brogan handled the rest with his usual calm brutality.

Afterward, as they walked back to the office under the streetlights, Marmalade didn’t saunter ahead like usual. He stayed close, walking beside Brogan and Dave.

Brogan looked down at the big orange cat.

“You didn’t have to do that.”

Marmalade flicked his tail once, then bumped his head against Brogan’s leg — the closest thing to “thank you” or “I’m staying” the cat had ever given.

Dave climbed onto Brogan’s shoulder and chattered softly, as if welcoming the big lummox properly for the first time.


The King Finds His Court

From that night on, Marmalade was part of the crew.

He still maintained his dignity. He still called the windowsill his throne. He still went on spicy chicken runs like they were royal expeditions. But he stopped pretending he didn’t care.

When Brogan worked late, Marmalade curled up on his lap. When Dave went on dangerous vent missions, Marmalade waited by the window like a grumpy but loyal sentinel. When Rush dropped by with intel, Marmalade gave him a respectful slow blink — the highest honor a cat can bestow.

One quiet evening, Brogan sat in the brownstone with a single scotch, looking at the photo of Carol-Ann on the mantel. Dave was asleep in his drawer. Marmalade jumped into his lap without being asked.

Brogan scratched behind the big cat’s ears and spoke softly.

“You know, I lost someone once. Thought I’d be alone forever. Then a scrappy little hamster showed up on my shoulder… and a proud orange pain in the ass decided to stick around.”

Marmalade purred deeply — a real, contented purr.

He had finally understood something important:

Freedom wasn’t just about running away from ribbons and “Best Boy” nonsense.

Sometimes freedom was choosing your own people — even if one of them was a sarcastic ex-cop, another was a tiny hamster with delusions of grandeur, and the third was a quiet Major who still carried the jungle in his eyes.

The King had found his court.

And for once, the wandering orange cat wasn’t wandering anymore.

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