The Old Navy Man They Moved From The Window Chair Left A Debt No One Expected

Chapter 1: The Chair They Said He Had Not Paid For

Melissa Perez moved the menu before Samuel Wilson’s fingers could touch it.

It was not a large movement. Just a quick slide of laminated plastic across the edge of the table, away from his reaching hand, as if she were clearing crumbs. But the sound of it against the worn tabletop was sharp enough to make the two teenagers in the booth behind him stop laughing into their phones.

Samuel’s hand remained in the air for a moment.

Then he lowered it slowly to the back of the chair.

The chair was nothing special to anyone else. It stood by the front window of Miller’s Diner with one leg that needed a folded sugar packet under it and a cracked strip of red vinyl curling at the back corner. The morning sun hit that spot first in winter. In summer, the window held the reflection of buses pulling in and out of the stop across the street. Samuel had sat there every Thursday for eleven years, always facing the window, always with his cane hooked over the left side, always with one small white cup of coffee.

That morning, the cup was already waiting near the machine.

Melissa had poured it out of habit before she had decided to follow the rule.

“Sir,” she said, and her voice was tired enough to turn hard before she meant it to, “we need tables for paying customers.”

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