The Waitress Who Shielded His Twins and Changed Brooklyn Forever-Teptep

The bullet was meant for a child too small to understand why grown men brought war into a diner.

Gia Valentine was six years old, holding a fork full of chocolate-chip pancake, when the front window of Sal’s Diner broke open in a bright crash of glass and rain.

Her twin brother, Nico, had blueberry syrup on his sleeve.

Image

Their father, Dominic Valentine, was ten feet away on the wrong side of an overturned table.

Everyone in Brooklyn knew Dominic was fast.

Everyone knew he was dangerous.

But the waitress was closer.

Lily Chen did not remember deciding to run.

Later, when the police report asked for a statement, she would remember the smell of coffee burning on the hot plate.

She would remember the cold November rain spraying across the red vinyl booths.

She would remember the tiny purple bow in Gia’s curls and Nico’s eyes going wide as the gun came up through the broken window.

She would remember her father’s voice, clear as if he had been standing beside her.

Do the right thing, baby girl.

Not the easy thing.

The right thing.

So Lily ran.

She crossed the diner through coffee, glass, and screams, and threw herself over both children in booth seven.

The first bullet hit her left shoulder.

The second tore along her ribs and ripped through her white apron.

She pressed Gia and Nico beneath her anyway, locking her arms around them so tightly that Nico later said he could feel her heartbeat through her uniform.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *