Home>>read The Greek Billionair's Marriage Matchmaker free online

The Greek Billionair's Marriage Matchmaker(23)

By:Holly Rayner




Still, the setting was a bit dim, even with the tea lights and the  lights spilling through the windows of the restaurant. So Anita set to  work, quickly stringing the white fairy lights around and across the  wrought-iron frame that would eventually hold a canopy, once the patio  was finished and open to the public. She had to work quickly-she didn't  want to keep the prince waiting after he'd been so understanding and  stood up for her in the face of his underling's anger.



When she stepped back, she thought it still looked a little bit dim. They'd done well, but was it suitable for royalty?



Anita watched the men's reactions carefully as she led them out to the  table. They were, by and large, stone-faced men, but she thought she  overheard a few appreciative murmurs.



She seated the Sheikh at the head of the table. It seemed like the right  thing to do, until she remembered, with a pit in the bottom of her  stomach, that when she was ten she had carved her own name, surrounded  by the shape of a heart, into the table-right in front of where he was  now sitting.



Hopefully, he wouldn't notice, she thought. Hopefully the light was dim enough.



They ordered drinks quickly enough, and Anita was able to get back to  serving her neglected tables. Her fellow waitresses had had to step in  in a few cases, and Anita couldn't help but curse herself for the lapse.  The rest of them were regulars, who didn't seem to mind the delay too  much. Some even seemed almost honored to be neglected in favor of a  prince, once Anita confirmed, in as low-key a way as possible, that it  was, in fact, him.



Things seemed to be going well enough, but still Anita felt nervous.  She'd already gone out three times, asking the Sheikh's table if they  were ready to order, and three times they'd told her that they were  still making up their minds.



Finally, she decided she should do something. She wandered over to where the Sheikh was sitting and summoned up all her courage.



"Do you have any questions about the menu?" she asked.



He looked up, startled, as though she'd interrupted his thoughts. "Yes,  ah … " He seemed like he was considering saying something, but wasn't sure  how to phrase it. "I know you're quite busy, and you've already bent  over backwards to accommodate us. I appreciate it, really."



"It's really no problem," Anita rushed to say.



The prince continued. "It's just that I didn't realize until now how  much I had my heart set on chakchouka. I think you have it in Al-Dali,  as we do."



Anita was nodding as though she was trying to make her head fall off.  She didn't mean to be so accommodating. She wanted to come across as  cool, calm, and laid-back. But there was something about the Sheikh that  made her want to please him, and she had a feeling that it wasn't just  his status.         

     



 



"We do," she said. "My father used to make it for me when I was a little  girl, actually. I don't really know why we don't have it on the menu,  but I'm sure my father could make it for you."



He cocked his head. "Your father?"



Anita blinked, suddenly unsure she should have shared this much about  herself. "This is my family's restaurant …  mine and my father's."



This only led to another confused look.



"And your mother's?"



Anita looked down. "I have no mother. Fadi, the head chef here, is my adopted father."



The Sheikh apologized, but Anita waved it off, saying that it had  happened a long time ago, and she had never met her birth parents, as  far as she knew.



She thought that was the end of it, but her explanation was met with  another blank look. He didn't press her for more information, though. He  only thanked her for accepting his ordering off-menu, and let her go  around the table collecting everyone else's orders.



Anita tried to shake off the strangeness of the conversation as she went  about her duties. Luckily, the restaurant would likely only get  emptier, and she was a little less run off her feet than she had been  earlier in the night. But still, she found that her attention was  constantly drawn to the party on the patio in the alley, wondering how  they were doing, and hoping they were having a good time.



She was peering out the windows, trying to get a look at their faces  from across the restaurant, when another of the waitresses interrupted  her thoughts.



"Your father wants to see you."



Anita was startled. "What? why?"



The waitress, a small curvy blonde called Lauren, shrugged. She looked  like she'd had a busy night, too, and didn't have the mental energy for  this conversation. "I don't know, but he does. You should ask him."



Anita thanked Lauren, and shrugged off her slightly terse manner-it had been a strange night for everyone.



When she went back to the kitchen, Anita was struck by how much it  looked like a war zone. Fadi insisted they run a clean kitchen, but even  so, in the course of service on a busy night, there was always this or  that that went wrong and wasn't able to be taken care of right away. A  workstation splattered with a red sauce here, a collection of eggshells  swept back behind a table there, until they could be properly cleaned up  at night's end.



It was always that way, and the kitchen staff were always a little bit  on edge after a busy night like this. But when she saw Fadi, Anita knew  that something was different.



He was chopping up a piece of meat, coming down just a little bit too  hard with every cleave. He was not usually this angry. He was never this  angry.



"Who has ordered off-menu?" he barked. "Who ordered the chakchouka?"



Anita paused. Something made her hesitant to respond. She got the sense  that Fadi already knew the answer, and for some reason, it made him  angry as sin.



She couldn't remember having seen him angry often. She'd seen him play  angry, as in their little game earlier. But he had this quiet, barely  contained intensity to him now, with fire in his eyes.



She swallowed hard. "The prince did. Sheikh Hakim al Kamal bin Masfari, of Az Kajir."



The words dripped off her tongue so easily. She hadn't realized his full name and title had stuck so well in her mind.



Fadi's knife came down hard on the meat. "And you just decided to serve  these men? You know of the bad blood between their kingdom and ours."



Anita frowned. "Well …  yes. But that all happened a long time ago-"



"No!"



Her father's shout reverberated through the kitchen in much the same way  as his laugh often did. It made her jump. Her eyes quickly scanned the  room, and she saw that the other cooks were likewise startled.



Fadi saw their reactions too. He continued, but with his voice markedly  lower. "Nothing of the old world is very long ago or far away. It may  seem that way to you, but it's a trick. You can never think it is."



Anita was shaken. It had already been a strange night, but Fadi's  reaction was infinitely stranger. She couldn't think of a response, and  he didn't wait for her.         

     



 



"You will not serve them," he said, turning his attention back to the meat in front of him.



Anita let out a little sound of protest, and Fadi's eyes shot back to her. They were still so angry.



"I have to," she lied. "No one else can cover it. They're all too loaded down with their own tables."



He saw straight through her. He always could. But everyone was still  watching, and the defiant set of her face must have changed his mind,  because he didn't insist further.



"And you'll make the chakchouka?" Anita felt she was pushing her luck now, but she couldn't help it.



In response, Fadi called out to a kitchen assistant to bring him eggs.



Good enough, Anita thought sullenly.



She headed back out to the table and asked if the men needed anything.  They didn't. But observing them sat around the table, passing around  appetizers and laughing, Anita felt like everything was going to work  out swimmingly after all. Whatever Fadi's opinion on the matter was.



She looked up to the head of the table, to where the Sheikh was sitting.  He was talking animatedly to his entourage, but his fingers were  absentmindedly rubbing over something on the table.



Anita's blood froze. Her carving. It had to be. But she had no way of  knowing for sure if he'd read it, or even if he could make out what it  even was in this dim light.



Anita felt vexed. He'd known something, earlier, that she hadn't. She'd  seen him holding back. And Fadi knew something. It was high time she  knew something, as well.



She made her way to the head of the table.



"And how are you doing, sire? Is there anything I can get you?"



She knew as soon as she said it that it was not the right thing to say,  but it was too late. It sounded ridiculous, but the Sheikh just replied  with the hint of a laugh in his voice and a trace of a smile on his  lips.



"Please, call me Hakim."