“Get out of that table now,” the cop ordered sharply, assuming authority over the situation. Moments later, he realized the man he had just insulted was actually the owner of the entire restaurant, turning the moment into instant embarrassment.
If you’ve spent enough time around high-end hospitality, you learn quickly that the real story of a place is never in the menu or the lighting or even the clientele—it’s in how people behave when they think no one important is watching. That’s something Dominic Arledge understood better than most, which is probably why, on the night that should have been purely about celebration, he chose to disappear into his own restaurant like a stranger instead of announcing himself like a king returning to his court.
The restaurant was called Marquette House, and in a city that liked to pretend it had standards, it actually did. The kind of place where the lighting was soft but intentional, where the waitstaff moved like they were part of a quiet choreography, and where every table carried just enough distance from the next to make conversations feel private, even when they weren’t. Dominic didn’t build it for show, at least not entirely. He built it because he liked control—clean systems, predictable excellence, the kind of environment where chaos was filtered out before it ever reached the surface.
His wife, Elise Arledge, found the whole ritual amusing in a way that never quite crossed into mockery. She had spent her career in litigation, the kind that didn’t just argue but dismantled, and she had a particular appreciation for watching people reveal themselves without realizing it. So when Dominic suggested—again—that they spend their anniversary “undercover,” she agreed, mostly because she knew it would entertain her in ways the food alone never could.
They didn’t dress down, exactly. That would have been too obvious. But they avoided the signals that staff were trained to notice—the watches, the introductions, the subtle cues that usually smoothed their path wherever they went. Instead, they checked in under a private reservation name, took a corner table with a full view of the dining room, and settled into the evening like any other well-dressed couple celebrating something meaningful but not important enough to disrupt anyone else’s night.
