Café Chocolaté: Chapter X

Chapter X – Ginger Thomas

Ginger finished serving drinks, returning to her usual position behind the café counter. She noticed Fabian going from table to table, talking to most of his fellow customers. She couldn’t hear what he said, but she narrowed her eyes in his direction, as if that would increase her chances of hearing.

What is he up to? He’s never been this interested in his fellow human beings before.

Fabian continued on, a bit stiff in his business suit, and Ginger let her distrust grow. Eddie pushed a coffee in front of her, then shoved both hands into his apron pockets.

“Who is this for?” Ginger snapped the words and her head in Eddie’s direction simultaneously.

“It’s for you.” Eddie, still pale and haggard, looked amused, nonetheless. “Black with a shot of espresso and another of chocolate.

“Oh.” Ginger took a sip. “It’s not as hot as usual.”

“Because we have no electricity.”

Ginger rolled her eyes. Brilliant observation, Ed. Tell me something I don’t know.

She took another sip and looked across at Fabian again. Eddie nodded in his direction.

“What’s he up to that you’re staring at him? You don’t usually pay much attention to business suit guy.”

Ginger choked on her coffee. “Business suit guy?”

Eddie shrugged. “I don’t know his real name, but he’s always in a business suit.”

“He is that.” A bit of a grin took residence on her face. “I wonder if anyone else has noticed that he always wears the exact same suit when he comes in. It never varies.”

I hadn’t noticed.” Eddie pushed his hands deeper into his pockets. “I don’t really care either, but are you sure?”

“Quite positive.” Ginger smiled again to have superior information, then blew across her coffee. “There’s the lightest stain on his left shoulder and one of his belt loops are torn. Easy to recognize.”

Eddie stood gaping at her. “Seriously?”

“What?” Ginger looked at him, one hand spread defensively. “Come on. I see him several times a week. He stands there forever looking at the menu board before ordering the exact same thing that he always does. I have plenty of time to notice his clothes without even trying.”

Eddie shook his head and turned to clean up a spill on the counter. “I don’t want to know your opinion of my dressing habits.”

Ginger laughed lightly, taking another sip of her coffee. “You don’t have habits. You just throw on whatever you see before leaving in the morning. At least, it’s usually clean.”

Usually?” Eddie turned around, consternation flooding his face and his voice. “It’s always clean.”

Ginger grinned. “If you say so.”

Eddie looked annoyed, but turned back to his cleaning. Ginger laughed to herself in silence, while she turned back to her coffee.

Fabian left his conversation with Timothy and Anna, joining Ginger at the counter. She eyed him expectantly.

Fabian leaned against the counter, stirring his coffee. He stared as the resulting whirlpool shimmered and spun. “What do you think caused the explosion?” He looked up at Ginger, his dark eyes almost gleaming.

Ginger tapped her fingers against the side of her coffee cup. “How should I know? I was in here along with you and everyone else.”

“Surely you can speculate.”

“Ginger only likes to speculate when it’s her idea.” Eddie joined them at the counter, holding a glass of water. “Otherwise, she abhors the notion.”

Ginger rolled her eyes. “You’re always so dramatic.”

I’m dramatic?” Eddie gave her a look she had long since given up on interpreting.

“What do you think may have caused the explosion then?” Fabian turned his smile on Eddie.

Eddie shrugged. “How many things explode? And twice? I think the better question is to ask why there was an explosion in the first place?”

“Why is that a better question?” Fabian asked. He rubbed the remnants of a coffee drip from the side of his mug.

“Because, honestly, who cares what was used to shake the earth? We ought to care about who, if anyone did it, why an explosion, and who is affected by it.”

Ginger raised an eyebrow over her coffee.

“If we knew what caused it, we might be better able to answer some of those questions.” Fabian smiled a bit at Ginger. “Different types of people tend to have their special methods that identify them. Knowing what caused the explosion might show us who created it.”

“Just how would you know that?” Eddie set down his glass and crossed his arms.

“Heard it around. Television or something.” Fabian smiled again.

“Because the TV tells us only the most reliable things.” Ginger smirked at her coffee.

Fabian only smiled.

“What do you think caused the explosion?” Eddie hasn’t uncrossed his arms.

“It doesn’t really matter what I think.” Fabian stirred his coffee again.

Ginger watched the movement with disgust. Stuff is going to get cold and nasty with all that stirring.

“Then why does it matter what we think?” Eddie’s voice bounced between annoyance and confusion.

