“Sure.”
“Would you mind if I sat here?”
I laughed.
“At the kids’ table?”
“Yes.”
He pulled out a chair.
“I’ve spent enough dinners discussing quarterly earnings.”
One of the children immediately asked him if he liked dinosaurs.
He answered seriously.
“For at least fifteen minutes.”
Everyone laughed.
Even Aunt Beatrice.
Across the ballroom, Nicholas looked horrified.
Several executives watched with confusion.
Soon, one executive wandered over.
Then another.
Curiosity spread.
If Emmett Stewart preferred sitting at the children’s table…
Perhaps there was a reason.
Within twenty minutes, Table Nineteen had become the busiest table in the room.
Not because of status.
Because of conversation.
People relaxed.
They laughed.
Children interrupted discussions with questions about superheroes.
Nobody seemed bothered.
Eventually Nicholas approached.
His forced smile barely stayed in place.
“Mr. Stewart,” he said.
“I actually reserved your seat at the head table.”
Emmett glanced around.
“I know.”
“We’d love to have you join the executive section.”
Emmett smiled politely.
“I appreciate it.”
Then he looked at the crayons scattered across the table.
“I think I’ll stay here.”
Nicholas blinked.
“But…”
Emmett interrupted gently.
“You know something?”
He gestured toward everyone sitting nearby.
“This is the first genuine conversation I’ve had all afternoon.”
Silence.
Then he added something I’ll never forget.
“The people who matter most are usually the ones nobody thinks to impress.”
Nobody spoke.