16
“You’ve found your place at last.”
Dana was resting her head on my chest. Before she spoke, I thought she had fallen asleep, and I was lost in reflection. My thoughts were rough wool that needed to be carded and spun, and they began with Ashkenazi’s slippers. I would have liked to communicate my suspicions about how the bailiff’s dispatches traveled, but Nasi and Gomez hadn’t yet come back, even though the sun had set an hour before. My thoughts returned to the meeting I had witnessed a few hours previously, with the weird old man and his entourage. Ismail, or Ludovico. Who knows where he and the Nasis had met. Maybe in Venice. I found myself thinking about Braun’s bank, at the Fondaco dei Tedeschi. My money was still there, the money I hadn’t been able to withdraw after fleeing from Arianna’s house.
After that brief deviation, here I was again at Palazzo Belvedere. I guessed that right under my nose, and without my understanding it, something important had happened that day.
“My place? What do you mean?”
“By Don Yossef’s side.”
It wasn’t strange to see things in that way. Nasi had given me the chance to return to my job. Basically it was the one I was best at: collecting information. I said as much to Dana. She lifted her face and folded her hands under her chin.
“Information? About Don Yossef’s enemies?”
“Particularly.”
“And who are the most fearsome of them?”
I let her hair glide through my fingers.
“Some of them are Jews like us. Envious men. They don’t support Don Yossef because he sees a hundred miles beyond their horizon. To avenge themselves on his intelligence, they prefer to serve the Venetians, or the Grand Vizier.”
Gusts of wind stirred the leaves in the park. A dogfight began in the distance.
“It was because of his dreams that the brothers sold Joseph to the Ishmaelites,” observed Dana.
Her words startled me. The similarities between the biblical Joseph and Yossef Nasi now struck me as obvious. Both had won the favors of a foreign sovereign. They had both obtained government positions, aristocratic titles, huge wealth. But not the trust of the family they served. Not immediately, at least, and not without a great deal of effort. A question came to my lips, the thin tail of an elephantine thought.
“Why are your mistress and Don Yossef barely talking to each other?”
“You must have noticed: Don Yossef doesn’t appreciate the attentions of women.”
It was true: I’d never seen him in the company of a woman, not even his wife. I hadn’t seen Gomez with a woman, either. In Venice Yossef Nasi was known as the Sultan’s catamite. In the secret service he was spoken of in low terms. On the streets of Constantinople I had heard similar allusions and obscene jokes.
“Incredible that such a man should be destined to live without heirs.”
“You could be his son. You’re the right age.”
In a different situation, the words might have irritated me, and I would have given a harsh reply, but I found myself saying something quite different. “My father was much older than Don Yossef.”
Just as the spinning of wool is followed by the doubling of the yarn, when two threads are twisted together to make one stronger one, in my mind the figures of two old men were superimposed upon one another, I still didn’t know to what end. I said, “This Ismail al-Mokhawi, the old man who arrived today. . What do you know about him?”
Dana shook her head and let her eye wander along the walls. “Not much. He left Constantinople before I got here. I know what Donna Gracia told me.”
“Down in the drawing room, he spent a long time sitting in silence by her portrait.”
“They loved each other,” said Dana. She must have seen me looking startled, and took advantage of it. “Do you love me?”
I didn’t know what to reply. I stammered something; I felt very stupid. Dana smiled and felt sorry for me. She picked up the story where she had broken it off.
“Before she died, Donna Gracia wrote him a letter. I was with her that evening. At sunset, the Bosphorus was beautiful.” She lost herself in her memory, and I avoided disturbing her with any further questions. A little later, it was she who broke the silence. She sat up in the bed, as if talking about Donna Gracia called for a more respectful posture. “She wanted to see him one last time before she died. She asked him to join her at Tiberias.”
“Why on earth did he leave her?”
“Donna Gracia never explained that to me. She once told me that, faced with a desert, a river has two choices: to hurl itself into the sand, determined to pass through it and irrigate it, at the risk of drying up and disappearing for ever, or else to evaporate and become a cloud, to fly above the desert and, raining down on the mountains, become a river again. She said that Ismail was the river that becomes a cloud.”
I was struck by the simile. “Was Donna Gracia the river that wanted to irrigate the desert?”
“Perhaps. Or perhaps she was referring to Don Yossef. What do you think?”
I replied impulsively, “That irrigating the desert is a difficult enterprise, but it’s worth trying.”
We said nothing more. We lay there side by side, waiting for sleep to overtake us.
“Ismail!”
The shout came from the drawing room and made us jump. Dana leaped to her feet, dressed in a flash, said good-bye to me and rushed from the room, swift as a fawn. All that remained was her scent, her perfume. Once I had put on my breeches and my shirt, I crossed the threshold. There was no one in the loggia. I leaned against the balustrade to look down and saw Nasi in the middle of the drawing room, which was lit only by a servant’s oil-lamp, with David Gomez next to him. They were talking to the manservant who had received the old man and called Donna Reyna.
Mulier in fabula, that was her, a dark outline below her mother’s portrait. Nasi saw her, and pointed at her, followed at a distance by Gomez. From the loggia I couldn’t make out every word; their conversation reached me in scraps.
. . staying here at the palace?
The tone couldn’t be misunderstood.
. . his old house in Üsküdar. . with his retinue. .
Bitterness, detachment.
. . miles to get here. . he was supposed to be our guest. .
Resentment, aged fury.
. . you know yourself why he doesn’t want. .
Then they stopped talking. A lull of silence settled in the room. Then Nasi bowed to his wife and turned on his heel. “Let’s go,” he said to Gomez.
I saw them leaving like arrows in flight, fired from the bow in the direction of Üsküdar.
17
The Palazzo Belvedere was abuzz with voices. Servants and sutlers, general dogsbodies, gardeners, wood suppliers and whoever happened to be passing through, everyone was coming and going, questions required answers, little knots of people clustered rapidly before scattering like ears of wheat when duty called and reassembling elsewhere, in the drawing room, in the kitchen, in the pantry, in the corridors and even outside, in the park, at the start of the tree-lined avenue. The women tidied up the rooms, talking about the German, el Alemán, back from Arabia after all these years, kon una barba blanka ke lo faze pareser un profeta, with a white beard that made him look like a prophet, and accompanied by three Moors ke tienen fachas de lókos, with the faces of madmen, it would have frightened you to look at them, but if they’re friends of his they must be decent people. A cook said that el barbarroja had asked her for five cups of boiling water, and then he’d put some nutshells into them, offered a cup to each of his friends and the last one to her, to try this drink, because apparently they weren’t actually nuts, but a kind of coffee. And it was so good that the woman had asked them to give her a handful, and if anyone wanted to try it she could make it in a moment, kishir. The two Indians, meanwhile, had beguiled the time by dancing in the park. What do you mean, dancing, it was a fight, didn’t you see when they drew out their shields and whips? What agility! Did you see when one of the two jumped the other with his feet pressed together?