his menu with a flourish, âwith the soup of the day.â
The soup of the day was curried carrot. Not exactly a Tony Soprano standby.
So hereâs something everyone should know about diners and Italian family restaurants. Order the obvious. On the rare occasion when Sadie, Frankie, and I forgo Chloeâs for the South Street Diner, Sadie inevitably orders something that just shouldnât be on a diner menu. Osso bucco, sole almondine, sweetbreads. Sheâs always disappointed. Me? Grilled cheese and tomato sandwich on wheat, side of fries, every time.
âHow do you know what youâll like, if you wonât even try?â Sadie scolds.
âYes, Frances. Have some bread and jamâ is Frankieâs helpful refrain.
Truth : I have seen sweetbreads in their natural state. Gimme bread and cheese any day.
Diner or Italian joint: Regulars have their faves; smart diners go for classic. People pleasers order the specials.
I turned to Alex.
âMinestrone. Please. And spaghetti carbonara.â
Smart boy. Smart boy who still hadnât looked me full in the face. Growing up in South Philly, itâs no big deal, giving and taking orders from people you know. There could be any one of the Giordano kids behind the counter at the bakery; Momâs best friend from forever cuts our hair. The Ryans down the street handle all our insurance, and I buy way too much unnecessary stuff to camouflage the tampons when Sam Nguyen is manning the register at his parentsâ pharmacy.
I know thereâs a division north of South Street. Your friends are never, ever your servers. But then, Alex wasnât really my friend.
âOn its way,â I said cheerfully. And went into the back, back to my family.
We keep the walls between us.
I gave the food order to Dad. Iâd debated not saying anything, but couldnât. âPersons of interest,â I told him.
Itâs code. Police-speak for suspects; Marino for regulars, suspected restaurant critics, and anyone who might be in a position to help or hurt the restaurantâs reputation. Everyone gets good food at Marinoâs; persons of interest get the best.
It galled me a little, giving Alexâs family the designation. But Iâm a pragmatist. A good word from Paul and Karina could bring in extra business. And the more extra business we get, the less money Iâll have to beg, borrow, or steal for college.
âWho?â Dad asked as he scanned the order.
âKarina Romanova from Channel 4 and Congressman Bainbridge. With their son.â
He let out a low whistle. âWell, lah-dee-dah. Good for us.â Then, âYou forget something here, hon? Thereâs only two entrées.â
âSheâs skinny,â I explained, then, before Dad could give a familiar opinion on women who eat naked salads for dinner, I told Uncle Ricky, âThe congressman ordered the ravioli.â
âHot damn!â He grinned, actually rubbed his hands together, and swung into action. Flour flew.
âHeaven help us,â Dad muttered under his breath. âNow, you take an antipasto plate out to them, on the houseââ
âDad, no!â
âWhat? We canât let Whatshernameanova sit there with just a pile of lettuce. Trust me, sheâll pick at a pepper, nibble some prosciut, and all will be well in the world.â
Not exactly. Karina wouldnât touch the platter, with its meat and cheese and oiled peppers; I knew that. And there it would be, sitting on the table in front of Philadelphiaâs Most Beautiful Family, like a gift from peasant to king. Itâs always a pig in fairy tales, hauled in from the grateful subjectâs backyard and trotted up the hill to become royal prosciutto.
âDad . . .â
I closed my mouth. I couldnât say it. My dadâs no peasant, and heâs no brown-noser. Heâs a decent guy who thinks an empty stomach leads to an empty head. I watched
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