The
mounded plate slid off Snowy's wrist and crashed on
the slatted wharf that served as the floor for the Tiki
Taster restaurant. She stepped over the oozing mess and delivered the other
plates in her hands to the frat boys at table five. "Don't make me wait
for the replacement food, you clumsy cunt."
"Yes, sir. I apologize for the delay. I'll make sure it comes right
up."
They ogled her suggestively. "Oh, it's up already, babe."
A flush rose over her like a heat shimmer from a desert dune. Her eyes would
give away her fury, so she kept them carefully focused on her empty hands.
"Excuse me while I work on that replacement."
The quartet jeered her until she turned a corner and moved out of sight. Her
feet felt like chewed gum despite her sturdy shoes, and her hands were shaking.
Get control of yourself. It was the third job-and third false identity-she'd
had in three months. She was a lousy waitress, but the Marshal's Service WITSEC
liaison was determined to get her into food service again, even if it meant
giving up her training as a chef to become a server. The last job had been as a
food expediter. The one before that was a hostess position. She'd be working in
a dish pit if she kept screwing up or having to move.
Snowy punched in a replacement order, coding the entry carefully so that it
would go to the head of the queue, secured some cleaning equipment, and took
care of the mess she'd made. She hurried back to the kitchen where the
assistant manager waited for her.
"Is there something wrong with you?" His tone suggested that he was
answering his own question with a loud "yes!" "That's the fourth
ruined meal in just three days. You're not concentrating on your job! Do you
want to be fired? Are you looking for unemployment benefits?" He narrowed
his black, piggy eyes. "You're still on probation here, you know. You can
be fired for any reason. Get your act together, Ms. Bianco,
or get the hell out."
Snowy bit her lip as she tried not to shout back at her boss. "Yes, sir. I'm sorry."
"Hmph.
We'll take the broken crockery out of your wages. Don't let it happen again, or
you're fired. Do you understand me?"
"Yes, sir." Her tongue was a lead weight in
her mouth. Nothing polite came to mind, so she turned back to her duties. To
think that she used to be one of the area's top chefs,
and now she was reduced to being berated by the assistant manager in an
unimpressive college hangout.
It seemed too unfair to have her criminal stepmother free on bail, living her
comfortable life while the legal system ground through the tedious details.
Snowy, on the other hand, was stuck hiding in the WITSEC program because she'd
seen the woman order the murder of a man Snowy didn't even know.
* * *
Doc watched Snowy move through the restaurant gracefully. Her dark hair, pulled
back into a long tail, swished like polished silk against her slender back. She
smiled at the customers she served, though the smile was superficial. He could
see how unhappy she was in the weariness in her eyes and the high spots of
color on her fair cheeks. As his subordinate, Deputy Marshal Logan, met him at
the table, Doc looked up and nodded.
"She's secure."
"Nothing suspicious?"
"No." Doc kept his voice low. "McCarty's shift was a
negative, too." He popped another French fry into his mouth. "She'll
be off work in half-an-hour."
"Right. Long hours for her today."
"Yeah, her feet must be killing her. Let me finish these fries and then
I'll jog along."
Nodding, Logan began to peruse a menu. This was the second time this week they'd
had their officer debriefing at the witness' place of employment. They'd have
to find another location for their next status update.