I stood there dripping, counting tiles on the floor so I would not cry in front of her. Vanessa smirked and told her friends that some people are simply born to serve, and some are born to be served. Her fiance, a quiet man named Marcus, looked away like he wished the chair would swallow him. I bent down to pick up the broken bowl, and that is when the front door chimed. A tall man in a charcoal suit walked in, silver hair, kind eyes, the kind of face that makes a whole room straighten up without knowing why. He scanned the tables, spotted me on the floor, and his expression changed in a way I will never forget. He crossed the room in six long strides, knelt beside me, and gently took the shards out of my hands. Then he looked up at Vanessa and said, very softly, Put that phone down and stand up. Vanessa laughed nervously and asked who on earth he thought he was. He straightened his cuffs and answered, I am Elliot Vance, owner of this restaurant, and I am also the man who signs the paycheck of every server you have ever screamed at in this city, because I own the other four locations too. The color drained from her face. He turned to the room and said, So technically, this young woman is my guest tonight, and every one of you at that table is not. Security walked Vanessa out while she screamed about her father, a senator. Marcus quietly slid off his engagement ring, placed it on the table, and followed me to the back to help me change aprons. Six months later I manage the Rosewood Grill, Marcus is my fiance, and Vanessa waits tables at a diner two towns over. She has not spilled a single bowl.
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