Redemption (Amos Decker #5)(94)



He eyed the table where he’d seen Earl Lancaster with his “friend.” He hadn’t expected his talk with Mary at the football field to have carried the day, but he was happy that they were giving it another shot.

This happy thought receded when he dwelled for a few moments on what the next few years of his former partner’s life might be like.

The brain was the most unique organ humans possessed. Decker knew that better than most. When it failed you, it was unlike any other breakdown in your body. If your heart went, so did you, six feet under. Gone but remembered, hopefully fondly, for who you had been.

But if your brain went, you were also gone, though your body lingered and became dependent on someone else to take care of it. And that would be your loved ones’ last impression of you, even though it wasn’t really you, at least not anymore.

Decker came out of these musings in time to glance up. Through the window of the door going into the kitchen, he caught a man watching him. It was just a quick look, and then the man was gone. The only thing Decker could really observe was dark hair and a pair of penetrating eyes.

Decker, the cop, was instantly intrigued. He had spent almost his entire adult life as a policeman. Reading people’s faces, separating the bad from the good, the scared from those trying to hide something. It was not a skill he could teach someone else. It really had become almost instinctual over time. It was a million little things processed together to spit out something close to a useful deduction.

And his antennae were quivering.

He slowly eased his phone out of his pocket, turned the flash off, and, while ostensibly checking his phone screen, snapped a series of pictures of the wait staff flitting around the restaurant. He recognized the waitress from the last time he was here. And trailing behind her was the young man named Daniel, who was learning the craft of being a waiter.

When he put the phone away, he glanced over at the kitchen double doors and thought he had seen someone at the window there.

Had it been the same guy watching him?

Decker motioned to the young woman who had been serving him. Daniel had gone into the kitchen.

She came over. “You want anything else?”

“No, the food was great.”

“I’ll get your bill.”

“Looks like you’re hustling tonight.”

“Yeah, it gets a little crazy sometimes.”

“Been working here long?”

“About a year.”

“Last time I was in, you had a trainee following you around.”

“Oh, right, yeah, well, that’s how we learn the job.”

“So, you did that too?”

“No, I already had several years of waitressing experience. Only reason I got the job. But it’s kind of silly, if you ask me.”

“What is?”

“Training all these people. They never stay. Two or three months on the job and then they’re gone. I guess some people don’t respect hard work or the time and money it takes to train somebody.”

“Yeah, you’re right. That doesn’t make much sense.”

“I won’t be working here much longer, so it doesn’t matter to me. I got another job offer and I’m taking it. Better pay, and benefits.”

“Great.”

“My mother used to work here, oh, about ten years ago. She was the one who told me to apply. Pay’s not great, not that any wait job’s is, but the tips aren’t bad, especially on the weekends when the guys get drunk and open their wallets. Makes up a little for all the stupid stuff they say, but if they get handsy, and a lot of them do, I bring the hammer down.”

“Good for you. Did your mother work here long?”

“No. I mean, she wanted to. But after about a year they let her go.”

“Why’s that?”

“They never told her. Then later, a friend of hers was hired to be a waitress here. About a year after that, they let her go too. No reason.”

“That is really odd.”

“Well, it’s not my problem. I’ll be out of here. Come to think of it, I’ve been here about a year. I guess if I wasn’t leaving, they might fire me too.”

“Maybe the management has changed since your mom’s time.”

“No, it hasn’t.”

“Come again.”

“Bill Peyton is the manager now. And he was the manager when my mom was here. She didn’t like him. He was always watching everything so closely.”

“I guess that’s what managers get paid to do.”

“I guess. And the kitchen staff, they haven’t changed either all that time.”

“How do you know that?”

“Because they’re the same people when my mom was here. I told her some of their names when I first started working, and she recognized them all. They were here from when the place opened, for all I know.”

“You mean the cooks and busboys and all that?”

“Right.”

“What are they like?”

“What do you mean?”

“Old, young, men, women, Ohio farm stock?”

“All guys. And, no, I don’t think any of them are from Ohio. To tell the truth, I’m not sure where they’re from. They don’t interact with us much. Age-wise, they’re probably in their fifties.”

David Baldacci's Books