“I was curious about your opinion.”

Eddie blinked.

Ginger set down her coffee cup. “We’re curious about your opinion then.”

“I’m not eager to grant an answer though.” He winked and turned back toward where Renee drank her hot chocolate.

Eddie watched him a moment, before picking up his water again. “There’s something weird about him.”

“Maybe he likes listening to you complain about me.”

“I did no such thing.” Eddie shook his head.

Ginger opened her mouth to retort, but Mary Dill sidled up to the counter.

Her frizzy curls stuck out like a disastrous halo all over her head, and her eyes still held a wild look, like she might be waiting for another reason to scream.

“This,” she held up her coffee, “is not sweet enough. I said I wanted it perfect. This is not perfect.”

Ginger glared.

Eddie set down his water and reached for her cup. “I’ll fix that for you, ma’am.”

Ginger filled her mouth with coffee to keep from saying anything, but a strangled gasp from Eddie nearly made her choke again.

Eddie’s face had gone white, and he stood with Mary’s newly sweetened coffee, frozen in one hand. He stared at the floor, his blue eyes wide with horror.

“Eddie?” Ginger tried to figure out what he gaped at, but couldn’t see anything.

He snapped his head up, the horror still evident on his face. “Nothing.” He set the coffee on the counter, pushing it toward Mary Dill.

Mary, however, shook her head. “No, you’ve got something.” Her voice grew louder. “You’ve got something! What is it?”

Eddie hesitated, eyes still wide. He yanked at his carrot top.

“What is it? What did you find? What did you do?” She had drawn the attention of everyone else, her voice escalating with each word.

Eddie stood rooted in a kind of terror. “N-nothing. I didn’t do anything.”

“Then, why the look! It’s something!”

Ginger’s glare appeared lost on Mary Dill. She turned to Eddie. “Might as well explain what’s wrong with you before she starts screaming.”

Eddie stared at Ginger in wide-eyed horror for several seconds, before he bent down. Picking up an item at his feet, he held it up with shaking hand.

Mary Dill began screaming at the sight.

The rarely used ice pick that generally hung above the back counter until needed, shivered under Eddie’s trembling grasp. The dark handle shimmered in the gray light of the window, the slender metal sticking straight in the air.

Even Ginger couldn’t suppress a shudder. Dotted along the slender blade in delicate relief, lay a pattern of red dots and streaks in differing sizes. The handle, smeared with crimson, transferred the sticky red substance to Eddie’s hand.

“I-It looks like blood.” Eddie’s voice shook with his hand. “There’s some on the floor too.”

Mary Dill screamed again.

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Café Chocolaté: Chapter IX

Chapter IX – Adrian Terrence

Adrian watched as the others began settling down, taking seats.

“I’m glad that worked,” Xavier said. “Though I’ve never seen you try to take charge of a room before like you just did.”

Adrian nodded. “I’m glad it worked too. Who knew people could get volatile so quickly?”

“I’ve heard of worse.” Xavier spoke low and almost weary. He held up his watch. “I’ll probably miss my meeting this afternoon.”

Adrian started. “I hadn’t thought of that. That would be more than a little unfortunate, after all the work you had to go through to set it up.”

“Agreed.” Xavier sighed. “We have another, more immediate problem on our hands at the moment though.”

Adrian would have asked about it, but the tall man in business suit walked up to the booth, his hands pushed into his pockets. Adrian noted the dark hair combed flat, the short goatee, and pinched face. He had certainly seen the man many times, but didn’t even know his name.”

“What do you think, gentlemen?” His deep voice didn’t sound like it belonged to his face. “I’m assuming that you don’t have working cell phones either?”

The cousins shook their head and Monique crept closer to Xavier.

“What do you think that our best course of action is? You seem like sensible men. Unlike some people present.” He lowered his voice and cocked his head slightly in Mary Dill’s direction. “The name’s Fabian, by the way. Fabian Smith.”

“Adrian Terrence. And my cousin, Xavier Nowak. I think our best course of action, as you put it, is to simply keep everyone as calm as possible, while we wait for the authorities or a rescue. I don’t see any other options, do you?”

“There ought to be some way for us to work ourselves out of here.” Fabian pushed his hands deeper into his pockets.

“I don’t see how, unless we try breaking the windows – which I wouldn’t advise. At least, not at this point. We don’t know what is outside. We may simply succeed in bringing in the cold and rain.” Adrian glanced at Xavier and realized that he just sat in silence.

