The Waitress Earning $9.50 An Hour Leaned Over The Table. Her Six-Word Threat Made The City’s Most Feared Mob Boss Freeze – Part 2

Chapter 2: The Arrival Of The Escalades

At exactly 9:47 PM, a gleaming black Cadillac Escalade pulled up outside the diner’s foggy front windows.

Another one parked right behind it. Then a third.

Three luxury vehicles with dark tinted windows idled at the curb. They sat in the cold rain like predators waiting for a signal.

Patty Kowalski, scrubbing the stainless-steel pie display, looked up at the window. Her hands stopped moving. Her shoulders went stiff.

“Scarlett,” Patty said. Her voice dropped to an unnatural, trembling whisper. “I need you to take table six right now.”

Table six sat in the secluded corner. It featured high-backed, cracked leather seats. It remained the only table in the entire building shielded from the street windows.

“Patty, I can’t,” Scarlett said, balancing a heavy tray of dirty dishes on her hip. “I’ve got four active tables right now. The Hendersons are waiting on their meatloaf, and table eight just spilled a glass of water.”

“I know,” Patty said. She kept her terrified eyes fixed on the black SUVs outside. “Take table six anyway.”

Scarlett stopped walking. Patty’s voice lacked its usual warmth. It carried a terrifying flatness that meant the subject remained permanently closed.

Scarlett heard that specific tone maybe twice in two years. It surfaced only when something felt wrong in a way that simply could not be discussed out loud.

“Okay,” Scarlett said slowly. She set the dirty tray down on the busboy’s cart. “I’ll take it. Who is it?”

Before Patty could answer, the diner’s front door chimed.

Two men entered first. Both stood well over six feet, possessing thick necks and wearing dark, tailored clothing. The suits looked too expensive for a greasy diner, yet far too casual for a boardroom.

They spoke no words. They scanned the crowded room with the cold, quiet efficiency of men who made a highly lucrative profession out of identifying exits and neutralizing threats.

They moved in perfect sync, bypassing Scarlett without a glance, and sat at the counter stools facing outward toward the door.

The glass door chimed a second time.

Dominic Caruso strode into the Cornerstone Diner like a man who never once considered whether he was welcome.

He was forty-one years old, broad across the shoulders, with thick dark hair silvering at the temples. He possessed a sharp, unforgiving jaw carved from stone.

He wore a custom charcoal suit with no tie. The top button of his crisp white shirt lay open, and the heavy silver watch resting on his left wrist caught the harsh fluorescent light.

He ignored Patty. He ignored the other terrified customers. He walked directly to table six and sat down in the shadows.

His name was Dominic Caruso.

In the city of Ridgewood, that name carried a terrifying weight. It meant the lucrative Port Authority contracts. It meant the billion-dollar East Side Redevelopment Project. It meant corrupt city council members sweating whenever his name surfaced in conversation.

It meant a ruthless family that started in the ‘import business’ in the late 1950s—legitimate on paper, but catastrophic in practice. The Caruso family evolved over three generations into an empire so powerful that the FBI assigned a dedicated task force solely to them.

The local Ridgewood police preferred to pretend the Carusos simply didn’t exist.

Scarlett Monroe knew none of this. She ignored the local political news, and she avoided mafia gossip.

She grabbed her green order notepad, clicked her cheap ballpoint pen, and walked directly over to table six. She wore the practiced, warm smile of a woman standing on aching feet for nine hours, determined to remain a consummate professional.

“Welcome to the Cornerstone,” Scarlett said brightly. “Can I start you off with something to drink tonight?”

Dominic Caruso didn’t bother to look up from the glowing screen of his smartphone.

“Coffee. Black,” Dominic ordered. His voice rumbled low and gravelly. “And whatever your soup is tonight.”

“We have a roasted tomato bisque,” Scarlett offered. “It’s really good. Patty makes it from scratch every morning.”

He offered no response. He typed an email on his phone, ignoring her existence.

Scarlett stood there for an awkward second. Her smile faltered just a fraction. She wrote the order down on her pad, turned on her heel, and walked away.

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