"I was burned out. I didn't have my heart in it anymore," says Galvan, explaining why he sold Ricardo's Tollway location to Sea Grill owners, who assumed many of Galvan's debts in the beleaguered operation. According to Sue Sudhi, a partner in Sea Grill, they took over the restaurant in July shortly after Galvan, too, filed for bankruptcy. They operated it as Ricardo's until December. Galvan says that over the past couple of years, he's lost the belly fire that once drove him to launch and operate some seven restaurants in Dallas over the past 28 years. Subsequently, his ambitions have evaporated to a ghost of what they once were. He now is a partner with his brother-in-law in a small restaurant called Manny's Grill in Frisco. Did his brush with Antonovich exhaust him? "It didn't help me any," says Galvan. "I had bank notes that [Antonovich] had agreed to pay. And he couldn't. And I just couldn't do it. There was a lot of stress with the Plano operation and what happened with Antonovich."