The Morning He Finally Shared The Water At The Corner Booth

Part I — The Corner Booth

The old man was halfway through buttoning his plaid shirt when Tyler Walker grabbed him by the collar and pulled hard enough to make the fabric snap.

The room stopped.

At The Lantern, silence never came all at once. It usually thinned slowly between pool-table clicks, low music, and men pretending not to listen to one another. But that morning, every sound fell away together.

A button bounced across the worn wood floor.

Donald Miller sat in the corner booth with his hands still on the table. Seventy-eight years had narrowed him but not bent him. His white hair was cut short out of habit. His red plaid shirt, buttoned high despite the July heat, had always made him look like any other old man waiting for lunch.

Now it hung open.

Under the gray undershirt stretched across his chest, a faded tattoo showed through where Tyler had pulled the collar wide: a broken compass, three small stars, and a string of numbers almost blurred by age.

Tyler leaned over him, broad shoulders blocking the light from the front windows. His black riding vest smelled faintly of engine grease and rain. There was oil under his fingernails. There was anger in every inch of him.

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