The man at table 9 was maybe sixty, silver-haired, wearing a plain gray suit. He’d been eating alone all evening, tipping generously, saying almost nothing. I’d assumed he was just another quiet regular. He stood up slowly, walked past three tables, and placed himself directly between me and Marissa. “Young lady,” he said softly to me, “go to the kitchen. Get some cold water on that burn. You’re not apologizing to anyone.” Todd sputtered, “Sir, this doesn’t concern—” The man raised one finger. Todd went silent. Then he turned to Marissa. “What is your name?” She smirked, tossing her hair. “Marissa Vance. And YOU are about to lose your reservation, old man. Do you have any idea who my father is? He OWNS half this block.” The man’s expression didn’t change. He reached into his jacket and pulled out a slim leather wallet. Not a badge. A business card. He set it gently on her table. Marissa glanced down—and her face drained of every ounce of color. Her champagne flute slipped from her fingers and shattered on the marble floor. “No,” she whispered. “No, no, no—” “Yes,” the man said. “I’m Arthur Ellery. I built this restaurant forty-two years ago. I built the tower it sits in. And the building your father rents his office in.” He turned to Todd. “This young woman just endured an assault in my establishment while my manager threatened her job. Effective tonight, Todd, you are no longer employed here. Emma, if you’d like, I’d like to personally cover the remainder of your nursing degree. My late wife was a nurse. She would have been horrified by what I just watched.” Marissa was shaking now, mascara running. “Please—my father—the contracts—” Arthur finally looked at her. “Your father called me this morning to beg for a lease extension. I was going to say yes.” He picked up his napkin. “Tell him I said no.” The entire restaurant erupted in applause. I couldn’t stop crying—but this time, for a completely different reason.
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