The Ex-Convict Nobody Trusted Ran Back Into a Burning Factory-tantan

Every town has somebody people decide not to forgive.

In Dayton, Ohio, that man was Marcus Reed.

Most people didn’t even realize they were judging him anymore.

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It had become automatic.

The tattoos.

The prison record.

The way conversations stopped for half a second when he walked into a room.

Marcus had learned to notice those moments without reacting.

That was survival.

You either learned to swallow humiliation quietly, or you spent your whole life angry.

And anger had already taken enough from him.

At thirty-nine years old, Marcus lived alone in a small duplex on the edge of town beside an abandoned gas station with boarded windows and weeds growing through the concrete.

The place smelled faintly like mildew in the winter and overheated dust in the summer.

His kitchen sink leaked.

His couch sagged in the middle.

And every Thursday night he called his mother exactly once before work because she worried if he didn’t.

The only steady thing in his life was the textile factory.

Riverside Packaging.

An aging industrial building made of dark brick and rusting metal tucked beside the railroad tracks outside the city.

The kind of place most people never noticed unless they worked there.

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