“It seems ridiculous that there is no other exit from the building.” Fabian’s dark eyebrows drew close together as he looked about the room. “There ought to be a law against such things!”

He didn’t wait for an answer. He turned back toward the two men and nodded. “I suppose you’re probably right. Stay calm and wait. What else can we do?”

He ambled away before Adrian could decide on a reply.

Xavier still sat in silence.

“He’s a tad impatient, but I suppose that we all are.” Adrian looked up in time for Ginger to ask if they wanted anything.

Adrian asked for coffee, but Xavier shook his head. He looked down at the tiny figure crouched beside him.

“Do you want anything, sweetheart?”

Monique hesitated, her dark eyes darting between Xavier and Ginger. At last, she nodded a tiny nod.

Adrian couldn’t hear the girl’s request. Apparently, neither could anyone else, as Xavier had to bend his ear down to her level and ask her to repeat herself.

“Milk, if you have any?” Xavier turned back toward Ginger. “I know it wasn’t in your list earlier.”

Ginger nodded sharply, tightening her ponytail. “I’m pretty sure Eddie can find some. I’ll be back in just a second.”

Adrian waited until Ginger had returned with the drinks, before he spoke to his cousin again. “Something is bothering you. Is it the problem you mentioned before?”

Xavier glanced down at Monique, who still held Mr. Pickles tightly in one arm, while she sipped her milk with her other hand. He nodded.

“What manner of problem is it?”

Xavier waited, sent a quick glance around the café, and lowered his voice, so that Adrian could only just hear him. “It wasn’t a heart attack or anything like it, Adrian. The explosion had nothing to do with it.”

It took Adrian nearly a full minute to process what his cousin meant. What… He started.

The man in the corner. He’s talking about the dead man in the corner.

Xavier looked grim. His dark eyes narrowed, as he glanced around the café again and his jaw clenched.

Adrian swallowed. “How do you know?”

Monique didn’t seem to hear them or, if she did, understand what they spoke of.

“Blood on the back collar of his shirt.” Xavier spoke almost imperceptibly low. “Puncture wound at the back of the neck.”

Adrian met Xavier’s gaze and he stiffened.

Murder. The man in the corner booth has been murdered.

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Café Chocolaté: Chapter VIII

Chapter VIII – Timothy Teller

Timothy didn’t sit down with everyone else at first. He absently rubbed his stomach where Ginger had elbowed him in her attempt to keep attacking Mary Dill.

He watched Anna sitting alone, still keeping her arm held close to her side. She shifted in her seat and a spasm of pain contorted her face.

She’s hurt more than she let on. She must have landed harder than I thought. I hope it’s nothing serious.

He vaguely heard Ginger and answered in the negative. Then, he wondered what he answered in the negative about. Still he watched Anna.

If she’s hurt badly, she needs to tell someone. I don’t know if we can help her for sure, but she shouldn’t just hide it.

He watched her another moment, then decided to take the seat across from her. Anna masked the pain on her face with a somewhat grim smile.

“Are you doing all right?”

Anna started, her large eyes growing wider. “As well as anyone here, I imagine.”

Not sure how to respond, Timothy grew quiet.

Eventually, Anna nodded toward the pregnant woman across the room. “She looks close to her due date. I’d be concerned in her shoes.”

“I imagine that she might be.” Timothy looked back for a moment at the tall woman, seated in a café chair, who gently rubbed her rounded stomach.

Anna tried to shrug, but the act made her wince.

“Do you know her?” He pointed over his shoulder to indicate the expectant woman again.

“Know her? No. I know that her name is Renee, because I’ve heard the waitress call her, but that’s all.” Anna looked at him and cocked her head. “I just realized that we haven’t been properly introduced. I’m Anna Carpentier. You are?”

“Timothy. Timothy Teller.” He glanced around the room in search of the gray-haired woman. He spotted her, still in the same seat she had taken before, her arms crossed. He couldn’t see her face. “You’re here with… Kimberly?”

“Kimberly Liath. I suppose I’m sort of with her, in a manner of speaking.”

Timothy raised an eyebrow at this explanation, but she didn’t volunteer more. He watched her move in her seat and wince again.

Ginger bustled over, placing a coffee in front of Anna rather abruptly. It splashed onto the table, reminding Timothy of his computer for the first time since the explosion.

Anna smiled a tiny bit and thanked her.

