| She won’t tell you about the specials unless you ask her to.
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| She says, «You are expected to participate in this life so don’t be shy to ask questions.»
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| Tammy’s real name is Dorothy.
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| Its the first thing you’ll learn about her,
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| when she points to her nametag with a finger like a switchblade that’s been
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| flirting with a waterbed, looks you in the eye and says, «This isn’t me.»
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| She’ll go on to tell you that Tammy is the best waitress in the whole wide
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| world.
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| If mountains had heart strings, Tammy woud have them curled around her fingers,
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| and she would be mining hard rock for heavy metal.
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| Skipping each love-me-not flower petal, until all that remains is the love,
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| love me.
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| Dorothy doesn’t ask if you want coffee.
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| She pours it hot, careful not to hit the brim, just shallow enough to leave
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| enough room to turn up the volume with cream and sugar if that’s how you take
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| it, I don’t even drink coffee.
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| But I can see that she has danced this dance so often that her steady grace
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| depends on this routine.
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| She’s been subjected to cruelty over empty cups of coffee, treated as if she is |
| somehow responsible for your long night or rough morning.
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| She holds a pen like a warning and is not shy to remind you that she doesn’t
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| take orders, she takes requests.
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| You can tell her what you’d like, but if you’re not polite about it,
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| she’ll point you to a sign that reads: Shoes and shirts are nice,
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| but manners are a must.
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| If you wanna be served, you better dust off your ettiquette.
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| Better sit like you did back in whatever grade that mad it clear to you that
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| your teachers are not your parents, and that any mess you make remains your
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| responsibility.
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| Dorotthy has set the bar so high for world’s best waitress, that I wonder about
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| Tammy.
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| How could she hold a candle to this woman who’s kicking wisdom into me as
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| swiftly as she’s kicking the bullshit out.
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| She tells me about dreams.
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| She says, «My dreams are helium balloons, and I’ve made the mistake of letting
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| go a few too many times but I still got this one.
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| Tied it around my finger like a wedding ring, because even though I don’t
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| believe in marraige, I’m gonna bring this one home.» |
| And I want so bad to ask her what her dream is.
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| But today I’m thinking maybe its enough that she has one.
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| Maybe its enough that she’s holding on to something in a world where everything
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| else floats away.
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| Maybe this one should stay her business, this one thing that she shouldn’t have
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| to explain to anybody.
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| Kinda like the fact that she gave up softness a long time ago.
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| I know because she wears her eyes like two diamonds, cut into spheres,
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| and she will look at you hard.
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| The other diners would call her blunt, not me, I would call her up-front.
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| LIke that kid at the front of the class that always has his hand raised |