Little Girl Asked A Feared Billionaire To Wait With Her Mom-hihehu

The first thing Nathaniel Vale noticed was the backpack.

It was faded lavender, wet along the seams, and hugged tight to a little girl’s chest like everything important in her life had been packed inside it.

Bellmere’s was the kind of Manhattan restaurant where people spoke softly because the prices did the shouting for them.

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Forks touched porcelain with tiny clean sounds.

Rain tapped the windows overlooking Lexington Avenue.

A line of black coats hung near the host stand, giving off the damp wool smell of a hard city evening.

The child stood in the middle of all that polished calm and tried very hard not to cry.

That was what made Nathaniel look twice.

Not the boots.

Not the curls darkened by rain.

Not even the fact that she was alone.

It was the effort.

The way her little chin lifted every time it shook.

The hostess had already tried to guide her away twice.

Nathaniel watched the second attempt from Table Twelve, where his untouched bourbon sat beside a folded dinner menu and two security men pretended not to be security men.

The hostess bent slightly, smiling the way adults smiled when they wanted a child to obey quickly.

“Honey, you can wait near the front,” she said.

The girl shook her head.

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

The hostess glanced toward the door.

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