“Are you sure that you don’t want anything, Timothy?” Ginger cocked her head and smiled.

Timothy didn’t like the way she spoke to him anymore than he liked the way she smiled at him. He didn’t smile in return, but kept his voice pleasant. “No, thank you. I don’t want anything.”

Ginger pouted and Timothy sighed in relief when she walked away.

“Do you know her well?” Anna asked.

“No!” Timothy hadn’t meant to answer so forcefully. He scratched his head. “I don’t know her at all. My acquaintance with her goes no farther than that of customer to waitress.”

Timothy thought he detected a smile in Anna’s eyes. “I see. I think she would like it to be rather more than that.”

“And I would like it to be rather less. Except, I like this place too much to stay away because of a waitress, who I can mostly avoid.”

“Except when you’re locked in the café with her after an explosion?” Anna smiled a bit.

Timothy shook his head. “Thankfully, we’re not the only two in here and I can still avoid her the best I can.”

“If she lets you.” The young woman’s smile faded into another wince of pain.

Timothy sighed. “Hey, I can tell that you’re hurt. Anyone with eyes can see that you’re hurt.”

Anna looked away.

“It’s no use to try to convince anyone that you’re fine, when you’re obviously not and in a lot of pain. If you don’t tell anyone what’s wrong, no one can help you. Is there anything that I can do?”

“I don’t need help.” She still didn’t look back at him.

Timothy leaned against the table in front of him. “Are you saying that because you really don’t need help or because you’re trying to get me to be quiet?”

Anna slowly raised her eyes. Her voice had gone cold and her bright green eyes, already dull from pain, had lost the rest of their sparkle. “If you insist, I will be fine. I’m not newly injured. It’s an old one causing me pain.”

“Do you mind if I ask what the original injury is?” Timothy wished he could help her, whether she’d talk to him or not.

This time, Anna’s face hardened, as well as her voice. “I do mind and do not wish to discuss it. It is my business and I will survive.”

“And you’re sure that there’s nothing that I can do to help?” He may have been walking on thin ice by asking, but he did it anyway.

The growing steel in Anna’s face softened. “No. Thank you for your concern. No one can help me. I need to be on my own.”

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Café Chocolaté: Chapter VII

Chapter VII – Ginger Thomas

Ginger stood beside Eddie, arms akimbo while she glared at Mary Dill and her would-be comforters. Would-be, as Mary didn’t seem to pay attention to a single word either of them said.

Renee should stop wasting her time. She probably ought to be resting. Probably at home. She’s huge.

For no visible reason beyond that of hysterics, Mary let out a shriek loud above her mumbling wails. Ginger clenched her fists.

She needs a good punch in that oversized nose.

She looked at Eddie, but he didn’t seem to care about Mary Dill at all. He kept casting surreptitious glances toward the dead man in the corner. Once or twice, he yanked at the spikes of his carrot hair as he glanced.

Poor stupid fellow. He can only pay attention to one thing at a time. It’s not his fault.

Renee pressed a hand against her lower back and sighed wearily. The man on the other side of Mary saw her and moved a chair for Renee to sit down.

Fabian Smith. I don’t trust him as far as I can throw him, but at least he’s smart enough to see the woman needs to sit down.

She looked back at Mary and ground her teeth, before clenching her fists again.

Renee sighed once more and rubbed her rounded stomach. After a moment or two, she looked up at Fabian. “I wonder when we’ll get out of here?”

Mary seemed to catch on. “Get out of here? Didn’t you see them pushing on the door?” She spoke in a rough and strangled voice with an undertone of wailing.

Eddie finally seemed to take notice of something besides the dead man. “So, what? Stuck doors get unstuck.”

“Not always!” Mary wrung her hands.

“Of course they do!” Ginger nearly lost all patience. “Whatever is the matter with you?”

“Doors get stuck and buried. No one can unbury them – and they never open again!” Mary’s voice grew louder.

“Look at the door!” Ginger stamped her foot and pointed to the etched glass window. “Does the door look dark enough to be completely buried?”

“There’s no bright sunshine coming through!” Mary’s voice grew closer to a full wail.

“It’s raining!” Ginger stamped her foot again. “Of course the light is gray! Does it look black to you?”

“We’re all going to die!” Mary threw back her head and arms, raising her voice to a clear wail. “We’ve already begun!” She gestured wildly to the man in the corner. “He’s gone already! Who’s next?”

Ginger leapt across the space between them. “You will be next, if I have any say about it!”

