The man and his snake did a little tour of the stage, bowing together; then the man reached up and took hold of the cobra by its head and slipped it back into the basket, clapping on the lid. The audience broke into applause.
“Come on, Yashim,” Preen said, nudging him with her elbow. “It’s only a snake. You look as though you’d seen a ghost.”
124
THE ship’s bell clanked, and a squad of smartly dressed sailors stood to attention on the foredeck, apparently none the worse for their foray into Pera the night before. A belch of black soot drifted from the single stack; it drifted up through the furled shrouds and spars of the main-mast, and slowly vanished into the blue sky.
A fat coachman brought an elegant black-lacquered barouche to a stop on the cobbles. He held the reins firmly in his hand and turned his head to look at the Ulysse. No one got out.
At the foot of the gangplank a uniformed sailor exchanged glances with two other men, in singlets, waiting on deck.
Amélie Lefèvre put out her hand. “Goodbye, ambassador.”
Palewski took her hand and stooped over it. “Goodbye, madame.” He nodded to Lefèvre. “Doctor.”
Now she was looking at Yashim. There was a strange, almost dull, look in her eyes. The sun was in her hair, turning her ringlets to fire. She did not offer him her hand; instead, she placed it on her heart.
“The sultan, Yashim,” she said. “And the poet. I shan’t forget.”
Yashim smiled sadly. “Perhaps.”
Lefèvre, he noticed, was glancing nervously around the quay. The gangplank screeched as the Ulysse rolled lightly in the current.
“I will remember your courage,” Yashim added.
“My courage,” Amélie repeated tonelessly. “But I believed in the relics, you see. I thought the myth was real.”
Dr. Lefèvre took her elbow. He leaned slightly forward to catch Yashim’s eye; then he raised his cheroot and pointed it at him. “Pah!” He made a soft explosive sound with his lips and smiled crookedly. It seemed like a private joke.
Yashim stepped back and frowned.
Palewski raised his eyebrows and glanced at Yashim.
The uniformed sailor put out a protective arm to usher the couple onto the gangplank.
“Faites attention, monsieur ’dame,” he murmured.
Halfway up the gangplank, Amélie had not looked back. Lefèvre was slightly ahead of her, his hand beneath her elbow, turning a little, when it all happened.
Perhaps it was the movement of the ship, perhaps the slippers—the slippers that Millingen had bought for her, with their pointed ends. Amélie stumbled. She pitched sideways, stretching out her arms, clutching at her husband for support.
By then it was already too late. With a sudden cry of alarm, Dr. Lefèvre flailed his arms through the air, and then he was gone.
Yashim sprang forward. For a second he saw it all frozen, like a tableau at the theater: Amélie on her knees on the gangplank, staring down; the officer on the quay turning, almost crouched, with horror; the two sailors on the deck leaning over the rail, their heads together.
Then he heard Amélie’s sob, and the officer was at her side; one of the sailors was shouting something over his shoulder and the other was dropping a rope into the narrow gap between the ship and the quay.
Yashim glanced down. Palewski was at his shoulder, and Yashim heard him murmur: “I just don’t believe it.”
He raised his head. The officer was helping Amélie to her feet, urging her gently up the gangplank. A band of sailors with crowbars in their hands were at the top, waiting to come down.
“Please, madame! Please, just come this way!”
The sailors streamed down the gangplank. They set their muscled arms against the wooden walls of the ship, planted their feet on the quay, and began to heave.
“Loose the stern warps! Give us room!” There were shouts, more orders; other sailors appeared. A man began to slide down a rope with bare feet.
Amélie, sagging on the officer’s arm, passed the ship’s rail and turned her head. Yashim felt her glance sweep over him to fix on something farther away, and he was about to glance around when Amélie gave a curious little jerk of her head. She was standing against the sun; he blinked, dazzled: for a moment it had looked as though she had smiled. When he next saw clearly, the officer was coaxing her onto the ship and in a few seconds she had disappeared from sight.
Yashim heard a sharp crack behind him, and turned to see the barouche start off. He thought he recognized a face at the window, the face of a woman with strong, dark brows; but it was only a fleeting glimpse, and he could not be sure.
Palewski took him by the elbow. “How did it happen?” he said, aghast.
Yashim began walking slowly in the carriage’s wake. After a few moments he raised his head and spoke to the air.
“Madame Lefèvre thought the myth was real,” he said. Then he nodded sadly and turned to his friend. “Until she discovered that the reality was a myth.”
Palewski looked searchingly into Yashim’s face. “It wasn’t an accident, was it? She pushed him in.”
Yashim bit his lip. “Let’s just say that Madame Lefèvre was a very determined woman.”
And he began to walk again, uphill through the dusty streets of Pera.
125
“I thought it was you,” Yashim said. “At first.”
He heard the ticking of the clocks, the rustle of Madame Mavrogordato’s silks, the chink of her spoon on the saucer as she laid it down very slowly.
“It should have been me,” she said. “Revenge is a dish—”
“Eaten better when cold, yes. I’ve heard that phrase. I don’t believe in it, either.”
Madame Mavrogordato narrowed her eyes and glared at Yashim. “When I heard that he had died—that he had been killed in the street? I didn’t believe it. That was not how it would happen—to him. He had more lives than a cat.”
More skins than a snake, Yashim thought.
Madame Mavrogordato leaned forward. “But they said it was him. Why?”
Yashim put his fingers together. “He was carrying Lefèvre’s bag. The dogs had got to him—there was very little left. Except that he had perfect teeth. I wondered about that. Lefèvre spoke with a lisp. Later, I learned that he had lost two teeth in a brawl—at Missilonghi.”
Some expression Yashim could not catch passed across the godlike face.
“Then what happened? Who was he?”
Yashim shrugged. “A man Millingen sent to fetch Lefèvre off the ship. Millingen wanted Lefèvre out of harm’s way, so he had him confined in a house somewhere down by the docks.” He hesitated, wondering whether he should say what he suspected: that her supposed son, the impatient Alexander, had been his jailer.
“Someone else was supposed to bring Lefèvre’s bag to the doctor’s house,” he said finally. “A servant. He was unlucky: the killers tracked him down. But they got the wrong man.”
Madame Mavrogordato nodded slightly. “And Millingen? Why did he want Lefèvre hidden?”
Yashim shifted slightly in his seat and sighed. “Dr. Millingen learned that Lefèvre’s life had been threatened. He, too, believed that axiom about revenge.”
“So he thought I had ordered his death?”
“They were friends, once. And Millingen, of course, was interested in the relics. He expected Lefèvre to tell him what he knew, in return for saving his life. The Ca d’Oro is one of your ships, isn’t it?”
Madame Mavrogordato gave a brief nod.
“When Millingen’s man was killed,” Yashim went on, “and identified as Lefèvre, Millingen decided to say nothing about it. At first, I suppose, he thought he had diverted you. But later, when other people died, he realized what I had guessed—that it wasn’t you at all.”