I’m Esther. I’m 72, and I’ve been waitressing at the same little diner in small-town Texas for more than twenty years. Most customers are polite. Some are rushed. A few are grumpy before their first sip of coffee. But almost everyone respects the rules.
Last Friday, one woman decided she didn’t have to.
I’ve still got the hustle of a teenager when I’m on the floor. I’m not the fastest anymore, but I never forget an order, I don’t spill drinks, and I treat every customer like they’re at my own kitchen table. That’s how I was raised. That’s how I’ve always done it.
This diner isn’t just a job—it’s where I met my late husband, Joe. He came in one rainy afternoon in 1981, soaking wet, asking if our coffee could “wake the dead.” I told him it could “raise them.” He laughed. Six months later, we were married. When he passed, this place became my anchor.
And last Friday, it anchored me in a way I didn’t expect.
The lunch rush was brutal. Every booth full, the kitchen slammed. I was moving steady when she walked in—a young woman, filming herself like the rest of us were props.

She sat in my section.
“Welcome, ma’am. What can I get you today?” I asked.
Without looking up: “Hey everyone, it’s Sabrina. Cute little diner, let’s see about the service. Chicken Caesar salad. No croutons. Extra dressing. Make sure the chicken is warm but not hot. I don’t want to burn my mouth on camera.”
I jotted it down. “Anything to drink besides water?”
“Iced tea. Only sweet. No fake sugar.”
I smiled. “Freshly made. You’ll love it.”
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