She pushed Mary to the ground before she felt arms grab her and begin dragging her back. Mary couldn’t have wailed and screamed more if Ginger literally stuck a knife in her, instead of grabbing at her neck with her hands. Ginger fought back the men pulling her, but Fabian and Timothy worked together, proving much stronger. She had no hope of winning.

“She tried – She tried to kill me!” Mary clung to Eddie’s arm so hard that he could barely pull her to her feet.

“Kill you?” Ginger lunged forward again, but the men wouldn’t let her get far. “The most you got was a bit of a knock on the head! And not enough to give you any sense, apparently!”

“I’ll have you fired!” Mary’s voice reached an ear-splitting screech. “Your job will be gone! You’ll be out of work!”

“Two minutes ago, you said that we would die before we got out of here – so what? They’ll be firing my corpse because of a message you sent by ghostly telepathy?”

Mary still clung to Eddie with a foolishly quivering lip. Ginger wanted to slap the quiver off of her face, but Fabian and Timothy still stood nearby. They would stop me, no doubt.

She contented herself with laughing instead, taking note that her laugh echoed through the café.

Mary started to wail.

“Enough!”

Ginger’s laugh died in her throat as she turned toward the speaker; a tall man with dark hair and blue eyes standing across the room, near another man seated beside a little girl. Adrian Terrence. The author. I don’t know who his relative is.

The little girl shrank against the other man, clinging to a rag of a stuffed animal. The man beside her stared, slack jawed, at Adrian.

Adrian Terrence spoke again, but his voice softened. “What purpose do you suppose you’ll accomplish by squabbling? As far as I can see, you’re not improving anything whatsoever and you’re terrifying the child!”

“She’s terrified? I’m terrified!” Mary held a hand to her throat.

“She looks like she’s about nine-years-old.” Eddie looked down on Mary with a quirked eyebrow.

“And you’re pushing fifty!” Ginger had expected the look of shock following her jab, and smiled gleefully.

“Why, I’m not-”

“Please!” Adrian raised his voice again along with one hand. “This is not helpful!”

Nothing is helpful!” Mary sobbed loudly into Eddie’s sleeve, while he stood stiff as a board.

From behind Ginger, Timothy coughed. She wondered if he wanted to laugh at the woman’s absurdities. I wish I wanted to laugh. Instead I still want to knock her down.

“We haven’t assessed our situation or even decided what could be helpful.” Adrian gave Mary a pointed look that she seemed to feel, as she raised her head. “If we consider for a very little time, whether fighting within ourselves would be helpful – we would all reach the same conclusion fairly swiftly.”

No one answered, but Mary didn’t wail either.

“Now, then.” Adrian clasped his hands behind his back. “Why don’t we all find a seat and take a breath.”

“The electricity is out.” Eddie pulled his arm away from Mary. “I’m sure the coffee is still warm though; those things stay hot forever. And we should have iced tea and hot water for hot chocolate.” He looked at Ginger.

She nodded. “I’ll take down orders. You go see how warm things are. We have food too, if anyone needs it.”

Mary opened her mouth, but looked at Adrian and thought better of it. She pursed her lips, then turned to Ginger. “I want coffee. Iced. Perfectly sweetened. A dash of cream.” She turned before Ginger could answer, fumbling her way toward a chair.

Dash of cream. I’ll dash you.

Adrian’s shoulders dropped and she saw him sink back into his booth. The man across from him spoke just as Ginger turned around to Timothy.

Timothy stood watching Anna from a distance and Ginger ground her teeth. She swallowed her annoyance and smiled. “Do you want anything to drink? Eat? Anything?”

Timothy turned toward her. Did he wince?

“No, thanks. I’m good.”

She nodded and turned away just in time to see a worried look cross Adrian’s face. He shook his head in protest.

Fabian waved her over to make an order. Ginger nodded with a last glance toward Adrian.

What was that about?

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Café Chocolaté: Chapter VI

Chapter VI – Monique Rodriguez

Monique curled up as far back as possible in her booth, stroking Mr. Pickles’ matted ear over and over. She didn’t want the cookie on the table in front of her. The people around her took no notice of the small child huddled into the smallest size that she could manage, as they went about their morning. Perhaps her chocolate colored shirt and black pants that matched her hair helped her to blend into her surroundings.

She watched everyone and everything around her, never loosening her grasp on Mr. Pickles, her nearly black eyes missing little that went on in the room.

