Meal Two · Chapter 6
A Fine Sieve
Oliver thought the whole plan was preposterous. A missing hot sauce vendor was not a mystery—it was a man who’d changed his mind. But he wasn’t going to show up next week empty-handed, so Monday afternoon, he’d scheduled a few emails to send throughout the late afternoon and taken the train into Manhattan.
Now he sat in a silent corner of the New York Public Library’s Rose Main Reading Room. The room smelled of old wood and aging paper, that particular library scent that Oliver found more comforting than any candle Olivia had ever brought home. He was at his usual desk—third row from the back, second seat from the aisle, close enough to a power outlet that he never had to worry about battery life. The warm glow of the iconic green reading lamp caught the lenses of his glasses and pooled on the keyboard beneath his hands. Around him, the other patrons worked in near-perfect silence, the only sounds the soft click of keyboards and the occasional turning of a page. He wasn’t looking for gossip. He was looking for data.
He was navigating the Department of Buildings’ public database—a system whose logic was buried under layers of bureaucratic architecture that would have defeated most casual users. But to Oliver, it was a puzzle, a system of rules and records that, if properly interrogated, could be made to reveal its secrets. His fingers didn’t fly across the keyboard; they tapped with a deliberate, methodical rhythm, each keystroke a precise and considered action.
He’d always loved this kind of work—the quiet archaeology of public records. As a kid growing up in northern New Jersey, he’d organized his bookshelf by how the books made him feel—calm on the left, exciting on the right, with a gradient of spines arranged by color so the whole thing looked like a sunset if you stood back far enough. His father had stared at it for a full minute and said, “Where does the dictionary go?” Oliver had pointed to the exact spot without hesitation. His mother had worried it was obsessive. His father had just shrugged and said, “At least he knows where everything is.”
The database was like that childhood bookshelf—chaotic on the surface, but with an underlying logic waiting to be discovered. You just had to be patient enough to find it.
He started with the basics, cross-referencing vendor permits for the McGolrick Park Greenmarket against new business licenses filed in the last six months. He searched for Hank’s name—or what he assumed was his name, “Henry”—in public records, a digital trawl that yielded hundreds of irrelevant results. Henry Chen, Henry Rodriguez, Henry Williams. None of them connected to hot sauce or farmers markets. He sighed, adjusting his glasses, and tried variations: “Hank’s Hot Sauce,” “Heritage Pepper Sauce,” “Fish Pepper.” Nothing useful. Just noise.
Statistically, the most likely answer was the most boring one. Hank had probably retired, moved to Florida, or simply decided to stop selling hot sauce. There was no data to support aliens, and barely any to support the wild theories his friends had spun over wine.
But still.
The group had committed to the investigation, and Oliver, despite his skepticism, was a man who followed through on his commitments. It was one of the things Olivia loved about him—his reliability, his steady presence. “You’re my anchor,” she’d told him once, early in their marriage. He’d appreciated the sentiment, even as part of him wished he could be more like Jasper, more spontaneous, less… predictable. Seven years married now, and he still wasn’t sure whether “anchor” was a compliment or a gentle observation about his limitations.
He shifted his search, looking not for a person, but for a pattern. He began meticulously combing through every new LLC and business permit filed in Williamsburg in the last year. It was a digital needle in a haystack—except the haystack was made of legal filings, and the needle might not exist at all. Hours passed. The light outside the grand, arched windows shifted from gold to gray, the shadows of the window frames moving slowly across the reading room floor like the hands of an enormous clock. Around him, other library patrons packed up their things, zipping bags and gathering coats, heading home for dinner. Oliver barely noticed. He’d entered what Olivia called his “tunnel”—that state of deep focus where the rest of the world simply ceased to exist.
He was on page forty-seven of business permits when a librarian approached, her footsteps soft on the marble floor.
“We’re closing in thirty minutes,” she said gently.
Oliver nodded without looking up. “Just a few more minutes.”
She smiled—she’d seen him here before, always at the same desk, always with the same intense focus—and moved on to warn the next patron.
Just as he was about to pack up, admit defeat, and head home empty-handed, he found it.
An application for a new restaurant opening on the Williamsburg waterfront. The applicant was listed as LLC #2847, a numbered entity with no names attached. Anonymous and sterile, the corporate equivalent of a blank face. Filed on October 2nd—exactly two days after Hank had given up his stall at the farmers market.
It was probably nothing. Corporate entities filed anonymous LLCs all the time for perfectly legitimate reasons—tax strategy, liability protection, privacy. But it was an anomaly, a data point that didn’t fit the established pattern. In a dataset full of named applicants—“Giovanni’s Trattoria LLC,” “Brooklyn Burger Holdings,” “Chen Family Restaurant Group”—one numbered entity stood out like a redacted name in a declassified document.
Oliver downloaded the relevant documents, his heart giving a small, unfamiliar flutter of excitement. The filing included an address—a waterfront property that had been vacant for months—and a projected opening date of December 1st. Fast. Suspiciously fast for a new restaurant. He’d spent enough time in zoning forums to know that most waterfront restaurant permits took four to six months from filing to approval. This one was on an expedited track, which meant either exceptional paperwork or exceptional influence.
He sat back, staring at the screen, his methodical mind already building connections. An anonymous entity. An expedited timeline. A waterfront location in a neighborhood where small vendors were disappearing. Each fact alone was unremarkable. Together, they formed the beginning of a shape—faint, but recognizable, like the outline of a constellation you can only see when you stop looking for individual stars.
Oliver packed up his laptop and headed for the exit, his footsteps echoing in the nearly empty reading room. The green reading lamps had been switched off row by row behind him, the vast space settling into its after-hours quiet. Outside, the October evening had turned cold, the air sharp with the smell of exhaust and fallen leaves. He pulled his jacket tighter and started composing the text he’d send to the group, choosing his words carefully—understating the finding the way he always did, hedging with “probably nothing” because he wasn’t ready to claim more than the data supported.
But as he walked toward the subway, his pace was a little faster than usual. For the first time since this silly investigation had started, he understood why his friends found this exciting.
There was a pattern here. He just had to keep looking.