The Officer Saluted The Old Man At Booth Seven Before Anyone Knew Why His Coffee Went Cold

Chapter 1: The Old Man Would Not Leave Booth Seven

The young assistant manager placed a laminated Reserved sign on Mark Thompson’s table before Mark had lifted his coffee.

It landed beside the second cup with a soft plastic tap, too small a sound for anyone else to notice over the rush of plates and voices, but Mark noticed. He had learned to hear small sounds. A spoon slipping against china. A boot shifting on wet gravel. A breath held too long before bad news.

He looked at the sign, then at Joshua Hall’s hand still resting on the edge of Booth Seven.

“Mr. Thompson,” Joshua said, keeping his voice low in the way people did when they wanted nearby customers to hear that they were being polite. “I’m going to need this booth.”

Mark kept both hands around his own white mug. The coffee inside it steamed against the lines of his face. Across from him, the second mug sat untouched, its surface already beginning to dull.

The diner was full enough to make every empty chair look like an accusation. Two families waited near the front glass. A delivery driver stood by the pie case. Behind the counter, the cook snapped an order bell three times, and the young server moved through the narrow aisle with plates balanced up her arm. Rain clung to the windows in fine threads, blurring the red sign outside until it looked older than it was.

Booth Seven was in the back corner, under the veterans wall.

It had not always been called that. To most people it was just the booth under the old photographs, the one by the outlet that didn’t work and the patched seat cushion Katherine had been meaning to replace. But Mark knew where the afternoon light used to fall. He knew which frame had slipped crooked after the winter the furnace failed. He knew the nail above his shoulder had been bent for eighteen years and still held.

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