The first explosion shook the child, but she stayed in her booth. She screamed, but from fright and not pain. She held onto the table and to Mr. Pickles for dear life, hoping that the noise and the movement would stop.

Even after everything ceased to move, no one seemed to notice her. One or two people looked at her, but that’s as far as it went and Monique didn’t know if she wanted more. The woman screaming and wailing in the middle of the room scared her.

We have to be brave, Mr. Pickles. Very brave.

She knew her bunny couldn’t hear her thoughts, but it comforted her to pretend otherwise. She didn’t want to speak aloud.

When the woman began yelling about a dead man, Monique quailed. She watched in horror as the two tall men went to go check the man in the corner.

I know what dead is. It’s what they called Mommy and Daddy. They couldn’t ever walk or move or anything again.

She brushed her cheek against Mr. Pickles head. We have to be very brave. She could feel her chin quivering and she pressed her back against the wall. Her eyes grew wider when one of the tall men took off his coat and covered the face of the man in the corner.

Is that how Daddy and Mommy looked when they died? Did they cover their faces?

The second explosion threw Monique from her seat. In her scramble to protect her head, she dropped Mr. Pickles as she screamed. She hit her ankle on the booth, but not too badly.

She found Mr. Pickles underneath the table, even before the noise of the explosion had fully died down. She scrambled back into her seat as quickly as she could.

The people scared her, even though being alone scared her too. She remembered being brought into the café and she shuddered.

I wish someone would take care of me. She buried her face against Mr. Pickles’ head. We have to be brave.

The woman’s howling frightened Monique more and she felt herself shaking. She sniffled, watching the other people over the top of her bunny’s head.

Eventually, she saw the two tall men coming toward her and she wished she could be invisible. She tried to still her shaking shoulders and keep her lip from quivering.

When the man who sat in front of her started speaking, his voice sounded gentler than she expected. She didn’t know if she should talk to him. If she should answer his questions.

She liked the man’s eyes. They were brown like Mommy’s had been. Mommy had pretty eyes.

She finally decided she could shake her head in answer to his questions. Tears kept splashing down her nose and she didn’t think that could be very brave, but she didn’t know how to stop them. When the man asked her name, she grew still.

He said that his name was Xavier and the other tall man nearby was Adrian. Adrian had blue eyes like… She sighed and the man smiled at her. He didn’t look very frightening either, except he was even taller than the man sitting in front of her.

She turned back and stared at him for a long time too. She didn’t even know what she looked for, but it felt like she found it.

“I’m Monique. This is Mr. Pickles.”

“It’s nice to meet you, Monique. And Mr. Pickles. He looks like a good friend.” He didn’t speak again at first. She watched him, to see what he would do next.

What do you think we should do, Mr. Pickles?

“Are you scared, Monique?”

The tears that she had wanted to hold back made her face wet and soaked Mr. Pickles’ head. We’re supposed to be brave. But I’m scared. I’m so scared.

She nodded.

“Would it help if you stayed with me?”

It would help. Then, she wouldn’t be alone. She nodded slowly.

A shriek, so loud Monique’s ears hurt, came from across the room. Monique jumped. She squeezed Mr. Pickles, his head getting wetter as she cried. She kept her throat closed, so she wouldn’t make a sound, even if she couldn’t stop her tears. We have to be brave, Mr. Pickles. It’s hard to be brave.

The man, Mr. Xavier she labeled him, moved from his chair to sit beside her on the booth. Monique sniffled, the lump growing in her throat.

He put an arm around her shoulders. Just like Daddy used to do. Another tear splashed down her nose.

“Don’t be scared, sweetheart,” the man whispered. “It’s going to be all right. I’ll keep you and Mr. Pickles safe, and Adrian will help me, okay?”

She nodded. Then, buried her face into Mr. Pickles’ wet fur.

But they might not like it, if he takes care of me. I was supposed to be quiet and good.

More tears soaked into Mr. Pickles’ matted fur. Had she been wrong to talk to the man?

But I’m scared. And by myself. They didn’t say not to talk to anyone.

She peeked over Mr. Pickles’ head again, up toward the man beside her. His arm still around her shoulders, he frowned in the direction of a growing argument between several other people. Monique watched them, listening as before, but she couldn’t quite understand everything they said.

She thought they were afraid they couldn’t leave the café – but didn’t they try the door already? Or were they afraid of something else?

Monique jumped violently. Did that woman say we’re all going to die?

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