The Billionaire Everyone Ignored Before One Waitress Spoke Japanese-Teptep

No One Helped the Japanese Billionaire — Until the Waitress Greeted Him in Japanese

Alfred Stone had spent most of his life being obeyed, but obedience was not the same as being seen.

By every public measure, he was untouchable.

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He was the head of Ethal Red Holdings, a company so large that nervous commentators spoke about it as though it were weather, or war, or something else ordinary people could not control.

One signature from Alfred could change the direction of shipping routes, swallow competitors, frighten investors and make ministers take his calls before breakfast.

He was worth more than £50 billion.

People said the number with awe.

Alfred heard it as a measurement of distance.

The richer he became, the further away everyone stood.

That morning, he destroyed a hostile takeover attempt before the coffee beside him had gone cold.

His lawyers had prepared long arguments.

His advisers had prepared panic.

Alfred needed neither.

He listened, asked two questions and spoke in the same calm voice he used when ordering a car.

By ten fifteen, the men who had tried to challenge him were thanking him for the courtesy of being ruined politely.

At lunchtime, a meal arrived at his desk under a silver cover.

It cost £400.

He ate it alone.

There was fish, something dressed with herbs, something glazed, something arranged with ridiculous care on a plate too large for the food.

He could not remember the taste five minutes later.

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