Captain Santiago, an aging fisherman, froze when he saw the dark cargo trucks pull up in front of his small seaside café.

Captain Santiago, an aging fisherman, froze when he saw the dark cargo trucks pull up in front of his small seaside café. He saw the panic flash in the eyes of his granddaughter, Maria, who had just replaced him in serving coffee. They clearly saw the exhaustion in her eyes, despite her efforts to hide her burnt hand. What these men did next did not involve demands or seizure, but rather gave the young woman the hope she had long lost.

The rotting wooden door of “The Last Lighthouse” café swung open. Eight tall men, dressed in black waterproof leather jackets, stepped in, their boots heavy on the old wooden floor. The afternoon sun slanted through the salt-crusted window, casting dim stripes across their faces. At the counter, an older woman stared at her soup, her spoon suspended mid-air. Maria quickly pulled the tablecloth to conceal the old tablet.

The man in the lead, named Kane, took off his beanie and sunglasses. “Afternoon, folks,” Kane said, his voice deep and weighty, easing the tension in the room somewhat. “We’ll take the big table by the window.” They ordered a round of black coffee and grilled fish.

This café was all that was left of Maria’s family, a roadside place shaped by the sea. The chairs were rickety, old fishing nets hung on the walls, and the smell of roasted coffee and grilled sardines clung thickly to the air.

Behind the counter, Maria, in her early 20s, looked up. Her professional smile held a genuine but weary and anxious look. Kane watched her move toward the coffee machine. He clearly saw the old bandage on her left arm, covering a burn mark. She worked with excessive caution, as if suppressing pain.

Kane’s crew sat down, still buzzing from the cargo delivery the night before. They were a private marine salvage and rescue group, having just completed delivering water filtration equipment to a remote island. “A good day, clear consciences. The kind of tired that feels meaningful.”

“Hey, Kane, remember the government rep who asked if our boat was a submarine?” A man named Jax laughed loudly, pulling off his glove. “His face when you turned on the sonar system. Priceless.” Kane nodded, but his attention was fixed on Maria.

Maria brought out the coffee tray, everything perfectly arranged. But her arm—she was trying awkwardly to conceal it. As she set the cups down, Kane noticed the old wedding ring on her finger and the slight tremor as she stepped back.

“Sugar’s on the table, grilled fish is coming,” she said. “Do you boys need anything else?” “Just the coffee is fine for now,” Kane said. Then he asked softly, “Long shift, huh?”

Maria flinched slightly. “Every shift is long here,” she said quietly, “but it’s all I have.”

Kane’s appearance might have been tough, but the truth was he grew up in a port where the poor worked themselves to exhaustion. He had sworn to himself, since he was 14 and watched his mother collapse from overwork, that he would never ignore the signs of depletion and injustice.

Maria brought out the first plate of grilled fish…

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