town drunk came in, Elle managed to put him at ease, got him to eat, which he rarely did anymore, and he even left her a tip.
“I can’t believe he took to you so soon,” Grace said from the grill. “He usually hates new people.”
“What’s to hate?” Elle said with a smile.
Then she went back to the counter and refilled the coffee mugs of the row of mechanics, lumberjacks, laborers, and forestry workers who were devouring their food.
“She’s going to work out just fine,” Grace said to Kelly, and Elle smiled quietly to herself when she heard it.
There was something about the place, about the whole town, that was bringing out the best in her. She’d worked her share of diners, but nowhere before had the customers seemed to welcome her so openheartedly, or had the boss been so willing to see the strengths she brought to the job. At heart, Elle was a people person. She could take a look at a mother coming in with a bunch of kids, or a laborer coming in after a hard day’s work, and know instantly what they needed. Not food necessarily, she didn’t know what they’d order, but she knew what they needed . Everyone who came into a restaurant needed something, and Elle knew it wasn’t only about having something to eat. People needed the company, the interaction, someone to give them a smile and bring a little cheer into their day.
“You going to stop pouring sugar into that cup before it gives you diabetes?” she said to a gruff looking park official who worked on the mountain.
He looked up at her in surprise but she was already gone, grabbing a basket of toast for another guy at the counter.
More than one customer asked Grace about the new girl, and they all had an approving tone in their voice when they did it.
“It seems you’re going to work out,” Kelly said, when the two girls had a brief moment’s rest between customers.
“Do you think?”
“I know it.” Kelly turned toward the grill. “Right, Gracie? She’s going to work out?”
“If she keeps working like this, and doesn’t bring any drama into the place.”
Elle shook her head. “No drama, Grace, I swear it.”
“I don’t know,” Grace said, kindly. “Girls your age, how old are you?”
“Twenty three,” Elle said.
“Same as me,” Kelly said with a grin.
“Girls your age attract drama. Romantic drama. Believe me. I know.”
“Grace was a bit of a femme fatale in her day, weren’t you, Gracie?”
“Those days are long gone now.”
“Oh, it’s never too late, Gracie. Love might be right around the corner.”
Grace laughed, “You two look after yourselves. When I was your age I had my hands full, I can tell you that much. You both have some catching up to do.”
As if on cue, the door opened and a group of guys in their twenties came in. There were four of them, accompanied by a cold gust of mountain wind.
“Oh, boy,” Kelly said. “Here comes trouble.”
Elle watched the boys come in. They were a a few years older than she and Kelly but still under thirty. Their clothes bore the logos of various local sports teams. They wore ball caps and sneakers, despite the fact that it was below freezing outside.
“Shit, Kelly,” one of the boys said, “four coffees, and make that shit fast.”
Elle was surprised at how quickly Kelly jumped at the boy’s demand.
“He can wait like anyone else,” Elle said.
“I don’t want them to cause a fuss,” Kelly answered as she hurried over to the table with the coffee.
Elle stayed put at the counter, sipping her own coffee. She wanted to know what was up with the boys. They weren’t exactly her type, a little scrawny looking, mangy beards, stained shirts. They wouldn’t be winning any fashion contests anytime soon, but she knew more than to judge people by their appearance. It could well be that they would turn out to be good guys, despite their rude entrance.
“This shit’s cold,” one of the boys said, sliding his coffee mug across the table.
Elle