Reign of the Favored Women (40 page)

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Authors: Ann Chamberlin

Tags: #16th Century, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction - Historical, #Turkey

BOOK: Reign of the Favored Women
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Some
tekkes
, however, were powerful and wealthy enough to have come to the notice not only of neighbors, but also of the tax authorities. Though exempt from dues, the holy men had a constant fight to prove they were indeed religious and not political. Into such establishments I easily gained admittance and almost as easily gained an interview with either the sheikh himself or one of his subordinates.

“Are you a seeker?” It never took long before such questions made me feel the interrogated. “Are you a dervish, one who sits on the door-sill of Enlightenment?”

Even when I learned to answer, “Yes, praise Allah!” more often than not our dialogue was wasted time. Sooner or later the man would drive from me what my true search was. Then, no matter what I had learned of their membership and religious practices, no matter how devout I tried to appear, the answer would always be an abrupt, “When you come seeking the answer to the nagging unfulfillment that is the curse of all humanity, then we may be of help to .you. The question you ask may eventually lead you to this search. If it is Allah’s will, it might. But until then—I’m sorry.”

At one of the smaller houses on the hill just north of the old aqueduct, in an alley shared with a tomb of a long-dead—maybe even Christian—saint, I was quite surprised to find that my contact was none other than Andrea Barbarigo, now called Muslim, the renegade son of the late proveditore of Venice. He was not the sheikh, of course, but of such position that he was trusted as spokesman.

I had not meant my knowledge of his past to interfere with the business at hand but at last I could no longer conceal my astonishment from him. First I had to apologize for our last meeting, in the bazaar by the Jews’ shop.

“Your warning was that of a friend,” he said, a wave dismissing the dagger cut that had accompanied my words. “I did not take it—but it proved to be true.”

“I am surprised” I told him, “by your presence in a tekke. Not only that but by the sober knowledge of the Way you’ve exuded since my arrival.”

He spoke laconically. “I can no longer be a Christian, and now that Sokolli Pasha is dead—Allah give him rest—without the particular favor of the Sultan, I am unlikely to advance any further in the navy. It is winter now and I cannot be on the seas anyway. So I come here. Here in the tekke I have found friends and new things to strive for. It is simple.”

Though we spoke for several hours until a call for prayer interrupted us, nothing further of interest was divulged. This once-compatriot of mine quoted the same mystical poets with the same slick liberality as all the others I had spoken to and seemed only to go round in circles with his speech as the whirling dervishes do in their dance. But this was the first place the name Sokolli Pasha arose without my own conjuring and so, though I did not cease probing into any other tekke I came upon, I returned to this one near the aqueduct again and again.

In Constantinople, where they themselves do not reign, the dervishes are not quite the open hosts they are in the holy city of Konya. They cannot afford to be, standing a ways there in the shadow of the Porte. But as I continued to frequent the place, I found my presence more and more expected, even welcome, though I could not say with truthfulness that I, too, stood on Enlightenment’s doorstep. But, with Muslim’s and Allah’s help, I was able, on occasion, to find myself not too far removed from the feeling of perfect acceptance I’d enjoyed in Konya with my friend Hajji.

I like to say now it was some power of the spirit that kept me coming back. At the time I doubt very much whether I actually felt anything but very lost, confused, and angry. I certainly wasn’t conscious of spirit. But eventually that spirit—or mere persistence, the skeptic may say—rewarded me. I joined the tekke many nights of that Ramadhan, which began a few weeks later, as I had done in Konya and again I found myself among the brethren on the Night of Power.

We were praying shoulder to shoulder not only because that is the way one always prays in company, for the feeling of unity, but also because the hall was packed. It was always so on this night. Men for whom even Ramadhan is only an excuse for more materialism are religious this one night. They hope the watchful angels who write men’s fates for the coming year may be fooled into giving them better than they deserve.

Even though the hall was full, it was still cold and our unified breaths were visible like steam rising from a stew. It made the ranks beginning five or so men away from me on either side seem unreal, like mirror images, or rather, like the fog that condenses on a glass in the bath. One can rub the fog away with the hem of a sleeve. There was great energy there, however, like the intangible sun on gross stones on a summer’s day.

