Part 1 – The Arrival
Highway diners always feel suspended in time, places where the smell of fried eggs lingers longer than the conversations do, where headlights pause as if thinking twice about rolling on, and where strangers’ paths intersect for moments that can shape entire mornings.
It was just past sunrise when Marcus Riley entered the diner, pushing the door open with his shoulder. His son, Jamie, clung to his side, bundled in a thin blanket that did little against the morning chill. Cold air followed them inside, brushing against Marcus’s worn jacket and the edges of the blanket, but the warmth of the diner was immediate—thick with the aroma of coffee and sizzling bacon. Yet, the eyes around them didn’t soften; whispers and judging glances traveled faster than the steam rising from the cups. People notice struggle long before they notice dignity, and often they give the former far more weight than the latter.
