I was still on one knee when the double doors at the back of the dining room swung open and the entire room went silent at once. Eight people walked in — dark suits, earpieces, one older woman in a charcoal coat leading them. The maître d’ went the color of the tablecloth and whispered, “Oh God, it’s the ownership review.” Preston smirked and turned to greet them, already smoothing her hair, ready to complain about “the help.” The woman in the charcoal coat didn’t look at Preston. She looked at me on the floor. Her face did a thing I’ll remember forever — it softened for half a second, then went to steel. She crossed the room, crouched down in her tailored coat right there in the wine, and said quietly, “Get up, sweetheart. You don’t kneel in this building.” Preston laughed — a nervous, ugly laugh — and said, “Excuse me, do you know who I am? I’m a Vale. Whoever you are, this little fraud just —” The woman stood, turned, and finally looked at her. “I know exactly who you are, Preston. Your father’s firm leases the fourteenth floor from my family. And this ‘little fraud’ is my son. He asked to work a season anonymously in one of our properties before he takes over hospitality operations next quarter. Every plate you threw, every slur you used — we have on fourteen cameras.” She lifted one gloved finger toward the ceiling. Preston’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. The woman turned to the maître d’, still not raising her voice. “Ms. Vale is 86’d from every Ashford property, globally, effective now. Refund table twelve’s evening and add it to her family’s next lease invoice. Legal will call her father before dessert.” Then she looked back at me, took a napkin from a passing tray, and gently wiped the wine off my cheekbone like I was still seven years old. “Go change, my love. Then come sit at table one. You’re eating with your mother tonight.” Preston’s martini glass hit the marble. Nobody moved to clean it up.
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