The Salute in the Lunch Line

The Salute in the Lunch Line

Part I — The Plate That Wasn’t His

The first thing people noticed about the man at the counter was the jacket.

Camouflage always changed the temperature in a room. Even in a diner full of strangers, it made people look twice. Some did it with admiration, some with curiosity, and some with the careful distance of people who did not know what to say to a man who looked like he had come from somewhere harder than their own lives.

But the second thing they noticed was worse.

The wallet in his hand was empty.

Not the kind of empty that meant a forgotten card tucked in another pocket. Not the kind of empty that could be solved with a sheepish laugh and a quick trip to the car. This was the still, staring kind of empty. The kind that made a man go quiet in front of a tray of hot food he could smell but no longer claim.

The lunch rush at Marcy’s Diner moved around him anyway. Coffee poured. Plates clattered. Someone laughed too loudly in a booth near the window. The neon OPEN sign buzzed faintly in the glass.

At the counter, the man lowered his eyes and checked the wallet again, as if money might have appeared from the force of wanting it badly enough.

It hadn’t.

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