cypresses; indifferent to the rain and the stench of rotting leaves。 I brought my
eye up to one of the cracks between the wooden planks of the dervish…lodge
walls; and later; to the shutter of a small window; whereupon; by the light of
an oil lamp; I saw the menacing shadow of a man performing his prayers—or
perhaps; a man pretending; for our sake; to pray。
405
I AM CALLED “OLIVE”
Was it more fitting for me to abandon my prayers; spring to my feet and open
the door for them or to keep them waiting in the rain until I’d finished?
When I realized they were watching me; I pleted my prayers in a
somewhat distracted state。 I opened the door; and there they were—Butterfly;
Stork and Black。 I gave a cry of joy and embraced Butterfly。
“Alas; what we’ve had to bear of late!” I lamented; burying my head into
his shoulder。 “What do they want from us? Why are they killing us?”
Each of them displayed the panic of being separated from the herd; which
I’d seen from time to time in every master painter over the span of my life。
Even here in the lodge; they were loath to separate from one another。
“We can safely take refuge here for days。”
“We worry;” Black said; “that the person we should fear is perhaps in our
very midst。”
“I; too; grow anxious;” I said。 “For I have heard such rumors as well。”
There were rumors; spreading from the officers of the Imperial Guard to
the division of miniaturists; claiming that the mystery about the murderer of
Elegant Effendi and late Enishte was solved: He was one of us who’d labored
over that book。
Black inquired as to how many pictures I’d drawn for Enishte’s book。
“The first one I made was Satan。 It was of the variety of underground
demon mon to the old masters in the workshops of the Whitesheep。 The
storyteller and I were of the same Sufi path; that’s why I made the two
dervishes。 I was the one who suggested to Enishte that he include them in his
book; convincing him that there was a special place for these dervishes in the
lands of the Ottomans。”
“Is that all?” asked Black。
When I told him; “Yes; that’s all;” he went to the door with the superior air
of a master who caught an apprentice stealing; he brought in a roll of paper
untouched by the rain; and placed it before us three artists like a mother cat
bringing a wounded bird to her kittens。
I recognized the pages while they were still under his arm: They were the
illustrations I’d rescued from the coffeehouse during the raid。 I didn’t deign to
ask how these men had entered my house and located them。 Nevertheless;