A Waitress Faced Five Armed Men. Then Her Past Walked In Cold.-eirian

Cassandra Mercer had chosen Rini’s Italian restaurant because nobody important looked twice at a waitress there.

That was the whole point.

Rini’s sat between a dry cleaner and an old pharmacy with a neon sign that buzzed whenever it rained.

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The restaurant smelled like garlic butter, lemon peel, tomato sauce, and the faint metallic tang of the espresso machine that Rini refused to replace.

At lunch, Cassandra carried plates to office clerks who tipped in coins and construction workers who always asked for extra bread.

At dinner, she worked the bar, polished glasses, poured wine, and listened to men pretend they were not afraid of the women sitting across from them.

She liked the ordinary dishonesty of it.

Ordinary lies were survivable.

A man saying traffic was bad when he had been late because he was drinking.

A woman saying she was fine while twisting her wedding ring around and around under the table.

A teenager telling his mother he had already applied to college while hiding acceptance brochures in his backpack.

Those lies did not leave bodies behind.

Cass had spent 6 years in a world where lies had coordinates, extraction windows, and classified initials stamped across folders that never officially existed.

The CIA’s Special Activities Division had taught her languages, weapons, pressure points, and the exact distance at which a man’s confidence turned into panic.

It had also taught her that serving your country could mean carrying ghosts no medal would ever name.

Her last mission had ended in a room too hot to breathe in, with a radio going silent and a decision she still woke up tasting in her mouth.

After that, Cassandra Mercer disappeared.

She cut her hair.

She changed apartments twice.

She stopped answering numbers she did not recognize.

Then she walked into Rini’s on a rainy Tuesday and asked for work.

Rini gave her one look, noticed the way she stood with her back near a wall, and did not ask what she was running from.

He only said, “Can you carry three plates without spilling sauce?”

Cass said yes.

By the end of her first week, she knew which table wobbled, which hallway bulb flickered before it died, which alley door stuck in winter, and which regulars carried weapons under suit jackets.

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