Rose walks over, the waitress. Peroxide-blond hair, grey eyes like flawed diamonds, a lost look that only lifts when she meets my gaze. She smiles, and for a moment I wonder why she hasn't asked about why an eight year old is hanging out with kids ten years older than her. Then I remember she knows me as twelve.
"Sleep well?" she says to me as she refills their mugs. "Your friends said you were pretty pooped out from baseball practice."
"Today was rough," I say. "You mind if I order?"
"That's my job," she says, flipping her notepad open.
"I'll have a coffee," I say. The teens nod. "And a Burger Bud," I say, and the teens shrug. "And a Challenge Steak," I say, and the teens stare. Rose stops jotting and looks at me. I look back, eyebrows raised. She shrugs and repeats my order to the chef, who curses under his breath and starts cooking. I don't break eye contact with the teens until my meal arrives. I polish off the burger and move onto the steak, lubricating my throat with coffee. When there's only a square of steak left, I put down my knife and fork. I'm half-full.
Or half-empty, depending on perspective.
"Now that's an appetite," Spiderweb says, pats me on the back, smirking. "You remember Percy Dalton?"
I shake my head.
"Now, that's odd," Spiderweb leans in, grin spreading. "Cos you ate him. Back in Los Dice."
I bite my lip. "If it helps, it wasn't personal," I say.
"It doesn't," she growls. The switchblade pokes my ribs. She bares her teeth. "Not one bit."
A. Make a scene. Push her off, run out of the diner. Problem is, they expect that, and I can't dodge the knife.
B. Wait it out. They won't cause a scene. Even this late at night, I count six other diners, and if they try to start a fight someone has to intervene... Then again, maybe they'll finish me before then.
C. Shift into the agent and kill them. There's three of them and they're real close, but I stand a chance. Not a great one, but a chance.