What Ashley did not know was that booth nine, the quiet corner booth by the window, was occupied by a silver-haired man in a plain gray jacket eating rye toast and reading a folded newspaper. He had been coming in every Tuesday for six months. He always tipped in cash, always called me sweetheart in a way that felt like a grandfather and not a threat, and always asked how Nora was doing. I only knew him as Mr. Hail. I did not know that Mr. Hail was Everett Hail, the founder and majority owner of Hail Hospitality Group, the parent company that owned the diner, the hotel across the street, and the luxury restaurant where Ashley’s father was hosting his sixtieth birthday dinner that same night. I did not know he had watched the entire thing over the rim of his glasses. I did not know he had already made three quiet phone calls before I finished mopping the coffee off the floor with shaking hands. That evening, Ashley walked into the Rosewater Room in a champagne silk dress, ready to be photographed beside her father. The maĆ®tre d’ met her at the podium with a soft, sorry smile and a folded envelope. Inside was a printed still from the diner’s security camera, her hand on the coffee pot, my face frozen mid-flinch. Beneath it, one line in Everett’s handwriting. We do not serve people who scald our staff. She was escorted out past every guest her father had spent a month trying to impress. The next morning, Mr. Hail sat in booth nine again. He slid a small white envelope across the table and told me to open it after my shift. Inside was a full scholarship to the culinary program I had whispered about once, six months ago, when he asked what I would do if I could do anything. At the bottom of the note, in the same careful handwriting, he had written, Nora deserves a mother who gets to become who she was meant to be. I sat down in the empty booth and finally, quietly, let myself cry.
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