So ethereal did the edges of my vision seem that at first I thought nothing of it when one of the figures there took on the appearance of my friend Hajji. One of the angels, I imagined, come among us to observe our mortal faith with a critical eye. I remembered another Night of Power, so many years before, when Hajji had spoken to me, told me truthfully how he had come to be a dervish and what it meant for him. Perhaps this angel, then, was only allowed to be seen at times of crisis and only on this most holy of nights—and only by those who were worthy.

The clouds of steam I breathed in were full of faith of this sort and they intoxicated me—my mind seemed to rise to the dome of the roof with it—and so I humbly lowered my eyes before the vision. My master’s murder? It was a little thing in the eternal perspective.

We ate, then danced, and throughout these activities, the image of my friend appeared and disappeared at the corner of my vision. Like the reflection of a tree in a slow-moving pond, I thought. And because of humility and the effervescent nature of the thing, I did not stare or approach but waited upon his will. So as the night progressed, devotion, spurred on by his presence, came more and more to replace all other desire in my soul until not only was I content to wait, but it was my own greatest desire to do so as well.

It was the same hour, the hour of stars, the setting of the moon and the sharp coolness before dawn. I had taken some food and was now coaxing down water in a pious, desireless fashion to steel myself against the rigors of the coming day. My old friend and I found ourselves face to face and alone in the courtyard. I lowered my eyes to my bowl and sipped again, waiting on him.

“Peace on you,” he said at just the right moment to meet the void of my desire, after a tantalizing pause. But not too late to lose the dither of expectancy.

“And on you, peace,” I replied. That was enough. I would have been satisfied then if our speech had never gone any further.

“What do you seek, pilgrim?”

“It.” I replied the dervishes’ divine “
Hu
,” beyond which there is no other.

“You shall find It in yourself.”

All that followed was afterplay, removed—if not in time or space, then in true reality—from that which went before. As distant from true discovery as are the two stars closest to the horizon north and south, the full arc of the sky from each other. How that vast gap in the fabric of reality is bridged, in the twinkling of an eye and yet so utterly, is one of the mysteries a dervish can feel to the very marrow of his bones. Yet he is unable to describe the mystery but with that one word that is goal and satisfaction, yearning and striving, all at once: “
Hu
.”

Bridge that gap we did, with the sweet nonsense of lovers, lovers of God. And when that was complete, Hajji spoke no more than a score of words from the world. They did not catch up with me until morning. “Purpose came not only from desire, but from within, from the harem. Look well, my friend.”

At that moment under the fading stars, we heard the muezzin together as if we had never heard him before. It brought tears to our eyes as if we’d spent all our lives imagining what the glory of that sound might be—the trumpet of the Day of Judgment—and heard it now at last, all our griefs and martyrdoms rewarded in the end. Then we bade goodbye—in silence and without touching. For how long? Another fifteen years? Who could say but the Most Merciful One?

We drifted back into the building to say die prayer at dawn. As I raised my hands to the side of my face, the edge of my sleeve wiped my friend from the mirror of my vision.

XLIX

“From within, from the harem. Look well, my friend.”

Upon the death of her husband, my lady fell under the protection of her brother. With no man to sit in its selamlik, the great house and gardens our master had built were deserted. There was talk of turning the area into a mosque with a pleasure park for the public.

But we moved back into the harem of the main palace. Safiye would hear of no place else, and in apartments right beside her, by Allah! My lady had always been loath to make a choice between Nur Banu and Safiye. When a firm decision such as this was made for her, however, and larded with protestations of friendship, she was helpless to refuse it. What I saw was that Safiye would find it that much easier now to see that her son, the heir, and his cousin Gul Ruh were brought together.

The move did cut my duties down to almost nothing. I was in favor of dismissing all my seconds, what with the army of eunuchs already employed in the palace. Although the last years of fevered purchase of new girls for the Sultan’s delight had filled the harem to overflowing, under such dense conditions, mere guarding took far fewer khuddam. But of course one can never look for reason or restraint when the palace is concerned, and somehow my assistants stayed on.

