Among them was 15-year-old Talia Leman, to whom Mr Gates paid particular attention; the day before he had played bridge with her grandparents. The fourth player was the sage of Omaha, Warren Buffet.
Mr Gates had also come with a note from Talia's gran, Evelyn Mintzer. "That is so typical of my mom," said Talia's mother Dana.
But this wasn't Talia's first encounter with Mr Gates. When she was 12, she heard him speak at Harvard where her father graduated. (The same cannot be said of Mr Gates who dropped out to start a small software company.)
His commencement address had an effect on Talia:
"He said the barrier to giving is not too little caring - it's too much complexity. That means when we see suffering in the world and we don't know how to help, we look away."
"It was such a reassuring message that people do care - but it's our job to make it simple for them to find a way to make a difference," said Dana. "Mr Gates is the one that liberated Talia to understand that complexity is her only enemy. It's not apathy. That is a very liberating thing to realise."
Talia used the quote in speeches to stump for her non-profit start-up Random Kid, which aims to use the "power of anyone to solve real problems" - that is, to help children help other children.
The first project was raising money for Hurricane Katrina. Her organisation has gone on to provide funding for water-pumping projects around the world, refurbished schools, provided play centres and anti-malarial nets for Africa and crutches and artificial limbs for those injured in the Haiti earthquake.
Random Kid has raised over $10m and counting. Not bad for a 15-year-old. Talia has also been appointed Unicef's first known National Youth Ambassador and has amassed a slew of national and international awards.
Over her short career to date, she has harnessed the energy of over 4,000 school districts. It sounds like she could give Mr Gates a run for his money in the "over-achieving" stakes.
While Talia clearly regards the software mogul as an inspiration, she said he also comes across as "a real down-to-earth person. He's very real and very legit and I hope to learn some of his wisdom."
Talia said she has been soaking up the conference atmosphere and learning as much as she can:
"Everybody here has something to offer and everybody comes from a phenomenal background with amazing resources we can bounce off.
"I feel everyone is interconnected in some way, which is really cool. I feel like I am listening in on something I am not supposed to - like I am part of this cool new present and like I'm not supposed to be listening because it is all the most intelligent people in the world discussing the biggest issues that we are facing."
Talia is planning a big site relaunch in the next couple of weeks. Her mum Dana is also looking for a mentor for her because "there's only so much a mum can do. She needs someone to help her to the next level."
For the moment, Talia is concentrating on spreading the world about Random Kid:
"You realise that coming from rural Iowa, you can be part of something that is so much bigger - and that's incredible. Also that the small efforts matter most not just that they matter.
"I'm in it for the real deal, for the long term."
And the outcome of that bridge game between Talia's grandparents and Messrs Gates and Buffet? Dana said that Mr Gates told her he couldn't remember.
Dana noted that last year her parents won.
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