
The sound of laughter bounced off the walls of the Damascus Rose Restaurant’s private dining room while I remained perfectly still, my fork suspended above the untouched lamb resting on my plate. Around the long, gleaming table, twelve members of the Almanzor family spoke with animated hands and expressive faces, their Arabic spilling effortlessly from one person to the next—smooth, rhythmic, and intentionally exclusive.
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At the head of the table sat my fiancé, Tariq, his hand resting possessively on my shoulder as he translated absolutely nothing. Across from me, his mother, Leila, observed me with sharp, assessing falcon eyes, a faint smile tugging at the corner of her lips.
She knew. They all knew.
Above us, a crystal chandelier scattered light across the white linen tablecloth, casting flickering shadows as Tariq leaned toward his younger brother, Omar, and spoke quickly in Arabic.
The words flowed easily, casually, as if I weren’t seated right there, as if I couldn’t understand every syllable.
She doesn’t even know how to make proper coffee, Tariq said with clear amusement. Yesterday she used a machine.
A machine? Like we’re at some cheap American diner? Omar snorted, nearly choking on his wine. And you want to marry this one? Brother, what happened to your standards?
I lifted my water glass and took a delicate sip, my expression carefully arranged into polite confusion. The same expression I’d worn for six months now—ever since Tariq proposed.
The same expression I’d perfected during eight years in Dubai, where I’d learned that sometimes the strongest position is the one where everyone believes you’re harmless.
Tariq’s hand tightened on my shoulder as he turned to me with that practiced smile—the one he used when he wanted something. My mother was just saying how beautiful you look tonight, habibti.
I smiled back, soft and grateful. That’s so sweet. Please tell her thank you.
What his mother had actually said, less than thirty seconds earlier, was that my dress was too tight and made me look cheap. But I nodded appreciatively, playing my role flawlessly.
The waiters arrived with another course—delicate pastries drizzled with honey and crushed pistachios. Tariq’s father, Hassan, a dignified man with silver threaded through his dark hair, raised his glass.
To family, he announced in English, one of the very few phrases he’d spoken in my language all evening. And to new beginnings.
Everyone raised their glasses. I lifted mine as well, meeting his gaze across the table. He looked away first.
New beginnings, Tariq’s sister Amira muttered in Arabic, just loud enough for everyone to hear. More like new problems.
She can’t speak our language, can’t cook our food, knows nothing about our culture. What kind of wife will she make?
The kind who doesn’t know when she’s being insulted, Tariq replied smoothly.
The table erupted into laughter.
I laughed too—a small, uncertain sound, as though I were trying to join a joke I didn’t quite understand. Inside, I was calculating, recording, mentally filing away every word and tone, adding them to the growing list of transgressions I’d been compiling for months.
My phone vibrated inside my clutch. I stood quietly. Restroom, I murmured to Tariq.
He waved me off without looking, already turning back to his cousin Khalid and launching into another Arabic story.
As I walked away, I heard him clearly.
She’s so eager to please, it’s almost pathetic.
But her father’s company will be worth the inconvenience.
The restroom was empty—polished marble, gold fixtures, elegant and cold. I locked myself into the farthest stall and pulled out my phone.
The message was from James Chen, head of security at my father’s company, and one of the very few people who knew what I was really doing.
Documentation uploaded. Audio from the last three family dinners successfully transcribed and translated. Your father wants to know if you’re ready to proceed.
I typed back quickly. Not yet.
I need the business meeting recordings first. He needs to incriminate himself professionally, not just personally.
Three dots appeared, then disappeared.
Understood. Surveillance confirms he’s meeting with the Qatari investors tomorrow. We’ll have everything.
I deleted the conversation, reapplied my lipstick, and studied my reflection.
The woman staring back at me wasn’t who I used to be.
Eight years earlier, I’d been Sophie Martinez—fresh out of business school, optimistic and painfully naive—accepting a position at my father’s international consulting firm in Dubai. I thought I was prepared for anything.
I wasn’t prepared for what I discovered there.
Dubai wasn’t just glittering skyscrapers, luxury cars, or seven-star hotels. That was the surface. What truly changed me was what lay beneath—the intricate negotiations conducted in Arabic over endless cups of gawa, the unspoken rules, the cultural subtleties that determined whether a deal succeeded or collapsed entirely.
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My father’s firm had been floundering in the Middle Eastern market. Too many Western executives assumed they could bulldoze their way through with American tactics. Too many lost contracts. Too many offended partners.
I watched deal after deal fall apart simply because no one on our team truly understood the culture—the language, the respect, the relationships that governed everything.
So I learned.
Not casually. Not superficially. Completely.
I hired the best tutors money could buy, immersed myself in the language, studied the culture with the same intensity I once reserved for corporate law. I spent eight years becoming fluent not just in Arabic, but in its many dialects, the subtle regional differences that separated those who truly belonged from those merely passing through.
Six years in Dubai. Two more bouncing between Abu Dhabi, Riyadh, and Doha. I negotiated contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars, all while smiling politely as men assumed I was just another pretty American girl who’d gotten lucky.
Let them underestimate me. Their competitors certainly did—right up until I closed deals they thought were impossible.
By the time I returned to Boston three months ago to take over as COO of Martinez Global Consulting, I could discuss Islamic finance, regional politics, and international trade in formal Arabic that would impress scholars, then switch seamlessly into street dialect without hesitation.
And that’s when I met Tariq al-Mansur.
We met at a charity fundraiser. He was handsome, charming, Harvard-educated. His accent was faint, his English flawless. He asked about my work, listened carefully, seemed genuinely interested in my thoughts on global markets.
Within twenty minutes, he casually mentioned his prominent Saudi family and their extensive business holdings across the Gulf—real estate, construction, import-export, a diversified empire built to survive any storm.
I wasn’t drawn to his wealth. My father’s company ensured I’d never worry about money. I was drawn to opportunity.
Martinez Global had been trying to enter the Saudi market for years. The connections, the trust, the right introductions—always just out of reach.
Tariq could be the bridge.
Over the following month, he courted me with a careful balance of Western romance and old-world courtesy. Fine restaurants. Thoughtful gifts. Long conversations about literature, politics, history.
He told me about growing up between Riyadh and Boston, about the strain of living between two worlds. He never once spoke Arabic to me.
My family is traditional, he said on our sixth date as we walked along the harbor. They’ll want to get to know you, but it may be overwhelming. They’ll mostly speak Arabic among themselves.
Don’t take it personally. It’s just what they’re comfortable with.
I nodded, sincere. I appreciate the warning. I’ll do my best to make a good impression.
He smiled and kissed my forehead.