how real the fear of being branded “stonehearted” is。
You know how some sympathetic aunt will always attest that “he’s crying
on the inside” to prevent someone like me from being banished from the
group。 I did in fact cry on the inside as I tried to hide in a corner from the
busybody neighbors and distant relatives with their astonishing abilities to
summon a downpour of tears; I thought about being the master of the house
and whether I should somehow take charge of the situation; but just then
there came a knock at the door。 A moment of panic。 Was it Hasan? Regardless;
I wanted to save myself from this hell of whimpering at whatever cost。
It was a royal page; summoning me to the palace。 I was stunned。
As I exited the courtyard; I found a mud…covered silver coin on the ground。
Was I afraid to go to the palace? Yes; but I was also happy to be outside in the
cold among the horses; dogs; trees and people。 I thought I’d befriend the
pageboy like those hopeless daydreamers who; believing they might sweeten
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the world’s cruelty before facing the executioner; attempt a lighthearted
conversation with the dungeon guard about this and that; the beauties of life;
the ducks afloat on the pond; or the strangeness of a cloud in the sky; but alas
he disappointed me; proving a rather morose; pimply; tight…lipped youth。 As I
passed the Hagia Sophia; noticing with awe the slender cypresses delicately
stretching into the hazy sky; it wasn’t the horror of dying right after marrying
Shekure after all these years that made my hair stand on end。 It was the
injustice of dying at the hands of the palace torturers without having shared
one good session of lovemaking with her。
We didn’t walk toward the terrifying spires of the Middle Gate; beyond
which the torturers and the quick…handed executioners saw to their work; but
toward the carpentry shops。 As we headed between the granaries; a cat
cleaning itself in the mud between the legs of a chestnut horse with steaming
nostrils turned but didn’t look at us: The cat was preoccupied with its own
filth; much as we were。
Behind the granaries; two figures; whose rank and affiliation I couldn’t
determine from their green and purple uniforms; relieved the pageboy; and
locked me into the dark room of a small house; which I could tell was new by
the smell of fresh lumber。 I knew locking a man up in a dark room was meant
to arouse fear before torture; hoping they’d begin with the bastinado; I
thought about the lies I could tell to save my hide。 A crowd in the adjoining
room seemed to be raising quite a ruckus。
There are most certainly those of you who can’t attribute my mocking and
mirthful tone to that of a man on the verge of torture。 But haven’t I
mentioned I consider myself one of God’s luckier servants? And if the birds of