A waitress stole one fry from Chicago’s most feared crime boss, then said five words that turned a diner into a battlefield.-iwachan

Marcus Thorne’s name flashed across Vincent Moretti’s phone while the stolen fry still lay broken beside the papers.

Nobody in the Night & Gale Diner breathed normally after that.

The rain hit the windows hard enough to make the neon sign tremble in red streaks across the glass.

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Vincent looked at the screen once.

Then he looked at Ava.

For the first time since she sat down, she saw something almost human move across his face.

Not fear.

Recognition.

His men near the door had gone rigid. Sal Rossi stood behind the counter with both hands flat on the register, like it could hold him upright.

Leo Walsh, the dishwasher, had stopped wiping a clean plate.

Ava heard the phone buzz again.

Marcus Thorne was not a man who called twice unless he expected to be answered.

Vincent let it ring.

The silence that followed felt louder than the storm.

Ava kept her eyes on him, even though every instinct in her body told her to stand up, apologize, and disappear back into the kitchen.

That was the old Ava.

The Ava who smiled when customers snapped their fingers.

The Ava who pretended not to hear men in expensive coats talking about tearing down blocks they had never loved.

The Ava who had watched her father’s restaurant die and called her own silence survival.

Vincent tapped one finger against the table.

Where did you get the map? he asked.

His voice was low enough that only she should have heard it.

But in a room that silent, every word landed.

Ava pushed the papers closer.

Outside Thorne’s campaign office on Wabash, she said. His intern dumped a box by our dumpster yesterday.

Vincent’s eyes stayed on her.

You went through it.

Yes.

Why?

Because one of Thorne’s men shoved Sal into the coffee machine and laughed when Leo had to clean up broken glass.

Sal closed his eyes.

Ava did not look back at him.

If she did, she might remember she was still only a waitress in a soaked uniform sitting across from a man people whispered about.

She needed to remember something else.

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