The Waitress Whispered Don’t Eat the Cake as Headlights Filled the Diner-eirian

The rain had turned the alley behind the diner into a strip of black glass.

Cole hit that glass with one shoulder, rolled, and tasted mud before he tasted blood.

Chief was already moving.

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Old did not mean slow.

Not for that dog.

The gunman had expected a tired man with a limp. He had expected fear. He had expected the poisoned cake to do its quiet work before anyone had to make noise.

He had not expected ninety-five pounds of trained German Shepherd to come out of the rain without a bark.

Chief struck him in the chest and drove him backward into the puddles. The suppressed pistol puffed once. Brick dust scattered over Cole’s hair as the bullet hit the wall behind him. Then Chief’s jaws clamped around the man’s forearm, and the pistol slid across the alley toward the storm drain.

The second attacker came with a crowbar.

Cole saw the iron bar rise above him, saw rain sliding down the black metal, saw the man’s eyes through the hood.

There was no anger in those eyes.

That scared him more than anger would have.

It was the look of a man doing work.

Cole rolled left as the crowbar smashed the pavement. Pain ripped through his bad knee and flashed white behind his eyes. He swept his good leg into the man’s knees, and they both went down hard, chest to chest in the greasy water behind the trash bins.

The man was younger.

Stronger.

He smelled like wet wool, cigarettes, and gun oil.

His hands found Cole’s throat and squeezed.

For a second, the rain went silent. The diner light blurred. Cole’s lungs clawed for air while black dots opened at the edges of his vision. He had survived roads that exploded beneath him. He had survived nights where the radio only brought screaming. He was not going to die behind a diner because a woman in a clean coat bought cake.

His left thumb found the utility knife.

The blade clicked open.

Small sound.

Big mercy.

Cole drove it into the attacker’s shoulder. The man roared and let go. Cole ripped the knife free, slashed once across the forearm, and kicked himself backward through the puddle.

The pistol lay near the storm drain.

Cole lunged for it.

His hand closed around the grip just as the kitchen door slammed open behind him. Flashlight beams cut through the rain. Men shouted inside the diner. Doris screamed once, then went silent.

Cole racked the slide and aimed at the doorway.

He did not fire at a body. Not yet.

He fired into the brick beside the door.

One shot.

Then another.

The men inside scattered.

“Chief, out,” Cole rasped.

Chief released the gunman’s arm immediately, because training lived deeper than pain. The man under him sobbed into the rain, clutching his shredded sleeve.

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