Outside, Chris folded his map and tucked it into his jacket pocket like a letter. He stopped, turned back, and waved β€” not at Nikki, but at the diner itself, the way one thanks a reliable friend. Nikki waved back. Diamond Nachos, battered and bright, would be there tomorrow β€” a place for unfinished things to be finished, for quiet plans to be salted with lime, and for people to practice being human, one plate at a time.

As the night unfolded, conversations braided. The couple at the counter traded stories about a hometown bakery that no longer existed. The college kids debated whether a midnight taco run counted as an adventure. The woman with rain-damp hair finally asked for extra salsa; Chris offered her a corner of his napkin to blot her cuffs. There was something modestly heroic about these exchanges β€” not the grand heroics of movies, but the quieter salvage work of ordinary compassion.

At the corner table, Chris unfolded a paper map with the care of someone handling treasure. He had lines penciled across neighborhoods, small circles around parts of the city; he was planning, or remembering, or both. Nikki carried his plate across and set it down with a practiced smile. β€œSame modifications?” she asked.

It struck Nikki then how much the place was about finishing things: meals, conversations, the scraps of the day people wanted to assemble into meaning. Diamond Nachos was a punctuation mark at the end of small urgent sentences. Strangers arrived incomplete and left with hands greasy and steadier.