Yashim went forward cautiously, balancing on the broad rim of the great tank.
He glanced back at the spigot. Water was pouring from it in a steady stream. It seemed impossible that a single spout like this could serve so many people across the huge city-the standpipes and the fountains. Unfaltering, never-ending, the stream twisted and flexed as if it were alive. Looking around, Yashim could see the small openings set in the walls where the flow was channeled out across Istanbul, a series of little black mouths, like snake holes. Some of them were stopped with rags. Some were open.
Yashim shuddered involuntarily. It was cold in the siphon.
On the lowest basin of them all, about six feet beneath the tank where Yashim was standing, lay the mouth of a low tunnel, far larger than all the rest, into which the water skimmed so broad and shallow that its motion was imperceptible.
Yashim descended from basin to basin, treading on the rims, feeling the air grow colder with every step.
The tunnel puzzled him. Even if all the outflows, the little pipes, were blocked by rags, the tunnel would never come close to overflowing. The largest amount of water that could flow down it came from the spigot above. He glanced up. Its discharge was no thicker than a man’s arm.
As he watched, a silver ball dropped from the spigot and floated gently across the great tank.
And at the same moment a great shaft of light illuminated the tank and the basins of water, and sent huge ripples of their reflection across the walls and roof.
The door swung open.
And in the eruption of the glare, Yashim did the only thing he could.
He ducked down and made a dive for the tunnel.
77
Far away, at the other end of the city, Amelie stood back and shielded her eyes with her free hand, like a woman trying to see far off on a sunlit day.
Very slowly she turned her hand to let her eyes travel upward, every moment revealing more details of the celestial form of the greatest building ever raised on earth.
She saw the great bronze doors that were cast two thousand years before in the sands of Tarsus. The pilasters, sculpted from marble, gleaming white in the sun. The windows of the tympanum, black and small and crisp, their decorative ironwork all but invisible in the glare, and the great arch curving above them, slender as a bird’s wing, strong enough to assume the weight of the great dome.
She saw, and did not see, the graceful minarets that fluted upward from the squinches of the dome.
She saw the red ocher of the great drum overhead, pierced with windows to admit the light. She saw the lead cappings of the dome.
And at the top, high above, she saw a silver crescent on its slender rod, a crescent that stood where the cross had stood for a thousand years, before the last days of May 1453.
In the last days, the cross had glowed with an eerie light. It had been concealed by fog. It saw the sky turn red and the crescent moon glow like a sliver in the dark, with the Ottomans readying themselves outside the walls, preparing for a final assault.
Slowly, Amelie lowered her hand.
She had seen the Pantheon, in Rome: a tribute to Roman strength and the Romans’ faith in concrete. She had seen the shattered remnant of the Parthenon. She had lain awake at night, willing herself to dream of the Pyramids, whose massive and enigmatic bulk she had met with in the great work of the Napoleonic savants.
But Aya Sofia was a case apart: the last and grandest gesture of the ancient world.
And the world had been trying to measure up to it ever since.
She raised her arms, to frame the vision between her two hands. There was, she thought fiercely, only one more thing that remained to be done.
She began to walk forward, toward the Great Church.
78
Yashim pulled himself into the tunnel like a snake disappearing into its hole. Light from the doorway danced and sparkled on the walls: ahead lay only darkness.
Two steps. Five steps. He was deep inside now, crouched in the dark. He turned around, with difficulty, resisting the urge to press his back in panic against the low roof of the tunnel. Breathing hard, he looked back at the mouth of the tunnel, toward the light.
He saw a pair of sandaled feet approach the rim of the great tank. The man knelt down. Yashim could see his knees, and the arm reaching into the tank. The man stood up. He began to move along the rim of the tank as Yashim had done moments before. He took a step down, and stopped. After a moment he moved on, disappearing from view.
The man was coming down the basins like a semicircular flight of stairs, stopping and opening the little pipes as he came.
Yashim took several steps backward, shrinking farther into the darkness of the tunnel.
As he watched, an orange light began to flicker against the side wall, close to the opening. He had not realized that the man was carrying a torch.
Yashim’s mind raced, riffling through a pack of images. He saw the boy waiting for his father on the low, stone wall.
He saw the sun setting. The boy at the door of the siphon, calling his father’s name. A little hand closing around a silver ball. A dented little hollow ball like the one that had fallen from the spigot just minutes before. It seemed an age.
Yashim worked himself around, facing the darkness. Feeling the horror of a light at his back. Feeling the weight of the tunnel on his bent neck.
He put out his hands, touched the rough masonry on either side, and began to creep forward into the dark.
79
Faisal al-Mehmed nodded his head gently at the faithful as they slipped off their shoes and proceeded, in chattering groups, into the Great Mosque for prayer. For himself, he wished that they did not chat so much; he wished, above all, that they had washed themselves in the fountain before they took the step of entering the holy precinct-but there it was, he was an old man and people had changed. Maybe, he told himself, every old man believes that the people have changed; but maybe every old man is right. For every generation from the Prophet (peace be on him) did seem to be doomed to be less reverent than the next. After the Prophet (peace be on him) came four men who were good men, and great warriors, men who had expanded the Domain of Peace beyond all limits-and yet they were men, and had died at the hands of men, and at the end of the four there had come confusion, and divisions within their house.
