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my name is red-我的名字叫红-第118部分

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could no longer walk back through the door; which was being battered to the 
breaking point。 Actually; I was afraid of both what would happen if they broke 
down  the  door  and  came  through  and  what  would  happen  if  they  didn’t;  I 
kept thinking that Black’s men; who trusted in me; were worried about going 
too far and might retreat at any moment; which would; in turn; embolden the 
father…in…law。 When he went to Shekure’s side; I knew he’d begun to cry fake 
tears; but what’s worse; he was trembling in a way that couldn’t be feigned。 
Stepping  toward  the  door;  I  screamed  with  all  my  strength;  “Stop;  that’s 
enough!” 
The motion outside and the wailing inside ended in a heartbeat。 
“Mother; have Orhan open the door;” I said in a moment of inspiration and 
in a sweet voice; as if I were speaking to the boy。 “He wants to go home; no 
one will take issue with that。” 
The  words  had  hardly  left  my  mouth  when  Orhan  freed  himself  from  his 
mother’s loosening arms; and like somebody who’d lived here for years; slid 
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open  the  bolt;  lifted  the  wooden  bar;  then  unfastened  the  latch;  and  moved 
backward two steps。 The cold from outside entered as the door yawned open。 
There was such a silence that all of us heard a lazy dog bark off in the distance。 
Shekure  kissed  Orhan;  who  was  back  in  his  mother’s  lap;  and  Shevket  said; 
“I’m going to tell Uncle Hasan。” 
I saw Shekure stand; take up her cloak and prepare her bundle to leave; and 
I  was  so  greatly  relieved;  I  was  afraid I  might  laugh。  I  seated  myself  and  had 
two more spoonfuls of the lentil soup。 
Black  was  intelligent  enough  not  to  e  anywhere  near  the  door  of  the 
house。 For a time; Shevket locked himself in his late father’s room; and even 
though we called for Black’s help; neither he nor his men came。 After Shekure 
agreed  to  let  Shevket  take  along  his  Uncle  Hasan’s  ruby…handled  dagger;  the 
boy was willing to leave the house with us。 
“Be afraid of Hasan and his red sword;” said the father…in…law with genuine 
worry  rather  than  an  air  of  defeat  and  vengeance。  He  kissed  each  of  his 
grandchildren; sniffing their heads。 He also whispered into Shekure’s ear。 
When I saw Shekure gazing one last time at the door; walls and stove of the 
house;  I  remembered  once  again  how  this  was  where  she  spent  the  happiest 
years of her life with her first husband。 But could she also tell that this same 
house  was  the  refuge  of  two  miserable  and  lonely  men;  and  that  it  bore  the 
stench of death? I didn’t walk with her on the way back for she had broken my 
heart by ing back here。 
It wasn’t the cold and blackness of the night that brought together the two 
fatherless  children  and  three  women—one  servant;  one  Jewess  and  one 
widow—it was the strange neighborhoods; the nearly impassable streets and 
the fear of Hasan。 Our crowded pany was under the protection of Black’s 
men; and just like a caravan carrying treasure; we walked over out…of…the…way 
roads;  backstreets  and  solitary;  seldom…visited  neighborhoods;  so  as  to  avoid 
running  into  guards;  Janissaries;  curious  neighborhood  thugs;  thieves  or 
Hasan。  At  times;  through  blackness  in  which  you  couldn’t  see  your  hand 
before your face; we groped our way; perpetually bumping against each other 
and the walls。 We walked clinging to one another; overe by the sensation 
that   the   living   dead;   jinns   and   demons   would   surely   emerge   from 
underground and abduct us into the night。 Just behind the walls and closed 
shutters;  which  we  felt  blindly  with  our  hands;  we  heard  the  snoring  and 
coughing  of  people  in  the  nighttime  cold  as  well  as  the  lowing  of  beasts  in 
their stables。 
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Even Esther; no stranger to the poorest and worst districts; who’d walked 
all  the  streets  of  Istanbul—that  is  excluding  those  neighborhoods  wherein 
