The laminated card was small, grease-stained at the corners, and taped to the inside of the pickup window at Al-Basha. It didn't have prices, just items, handwritten in black marker. Above it, a neon sign buzzed: TAKE OUT ONLY. NO DINING. NO DELIVERY. NO EXCEPTIONS.
"What'll it be?"
A man in a soaked raincoat—the first customer of the evening—squinted at the card.
He took the bag, the heat bleeding through the paper. Behind him, two more customers had lined up, already studying the card like it was scripture. al-basha take out only menu
He stepped aside. Through the fogged glass, he could just make out the old man—Al-Basha himself—turning skewers over charcoal. No words. No smile. Just the hiss of fat dripping into fire, the thud of a cleaver, the shake of spices from a tin labeled only in Arabic.
Mona, the owner's daughter, slid the window open at exactly 4:47 PM, three minutes early, as she had every day for eleven years.
When the bell rang, Mona pushed out a white bag, stapled shut, with a single green olive taped to the top. "Tradition," she said. "You eat it first. Brings luck for the rest of the meal." The laminated card was small, grease-stained at the
The man in the raincoat ordered a Mixed Grill. Mona wrote it on a torn paper slip, pinned it to the spinning wheel above the fryers, and said, "Twelve minutes. Don't stand in front of the window. You'll fog it up."
"Forks are for people who don't know how to use pita. You'll figure it out."
The man asked, "No forks?"
Mona pointed to the menu card. Tucked below Side of Toum , nearly invisible, was the final line:
Mona slid the window shut. The neon hummed. And somewhere in the back, Al-Basha cracked a fresh bag of sumac, not looking up, already knowing: dinner rush would be good tonight. Take out only. Always had been. Always would be.