A Turk with a black mustache and a fez and a heavy belly kicked off his slippers and bent, awkwardly, to pick them up and hand them to Faisal al-Mehmed.
Faisal tucked them away. The fat man went into the mosque.
Faisal al-Mehmed hoped the man would remove his fez. He himself wore a green turban, signal of his descent from the Prophet (peace be on him). When men saw the green turban, wherever it was, even far from the mosque, they would be reminded of the Prophet (peace be on him), and so they would adjust their behavior accordingly. A man could not be near a mosque every moment of his life, and Faisal was well aware that very few men could be close to his mosque, the greatest mosque in all Islam; some had traveled many miles, even across whole lands and peoples, to visit this place. But those who were descended from the line, wearing the green turban-they were legion. Their turban was a precept. And that was good, a blessing upon the faithful.
Faisal al-Mehmed turned his attention to the courtyard. Even he would have to admit that the courtyard of Aya Sofia was not perfect, as the courtyard of the Suleymaniye was sublime. It had its fountain, where men were sitting in silence, washing their hands and feet; but it was a truncated court, without a colonnade to provide the faithful with shade, and the white marble threw off a fierce glare in the morning sun.
He squinted into the bright light. It seemed to Faisal al-Mehmed that a woman was coming across the court, a tall woman who walked with immodest ease, unveiled. His eyebrows met in a black frown. He looked again, shielding the side of his face. It was unthinkable-but there she was, a woman, a very beautiful woman, making her way past the knots of men standing in the courtyard, waiting for the hour of pray
er, toward the fountain. He scanned the courtyard, looking for the man who was with her. How could he allow such a thing! Already, some of the men had stopped talking and were staring after her. And now, Faisal al-Mehmed saw, she was unlatching her shoes, as if she were a man, preparing to wash.
It was too much. Sometimes madmen did appear at Aya Sofia-ranting dervishes, perhaps, from the hills, strange, bearded fanatics from the deserts, once even a naked man who had come rushing into the precincts of the holy place, laughing and clapping his hands. It was not the gatekeeper’s place to judge them, for they were all of God’s creation: who was to say that the mad were not greater men, who had looked on the face of God and found rapture? So said the wise. God, they said, took care of His people, but a madwoman? A man should be taking care of her. It was very shocking.
He began to hobble forward. He raised a trembling hand. Already, the men were standing around the woman, watching her, dumbfounded. Somebody spoke to her. She looked up and smiled and shook her head. Her scarf slipped back an inch.
The gatekeeper began to run. He waved his arms. “No! No! Haram! Haram! ” It is forbidden!
One of the men pointed to the woman’s hair. The others looked around at the running gatekeeper, then back at the woman.
“See!” a voice cried out. “She is an unbeliever.”
The woman had put up her hands. She was backing away. A ring of men gathered behind her. She turned. They began to shout.
The gatekeeper took her by the arm. “What is this, you foolish daughter?”
A stone landed at their feet. The gatekeeper looked down at the stone, then swung around. There was quite a crowd now. Some of them were shaking their fists. Somebody stooped down and another stone whizzed through the air. Faisal al-Mehmed tugged at the woman’s arm.
He saw the fear on her face. A look of surprise.
“This is forbidden, don’t you understand. You must go!” He shook her roughly. He was pulling her away; the crowd parted, but only just. People were shouting. The muezzin began to cry from the minaret, and to the men below it seemed as if some hideous miracle were being enacted, some challenge had been issued. The shouting grew in intensity. Faisal al-Mehmed was afraid now.
A hand reached out and plucked away the woman’s scarf. Somebody spat. The woman shrank closer to the gatekeeper, who waved his hand ahead of them, trying to clear a path.
“She is a mad Giaour! Only mad! Please, good people, let us pass. She is going!”
The crowd surged around them, angry, yelling faces, men jostling for a better view: Faisal al-Mehmed’s voice was lost in the hubbub.
The crowd surged around them as he took the woman to the narrow gate. Faisal al-Mehmed began to pray, his voice echoing the voice of the imam overhead. “There is no god but the One God!”
The gate was thronged with worshipers arriving for prayers. It seemed to Faisal al-Mehmed that they would be cut down before they ever got through.
80
Yashim slid his feet through the water, one hand trailing against the wall of the tunnel, the other outstretched in front of his face.
He tried not to think. All his life he had had a horror of confinement. Even as a little boy he had fought like a wolf if his playmates tried to pin him down. He never followed them, either, into the caves they used to explore around his home on the Black Sea coast: there were rockfalls sometimes; tales of miners, trapped underground, used to visit him at night. Once had he been trapped himself. Confined, unable to move, staring wild-eyed at the men and the knife. The horror had risen in his gorge-and his life was changed.
He tried not to splash; it seemed to him that the level of the water had risen, that it was by his ankles, but the cold was so intense that he could not be sure. All that mattered was to get deep into the tunnel, away from the torchlight.