At first I was pleased to be relieved of responsibilities. I was spending all my time trying to track down my master’s murderer. But soon I discovered what such ‘freedom’ did to my power to act for myself. Hours and stations of guard were set in the palace by long tradition. And I was trying to fill old bottles with new wine.

“Hello, khadim. What are you doing here?”

“I just thought this corridor seemed unwatched.”

“No, no. I’m here. Don’t you worry. We’ve got it all taken care of. Why don’t you go run an errand for your mistress into town? Surely there is some new jewelry she needs to get, a new case of sweetmeats...”

And the day after the Night of Power my refocused attention made me discover yet another thing the move had taken from me. I had unwittingly, though quite of my own free will, given up the only responsibility I had left—and it was the only one that was of any real meaning. I had neglected my role as confident and comfort to my lady.

Her marriage to Sokolli Pasha had been empty form for years. We all knew that. I had supposed her grief would be but form as well. I don’t think she’d even seen her man for over five years. Though they lived in the very same house, their paths never crossed. But I’d forgotten to consider that with this emptiness could come a horrible guilt. And that never seeing him could help create an image of the man in her mind that was worth ten times the mourning the real flesh and blood had been.

She was never a complainer, but on that day just after the end of Ramadhan, Esmikhan herself reproached me. “What have you to do with those men’s affairs?” she asked me after I’d stumblingly tried to explain that my negligence had really been in her interest and the interest of Sokolli Pasha’s memory. I was seeking revenge, after all.

“Revenge,” she said with a wave of her hand, “that is for men. Your place, dear Abdullah, is here with me in the harem.”

I knew she spoke truthfully. And how many times had she made similar reproaches but I had been too driven on my course to hear? I heard now and saw besides what two months of lonely grief had done to her. She’d lost weight markedly, and this was not just from the holy month of fasting. Yet the loss of weight seemed no more geared to getting her up off her cushions than the gaining of it had been. The deflated flesh sagged back onto those supports as if it was too weak and lifeless to ever budge again.

This was the woman I’d married. In a mystical, symbolic sense, yes, it was true. She was incomplete without me, and my life had no meaning without her. It had been that way since I’d first knelt at her side and answered her question, “What is he like, this man I must give my body to?”

“There’s no man I’d rather be a slave to,” had been my reply and with those words, we’d become slaves together, yet together, freer than that man who owned us, who’d never learned how to need another and was now dead.

I knelt beside her once again, oblivious of the crowd in the room with their gossip and needlework. I took her little hand in mine, her stumpy little hand that was now like five little half-stuffed white sausages, and promised her, “No more revenge, by Allah.”

“Thank you, Abdullah,” she said, and smiled as if it were a rare new practice. She closed her eyes and laid back on her pillow, perhaps to take her first sleep in two months.

I rose to leave her thus, but then stopped to ask after Gul Ruh. “I don’t see her in the room.”

“No. She doesn’t spend much time with us old ladies. You know that.”

Yes, I had known that before, at home. But here in the palace, where did she go?

“I don’t know. But you’ll find her. I know you’ll take care of her for me, Abdullah.” Esmikhan slept.

I had no idea of all the nooks and crannies, rooftops and cellars the renewed palace might provide for a young woman to hide in. And she’d had two full months in which to find the very best one. My few inquiries were met with cither a shrug or (and my heart pounded with sudden fear) “Gul Ruh? Who is she? Is she that short dumpy girl the Lady Safiye has laying out her clothes these days? No, I didn’t even know we had a girl called Gul Ruh.”

It rapidly became clear that my young mistress had spent very little time with her mother and the others in Safiye’s main room since her arrival.

I knew no other plan of action than to start at the farthest kiosk and work my way from top to bottom throughout all the harem looking with the eyes of a child. I had done this once before: I remembered the terrible fire and prayed God might allow me to find her so unharmed as on that first occasion. If she should be found with her cousin Muhammed again, that would have very different implications this time than last. But I knew very few people for whom those implications would be all together bad. Still, some of the horrible panic of that ancient .search came back to me and I moved as quickly as I could without, I hoped, jeopardizing any thoroughness.

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