migrants    and    the    members    of    various    unfortunate    munities 
congregated—occasionally  felt  that  we  would  vanish  on  these  streets;  which 
twisted and turned without end through an endless blackness。 Yet I could still 
make out certain street corners that I’d patiently passed in the daytime toting 
my  satchel;  for  example;  I  recognized  the  walls  of  Head  Tailor’s  Street;  the 
sharp smell of manure—which for some reason reminded me of cinnamon—
ing from the stable adjacent to Nurullah Hoja’s property; the fire…ravaged 
sites on Acrobats Street and the Falconers Arcade that led into the square with 
the  Blind  Haji  Fountain;  and  thus  I  knew  we  weren’t  heading  toward  the 
house   of   Shekure’s   late   father   at   all;   but   to   some   other;   mysterious 
destination。 
There was no telling what Hasan would do if angered; and I knew Black had 
found  another  place  to  hide  his  family  from  him—and  from  that  devil  of  a 
murderer。 If I could’ve made out where that place was; I would tell you; now; 
and Hasan tomorrow morning—not out of spite; but because I’m convinced 
that Shekure will again want to have Hasan’s interest。 But Black; intelligent as 
he was; no longer trusted me。 
We  were  walking  down  a  dark  street  behind  the  slave  market  when  a 
motion of cries and wails erupted at the far end of the street。 We heard 
the  sounds  of  a  scuffle;  and  I  recognized  with  fear  the  clamorous  start  of  a 
fight: the clash of axes; swords and sticks and the bellow of bitter pain。 
Black handed his own large sword to one of his most trusted men; forcibly 
took  the  dagger  from  Shevket;  causing  the  boy  to  cry;  and  had  the  barber’s 
apprentice and two other men move Shekure; Hayriye and the children a safe 
distance away。 The theology student told me he’d take me home by way of a 
shortcut; that is; he didn’t let me stay with the others。 Was this a twist of fate 
or some cunning attempt to keep secret the whereabouts of their hideout? 
There was a shop; which I understood to be a coffeehouse; at the end of this 
narrow street we were passing down。 Perhaps the swordfight stopped as soon 
as it’d begun。 Crowds of men were hooting as they entered and left; at first I 
thought they were looting; but no; they were destroying the coffeehouse。 They 
carefully  took  out  all  of  the  ceramic  cups;  brass  pots;  glasses  and  low  tables 
under  the  light  of  the  torches  of  the  onlookers  and  destroyed  them  all  as  a 
warning。 They roughed up a man who tried to stop them; but he was able to 
get away。 Originally; I thought their target was only coffee; as they themselves 
claimed。 They were condemning its ill effects; how it harmed the sight and the 
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stomach; how it dulled the intellect and caused men to lose their faith; how it 
was the poison of the Franks and how Exalted Muhammad had turned down 
coffee  even  though  it  was  offered  to  him  by  a  beautiful  woman—Satan  in 
disguise。 It was as if this were the theatrics for a night of instruction in moral 
etiquette; and if I finally made it home; I thought I might even scold Nesim; 
warning him not to drink too much of that poison。 
Since  there  ing  houses  and  cheap  inns  nearby;  a 
curious crowd formed in no time; made up of idle wanderers; homeless men 
and   no…good   mongrels   who’d   snuck   illegally   into   the   city;   and   they 
emboldened these enemies of coffee。 It was then I understood that these men 
were  the  henchmen  of  Preacher  Nusret  Hoja  of  Erzurum。  They  intended  to 
clean up all the dens of wine; prostitution and coffee in Istanbul and punish 
severely those who veered from the path of Exalted Muhammad; those who; 
for example; used dervish ceremonies as an excuse for belly…dancing to music。 
They  railed  against  the  enemies  of  religion;  men  who  collaborated  with  the 
Devil;  pagans;  unbelievers  and  illustrators。  I  suddenly  recalled  this  was  the 
coffeehouse on whose walls drawings were hung; where religion and the hoja 
from Erzurum were malig
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