If only the pipe would curve.
A few steps farther on, his hand came up against a curved edge. He stopped and groped around. As far as he could tell in the dark, the channel forked; he was between two openings, both the same size, both carrying the current. He squatted down and glanced back.
For a dizzying moment he felt that he was staring at a solid wall, as if the tunnel had sealed itself behind him, and he reached out in a panic. The movement of his hand revealed to him the existence of a faint glow, which seemed to hang in the air in front of him. As he watched, it grew brighter, an aureole of faint light surrounding a pinprick of flame in the darkness.
The waterman was coming down the tunnel.
Yashim felt sick. He squeezed his eyes shut and fought the panic, fought the thought that he was being pressed deeper and deeper into the ground.
It’s a maze, he murmured to himself. Only a maze. In a maze, you must follow a rule.
Two tunnels. One bore to the left: it might descend the hill toward the Fener. The other, tending to the right, presumably took a line to the south. Yashim tried to picture the shape of his city, the rise and fall of its hills. One or both of these pipes might lead to another siphon, where the water pooled at a lower level than the tank it came from. Sooner or later, if that were the case, the pipe would start to grow full of water, like a curving reservoir, and he would have to stop moving.
Left or right?
Which way would the waterman come?
Yashim was right-handed.
The rule, in a maze, was to keep turning the same way at every bend. Trail his left hand on the wall and reach forward with his right.
That was the way.
Yashim put out his hand and groped for the opening on his left.
He started down. He felt the floor of the tunnel sloping. His hand trailed along the wall. It was no longer rough to the touch, but slimy and knobbled: he imagined it caked in calcareous lumps, dripping with shiny algae.
He advanced several yards. He almost missed the first turn, because he was swaying as he scuttled forward, and his hand missed the wall for a foot or two. When he reached out again he felt a hard corner; groping back, he discovered the opening he’d missed and turned into it. He thought of the horror of losing his way back.
Now he leaned his shoulder against the wall on his left. Like that he was in less danger of missing a turn, and from time to time he could pause and rest.
He wondered how much farther he needed to go. Three turns already, the chances of discovery were increasingly remote.
He decided to make one last turn, and then he would wait.
He shoved himself along, spreading the weight between his legs and his left shoulder, and that is when he found the turn.
He swiveled into it.
Something hard caught his foot as he slid around the corner.
He put out his hands, and fell into the void.
81
Amelie felt the crowd around her, dense and hostile, and the old man’s grip on her arm. He had been angry, but now he seemed only afraid. She bowed her head and tried to avoid the blows she could almost sense were about to rain down on her head.
She had no time to think that she had been a fool.
Someone touched her shoulder, and she wriggled forward, propelled by the weight of the crowd at her back and the old man’s insistent tugs. There was the gate, crammed with men; the sound of voices she couldn’t understand filled her ears. She lowered her head and saw blood on her bare foot. She didn’t remember cutting herself. She had left her shoes at the fountain.
They neared the gate. Whether the angry crowd behind her couldn’t make itself understood over the muezzin’s chant, or whether people were simply too astonished by the spectacle of the gatekeeper half dragging a foreign woman from the precincts of the mosque, the churning flow through the gate seemed to stop and for a moment there was a way through. The old man plunged in.
They surged through the gate; the men coming in met the following crowd like two waves, and for a moment each checked the force of the other. It was just enough time.
The gatekeeper dragged her forward.
A carriage was rattling do
wn the slope from Topkapi Palace, pulled by two grays; the coachman stood on the box and someone was leaning from the window.
Amelie made a sudden wrench, and the gatekeeper’s hold on her arm was lost. Without a thought she flung herself toward the horses.
One of the horses flung back its head. The driver lunged on the reins.
Amelie closed her eyes and turned her head away.
From far away she heard a voice saying, in French: “ Vite, madame, vite! Jump in.”
Another hand was beneath her elbow, tugging her upward.
She half fell, half leaped through the carriage door.
“Quick, Hasan! Drive on!”
The jolt threw her back into a seat. She opened her eyes.
There was a man in front of her, kneeling up on the opposite seat and giving orders to the driver through the hatch.
He turned to her with a worried expression.
“I have no idea, madame, what brings you here, but I believe we have been of some service.”
He glanced through the window.
“We’ll beat them yet,” he said darkly. “Allow me to introduce myself. I am Dr. Millingen, the sultan’s physician.”
82
Yashim shot to his feet. The water reached to his knees. He was aware of a searing pain in his left arm.
A kind of sob escaped him, like a cough. The pain made him wince, but he could move his fingers and he did not think he had broken a bone. He sloshed forward through the icy water, sliding his feet over the ground, and touched a wall in the dark.
Like the tunnel itself, it was slimy. He reached up with his good arm and tried to find the top, and when that failed he began to follow the wall with his hand, looking for an opening. He counted four corners, and didn’t find one. Once he stumbled against something soft and large, which seemed to be rolling on the floor under the surface. He drove it away with his foot and tried not to think about it again.
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