A Little Girl Asked To Sit With A Feared Billionaire At Table Twelve-kimochi

The first thing Evelyn noticed was not that the little girl was alone.

It was how carefully she held her backpack.

The child had both arms wrapped around the faded lavender fabric, pressing it against her chest as if the backpack had a heartbeat and she was responsible for keeping it alive.

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Bellmere’s was full that night, the kind of Manhattan restaurant where raincoats cost more than some people’s rent and nobody looked at prices unless they wanted to look humble.

Outside, rain slid down the tall windows along Lexington Avenue and turned the streetlights into long silver streaks.

Inside, the room smelled like butter, seared steak, lemon oil on polished wood, wet wool coats, and the soft expensive smoke of a bourbon someone had ordered and forgotten to drink.

The reservation tablet at the host stand showed 7:18 p.m.

Evelyn had been a hostess long enough to recognize trouble before it reached the dining room.

Trouble usually came in loud.

This child came in quietly.

She was small, six maybe, with damp curls and rain boots that squeaked each time she shifted her weight.

Her backpack had cartoon planets on it, rubbed pale at the corners from being dragged across too many floors.

She looked around the restaurant the way adults looked around an airport after a canceled flight, trying to figure out where the rules were and which ones could keep her safe.

“Sweetheart,” Evelyn said gently, lowering her voice so the nearest table would stop staring, “is your mom here?”

The little girl shook her head.

Her arms tightened around the backpack.

“My mom told me to stay somewhere busy until she comes back.”

Evelyn glanced toward the glass door.

Rain beat against it hard enough to blur the sidewalk.

“She told you to come in here?”

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