Page 55 of A Cry for Help


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Chapter 36

THEN:

The lunch rush hit Granger's like high tide—a surge of humanity filling every table, their collective voices creating a wall of sound that Ann used to find comforting. She moved between tables with practiced efficiency, her smile fixed in place. Each time the door opened, her shoulders tightened imperceptibly, her body braced for the moment she knew would eventually come.

Marcus Hale stood in the doorway, the afternoon sunlight casting him in silhouette for a moment before he stepped fully inside. Ann's hand froze mid-pour, water hovering dangerously close to overflowing the customer's glass as she watched Marcus scan the restaurant with deliberate thoroughness. Not searching, she realized—he already knew exactly where she was. The survey was performative, establishing his presence, letting her know he was aware of everyone and everything in the space.

The hostess approached with a practiced smile, menus in hand. Ann couldn't hear their exchange over the dining room chatter, but she saw the moment Marcus gestured in her direction, saw the hostess's expression shift to uncertainty as she consulted her seating chart.

"Everything okay?" The customer's question jolted Ann back to awareness.

"Yes, sorry." She completed the pour with a jerky motion, then stepped away from the table, moving toward the kitchen with swift, urgent steps. She needed a moment, just one moment to breathe before?—

"Ann." Tom's voice caught her near the service station, his hand settling briefly on her arm. His expression was troubled, brow furrowed with lines that hadn't been there months ago. "Officer Hale is asking specifically for your section."

The words landed like stones in her stomach. "Please," she whispered, her voice nearly inaudible beneath the restaurant noise. "Don't make me serve him."

Tom's eyes darted toward the entrance where Marcus still stood, his posture military-straight, waiting with the patient stillness of a predator who knows his prey has limited escape routes. "I offered Miriam, but he was… insistent."

"Tom—" Ann began, desperation edging into her voice.

"Just take his order and bring his food," Tom said, his tone suggesting this was the most reasonable compromise available. "Professional, quick, and done. I'll keep an eye out."

The small assurance did nothing to ease the cold dread spreading through Ann's body. Tom might watch, might even intervene if something obvious occurred, but he still didn't truly understand. Didn't believe the depth of danger she sensed every time Marcus entered her orbit.

Tom raised his hand, gesturing toward the hostess with a small nod that signaled consent to Marcus's request. Ann watched, paralyzed, as the hostess led Marcus to a small table directly in the center of her section. This position allowed him unobstructed views of the entire restaurant, the kitchen doors, and the staff entrance.

Her order pad felt suddenly heavy, the small plastic pen slipping against her damp palm as she forced herself to approach his table. Each step required conscious effort, her body fighting the instinct toflee, to hide, to escape the watching eyes that tracked her movement across the floor.

"Good afternoon, Officer Hale," she managed, the professional greeting emerging as flat and lifeless despite her attempt at normalcy. Her hand shook visibly as she held the pen poised above the pad, the tremor so pronounced that the pad nearly slipped from her grasp.

"Ann." He spoke her name with a familiarity that made her skin crawl, though his tone was perfectly pleasant, even warm. "Thank you for coming over. I was afraid you might avoid me."

The direct acknowledgment of her fear—packaged as concern—sent a cold ripple down her spine. She said nothing, waiting with rigid posture for his order, unwilling to engage in the pretense of casual conversation.

Marcus studied her face with that same measured intensity she'd come to dread, his head tilting slightly as he observed her discomfort. "You seem afraid of me, Ann," he said, his voice lowered just enough to keep their conversation private despite the surrounding noise.

The statement—so accurate and yet so manipulative in its presentation—broke something in Ann's carefully maintained façade. "I think you've been following me," she said quietly, the words escaping before she could stop them, driven by days of accumulated fear and the violation she'd discovered underneath her car.

Marcus's eyebrows rose, his expression shifting to what appeared to be genuine surprise. If Ann hadn't seen the device with her own eyes, hadn't documented pattern after pattern of his surveillance, she might have doubted herself in the face of his convincing reaction.

"Following you?" He leaned back slightly, palms open on the table in a gesture of innocent confusion. "Ann, I'm not following you. Why would you think that?"

The denial—so smooth, so practiced—hit her like a physical blow. "The tracking device in my car," she said, her voice barely above a whisper. "The patrol car outside my apartment. The way you always know where I'll be."

"Tracking device?" He shook his head, concern creasing his brow. "Ann, I have no idea what you're talking about. I come here because the coffee is good and the service—your service—is excellent." His eyes held hers, unwavering. "As for patrol cars, we cover the entire town. It's not unusual for us to be in various neighborhoods."

Every word was plausible, reasonable—and utterly false. Ann gripped her pen tighter, her knuckles whitening with the effort of not screaming the truth at him.

Marcus leaned forward, lowering his voice further. "Listen, you seem genuinely distressed. Why don't we talk about this somewhere private? After your shift, perhaps? I can help you figure out what's going on."

The suggestion sent ice through her veins—the thought of being alone with him, away from witnesses, from the relative safety of the public space. "No," Ann said, taking a deliberate step back, putting distance between them. "I don't feel safe being alone with you." Her voice wavered despite her effort to keep it steady.

Something flickered in Marcus's eyes—a brief, dark expression quickly masked by renewed concern. "Ann, I'm a police officer. If you're experiencing problems, I'm literally the person who's supposed to help."

Before Ann could respond, before she had to find words to counter his practiced manipulation, a loud splash and clatter erupted beside them. She turned to find Lena standing there, an empty water pitcher in her hands, a spreading puddle at her feet.

"Oh, my God, I'm so sorry!" Lena exclaimed, her voice carrying across the restaurant as she made a show of dabbing ineffectually at the spill with her apron. "Ann, can you help me with this? I'll need towels from the back."