As though addressing herself, she said, "It's been a dark night.
I haven't been able to tell my head from my feet, and the din is still ringing in my head. But it's my fault. I should never have listened to you."
He suspected she actually was pleased, her complaints notwithstanding;, or that she was using them to get at him. Had he not known women in the Ezbekiya fleshpots who boasted of the number of bloody battles waged over them? But he did not get angry. Matters had reached such a desperate pass that he was spared the effort of trying to remedy them.
He could not help laughing as he observed, "It's the worst catastrophes that make you laugh. Laugh! You've wrecked my home and replaced my wife. Get up and pull yourself together. Prepare for a long stay… till night falls. You won't leave the house until it's dark."
"What dreadful news! Imprisoned! Where's your wife?"
"I don't have a wife anymore."
"Where is she?"
"In divorce court, if my guess is correct."
"I'm afraid she'll attack me when I leave."
"You afraid? Lord have mercy on us! Last night, menacing though she was, you didn't lose a bit of your sly pluck, you niece of Zubayda."
She laughed for a long time. She seemed to be acknowledging the charge against her and to be proud of it too. Then she put out her hand to take the glass of coffee. After drinking a little, she returned the glass and asked, "Now what?"
"As you can see, I'm in the dark too. It hurts to be exposed in front of people the way I was last night."
Shrugging her shoulders disdainfully, she said, "Don't worry about it. There's not a man alive who hasn't more dirty linen than the earth has room to hide."
"Just the same, a scandal's a scandal. Think of the fight, the wailing, the divorce at dawn. Picture the neighbors coming with alarmed curiosity to my apartment. Their eyes took in everything."
She frowned and said, "She started it!"
He could not restrain his sardonic laughter. She persisted: "If she had been wise, she could have worked everything out. Even str? ngen, in the street are considerate to boisterous drunks. She's the one who brought the divorce down on herself. What did you say to her? 'Whore and daughter of a whore'? Huh? And something else about English soldiers?"
He only remembered this now. Giving her a peeved look, he wondered how these phrases had taken root in her memory. He muttered uneasily, "I was angry. I didn't know what I was saying."
"Humbug!"
"Humbug to you!"
"English soldiers? Did you get her from one of their haunts like the Finish Bar?"
"God forbid. She's from a decent family, lifelong neighbors. It was just anger, a thousand curses on it."
"Without anger, secrets would never come to light."
"By your aunt's life, we have enough trouble as it is."
"Tell me about the English soldiers, as if there was anything I didn't know about them"
In a loud, defiant voice he replied, "I told you it was anger. That'll do."
She groaned sarcastically and then asked, "Are you defending her? Then go get her back."
"Curses on anyone shameless and cold-blooded enough to do that."
"Curses…."
She got out of bed and went to the mirror. Picking up Maryam's comb, she began to fix her hair quickly as she asked, "What will I do if the man breaks up with me?"
"Tell him goodbye. My house is always open to you."
She turned toward him and said sadly, "You don't understand what you're saying. We were thinking seriously about marriage."
"Marriage! Haven't you dropped that idea after you saw what it's like last night?"
She answered shrewdly, "You don't understand. I'm tired of being a kept woman. All it brings is ruin. A woman like me who weds really values her marriage."
"Who's the idiot?" he asked himself. "In the troupe she was never anything more than a lute player. After thirty a prostitute's over the hill, and she'll be thirty soon. So marriage is her best bet. Is she aiming this talk at you? What a delightful devil! I won't deny I want her. I desire her in the strongest possible way. My scandal bears witness to that."
"Do you love him?"
As if angered, she replied, "If I loved him, you wouldn't find me imprisoned here now."
Although skeptical of her veracity, he longed for her. Yes, even if her heart was not sincere, she had clearly shown a weakness for him.
"I can't do without you, Zanuba. To get you, I've done crazy things, not caring about the consequences. You're mine, and I've been yours for a long time."
Silence reigned. She seemed to be waiting impatiently for more. When he did not continue, she asked, "Should I sever my ties with that man? I'm not a woman who can bounce back and forth between two lovers."
"Who is he?"
"A merchant from the Citadel region called Muhammad al-Qulali."
"Married?"
"And he's got children, but he has lots of money."
"He promised to marry you?"
"He's trying to talk me into it, but I've been hesitating. The circumstances and the fact that he's a husband and father suggest there could be problems."
He put up with her deceitfulness for the sake of her beautiful eyes. "Why don't we go back to the way we were. I'm not destitute, in any case."
"I don't care about your money, but I'm sick of living in sin."
"What's to be done?"
"That's what I'm asking."
"Explain."
"I've said more than enough."
What an unexpected attack! Yes, at first glance it seemed ludicrous, but he wanted her. So he was forced to play along. After a pause he said, "I won't try to hide my low opinion of marriage from you."
"I have a low opinion of living in sin."
"That wasn't how you talked yesterday."
"Then I had a husband within reach, but today…"
"With a little flexibility, we can meet each other halfway. There's one thing you must never lose sight of: No matter how long I stey with you, I'll never let you go."
She cried out defiantly, "Your past adventures really bear that out!"
To hide the weakness of his position he replied earnestly, "A man doesn't learn without paying a price."
"Words no longer beguile me. Shame on you men!"
"And on you women too … isn't that so?" he thought. "Have mercy, niece of Zubayda. You arrive here drunk after midnight, and in the morning you're tired of living in sin. Perhaps she told herself, 'If his second wife was a whore, why shouldn't I be the third one?' How low Yasin has fallen. Have you forgotten the trouble ready to pounce on you outside? Let those problems wait. Just don't lose Zanuba with an ugly remark the way you did Maryam. Maryam? I'm atoning for my sin now, Fahmy."
He said calmly, "Our relationship must not end."
"It's up to you whether it continues or ends."
"We need to meet a lot and think a lot."
"As far as I'm concerned, I don't need to think anymore."
"So either I convince you of my opinion or you convince me of the wisdom of yours."
"I'll never come around to yours."
She left the room and did not let him see her smile. He gazed after her rounded back with a look of amazement. Yes, everything seemed amazing. But where was Maryam? On her own, wherever she was. He would not get any rest or peace. He would be questioned tomorrow at Palace Walk and the following day at the Islamic court. All the same, their life during the last period had been one long wrangle. She had even told him quite bluntly, "I hate you and I hate living with you."
"I wasn't made to succeed in marriage. Was my grandfather's life like this? I'm the one in the family who most resembles him, so they say. Despite all this, that crazy woman wants to marry me."