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worried, his eyes flicking from the child's face to her plate.
"The croissant is delicious," Hani said firmly, "and I don't need another
coffee. But actually I do need to see the maître d' . . . to borrow a pen,"
Hani added, when the man looked worried. Slipping down from her chair, she
strolled through the terrace door into Le Trianon and headed for the elderly
person standing at a small lectern, leafing through a reservations book.
"Problems?" Hani asked politely.
"Nothing serious." The thin Italian smiled at her. "A double booking for the
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same cover . . ." He nodded to a table for six beneath a mural, the one
decorated with a dancing girl in jewelled slippers and a wisp of cloth.
"Sometimes I just think it would be easier to do everything myself."
"It is," said Hani, raising the lip on her notebook and hitting a hot key. It
would have been obvious even to someone less versed in the ways of Lady Hana
al-Mansur that the child was hovering on the edge of a question.
"What is it?" the maître d' said and kept his smile in place to stop the girl
from being anxious. "You can ask . . ."
Hani held up her pink plastic notebook. "My uncle's on a mission," she said
seriously. A flick of her eyes around the almost empty café found it safe to
talk. Her look swift, instinctive and enough to convince the man that Hani
believed what she said. And why not . . . ? Everyone had heard the rumours
that her uncle
Ashraf Bey was in the direct employ of the sultan in Stambul.
"A mission?"
"Secret," said Hani. "Very secret."
Not being too sure how else to proceed, Hani thrust the screen at the man. "I
have to find this woman,"
she said and watched his eyes. Glad that he didn't like the look of her
either. "To deliver a message."
"This message is from His Excellency?"
Hani shook her head and left it at that.
"I see," said the thin Italian, visions of the Khedive using his young cousin
to pass secret messages to unsuitable foreigners flicking through his head. Or
maybe it was Hamzah Effendi, because rumours had the industrialist quietly
financing a return to power for Saiid Koenig Pasha.
"The thing is," Hani began. "I was wondering if she'd ever eaten here?"
"I forgot to give you this . . ." Hani held out the pen.
"Thank you." The maître d' smiled. It was only after she'd slipped away the
previous afternoon that he realized Lady Hana had taken his silver Mont Blanc
with her. He should have known she'd return it just as soon as she realized.
"A parcel came for your uncle."
"I know," said Hani, "I'm here to collect it."
The maître d' looked doubtful.
"It's wrapped in brown paper," said Hani. "Madame Ingrid brought it down this
morning. Gave it to you herself."
At least Hani imagined that was what had happened. She'd been very specific in
her instructions to the bank. His Excellency needed the money wrapped in paper
and delivered to his office. The parcel was to be given only to Madame Ingrid.
The note Hani sent to Madame Ingrid on her uncle's behalf was actually a
postcard taken from a box in her dead aunt's old room. The card's surface was
waxy, ivory rather than white. Across one side, at the top, ran the words,
al-Mansur Madersa, Rue Sherif, El Iskandryia.
That alone must be enough to make the card an antique, since the door onto Rue
Sherif had been walled up for . . .
Hani wasn't sure, but ages anyway. And it had only been unbricked after Aunt
Nafisa died. She'd risked using her printer to fake Uncle Asraf's signature on
this, because she was pretty certain Madame Ingrid wouldn't be feeding the
card through any machine. All the woman would do was what she was told, which
was deliver any parcel left at C3 straight to the maître d' at Le Trianon.
It was a smooth-flowing, perfect circle of transferred responsibility.
Hani held out her hand.
"The parcel's in my office," said the maître d' and Hani nodded wisely,
although she hadn't even known the Italian had an office. "Why don't I have
someone bring you a cappuccino while I fetch it?"
Hani did her best not to sigh.
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CHAPTER 22
_____________
Wednesday 23rd February
Mubahith came looking for Raf. At least they didaccording to Isabeau. But this
Raf only found out later, and first there was another shift to get through.
His seventh in three days. Two scraping dishes, one suds diving, three
prepping vegetables and now this.
"More fire . . ."
Chef Antonio skimmed the hot chicken breasts across his kitchen, one after the
other and a commis chef ducked.
It was inevitable the new broiler man should fumble the catch. If only because
he had two hands and there were five flying breasts of chicken. But he caught
three and won $20 for Idries who'd bet Raf would catch more than he dropped.
"Owe you," Idries told him.
The kitchens at Café Antonio were thick with steam. The floor slippery. A
radio spat raiPunk and the only thing louder than the fury of Cheb Dread was
the chef's voice.
"Burn it," Antonio snarled. "Blackened chicken needs to be fucking blackened
." With a scowl he swung round, gearing up to persecute somebody else.
Out of the fat chef's sight Raf grabbed a hand towel and began to wipe off his
fumbled catches.
"Run them under a tap," Idries said over his shoulder.
So Raf did, then tossed the five chicken breasts back into oil and smoking
butter. Sixty seconds later, having seared both sides to charcoal against the
pan's heavy bottom he scooped them out, rolled them on cheap kitchen paper and
dumped them back on a plate.
"Ready," he shouted and discovered the plate was already gone.
"Swordfish two," came the cry from a teller, "and let's hustle, tagine three."
The tagine would be lamb because that was the only kind Café Antonio served.
Lamb tagine, blackened chicken and pan-seared swordfish, those were Antonio's
bows to ethnic cookery; and if the Soviet kids with their rucksacks and cheap
condoms didn't know that tagine came via Morocco, the chicken courtesy of the
Caribbean and the swordfish recipe from Malta then Antonio wasn't about to
tell them.
His ingredients were local, mostly . . . The fish caught by boats from Odessa
and frozen on-site. When the Soviet crews docked at Tunis, which was rarely,
Antonio would be waiting, ready to come to an agreement.
The captain would eat free for his entire stay, much vodka would be drunk and
one or maybe two sides of frozen swordfish would go missing.
Other than these dishes Café Antonio served pizza and that was all. Antonio
pushed the pizza because he was from Naples after all, and his staff also
pushed pizza, whatever their nationality, because that's what they were told
to do. Pizza was good to eat, quick to cook and the markup was excellent; the
other dishes took more time, cost more to make and irritated Antonio with
their inauthenticity.
"So why serve them?"
Idries shrugged. "Have you seen the real thing?"
Apparent y Antonio needed the ethnic dishes for the kind of tourists who [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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