Three weeks later the sidewalk outside Rosie’s was packed shoulder to shoulder, and I could barely breathe. It started with one review. A quiet man had come in the night Hollis threatened me, ordered the meatloaf, left a twenty dollar tip and a note that said, keep your father’s light on. I never knew his name. But that man was a food writer, and he wrote a column about a corporate developer trying to bulldoze a family diner. The column went everywhere. By Monday my phone would not stop ringing. Truck drivers drove in from three states for the pie. A retired contractor showed up with his crew and repaired my leaking roof for free, saying my dad had fed him during a hard winter in ninety two. My old waitress came back in tears, apron already tied. Then the city council voted unanimously to designate the block a historic district, killing the tower before the first shovel touched dirt. Hollis lost his investors in a single afternoon. On opening morning of our anniversary week, I unlocked the door and the line stretched around two blocks. Neighbors I had not seen in years stepped inside carrying flowers, casseroles, framed photos of my father from decades ago. A little girl handed me a crayon drawing of the diner with the words we love Rosie’s written in shaky letters. My mother, who had not set foot inside since Dad passed, walked in wearing his old apron, and the whole room stood up and applauded. I hugged her over the counter, both of us crying, and I looked up at his photograph and finally whispered, we kept the light on, Dad. We kept it on.
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