Suddenly, a soft coil of flesh grabbed him by the waist and lifted him up.
"Chota! How did you get here?" Jahan exclaimed.
In lieu of a response the elephant led him towards the depths of the house or what was left of it. Chota moved his ears as though catching an imperceptible sound. The animal"s sensitive feet must have been burning, but the mahout would not think of that until later.
Jahan could not open his mouth for fear of swallowing more smoke. Every breath hurt. Taking off his jacket, he wrapped it around his face. Chota shoved him from behind, gently but firmly. Hedged in by flames, Jahan lurched forward into the second room, then steadied himself. The elephant waited behind him.
There it was the cradle. Its gauzy tulle covering must have helped the baby to breathe. Jahan grabbed the bundle, without checking whether the child was alive. With one hand the baby, clinging to life, clutched at Jahan. It had cried so much its voice was gone; its rosebud mouth was closed. Yet its strength was surprising, and it must have been contagious, too, for both Chota and Jahan were calmer now.
By the time Chota and Jahan emerged, the number of people watching on the street had tripled. Sinan and the apprentices, too, were there, having heard the story of the beast that had plodded into a burning house. The mother of the baby dashed towards them and plucked the baby away from Jahan. Then she began praying, laughing, thanking, crying, trying to kiss Jahan"s hand, Chota"s skin, all at once, with no fear of being trampled by the elephant.
Jahan tottered towards Sinan, who was greeting him with open arms. "I am furious at you ..." he said, "but proud, son, so proud."
The apprentices embraced him. Even so, Jahan could feel a coldness exuding from them. He had outshone them, and this they hadn"t liked.
It turned out the Chief Janissary Agha had really been ill. Yet that was not the reason why he had delayed sending instructions to the soldiers. The army, demanding an increase in their pay, had seen the fire as an opportunity to prove how essential they were. As the Grand Vizier had been slow in granting the rise, the agha had been slow in giving the command to his Janissaries to put out the flames.
The mahout and the elephant headed to the master"s home, smothered in soot and reeking of cinders. Jahan wrapped Chota"s feet. Two of his nails were broken, bleeding. He had patches of burned skin all over. The scars from that night would remain and never heal.
Later on, from Sinan"s garden, Jahan stood gazing at the city below, wraiths of smoke whirling here and there. At dawn there were no birds chirping, no hearths crackling, no seagulls swooping; everything had plunged into silence. It had become nippy; the cold felt strange following the heat of the night.
After the fire died out, the extent of the devastation was clear. With the exception of the Jewish quarter, which was built of stone, street after street had been razed.
"The fire was our teacher," Sinan said when they all gathered again. "He taught us a lesson."
That same week Sinan went to the palace and obtained the permissions that he needed. Sleeping little, he drew plans. Streets would be enlarged by half a cubit on each side. There would be no house taller than two storeys. More brick and stone, instead of wood, would be used, he decided.
No sooner were the new rules introduced, however, than people began to defy them. The fire had been a teacher, true. But Istanbul, where forgetting was easier than remembering, never learned its lesson.
One evening Sangram came to see Jahan with a bowl of sutlach, just as he had done so many moons ago. He was very old and frail, and every now and then he shook his head uncontrollably, as if arguing with some invisible companion. Jahan took the treat, thanking him. As he watched him eat, Sangram asked, "Did you hear what Captain Crazyhead has done this time?"
Jahan almost dropped his spoon. "What?"
Captain Gareth"s fleet had run into an armada. In the ensuing combat the seaman bit the hand that had fed him all these years and turned traitor. Starting on the side of the Ottomans, he had ended toasting the Pope. Knowing he would be gutted alive if caught, he had fled the Ottoman territory. He could not return to Istanbul. Not that he minded. Having been given sanctuary by the papacy, he was quite content with his new banner, hunting for Ottoman sailors.
When Jahan heard this he was dumbstruck, flooded with disturbing memories. Captain Gareth was the sole reason he had ended up in the royal menagerie. It had been the man"s plan to disguise him as an animal-tamer and place him a stone"s-throw away from the riches in the seraglio. A plan that had worked seamlessly once the sailors in his command had got rid of the real mahout hurled into cold waters, just like that. "Never liked the chap"s wits," the Captain had said by way of explanation, though Jahan never understood how he could have disliked this man, who spoke not a word of Turkish or English and stared at the waves all day long. Inside the hold they carried merchandise from Hindustan and a white elephant on the brink of death. Jahan was only a cabin boy, escaping his stepfather. He was a mere youngster from a town in Anatolia. What did he know about elephants? As he stood there, remembering all of this, another thought occurred to Jahan. Why was Sangram suddenly telling him about Captain Gareth?
"So you knew ..." Jahan whispered.
"How could I not?" Sangram said. "You told me you were from Hindustan. You spoke not a word of any of our languages and the stories you told made no sense."
"Why didn"t you inform on me? You could have told everyone, "This boy is an impostor, he is lying." "
Sangram smiled. "I was going to ... but then I changed my mind. I didn"t want you to suffer. You seemed like you"d had your share of hardships why bring more pain?"
Jahan stood up, kissed the man"s bony hand.
"You were only a lad; now look at you," Sangram said, overwhelmed with tenderness.
Jahan bit his lip. How bizarre it was. While he had been running after things that were never going to happen and resenting life for the gifts it had denied him, there had been people supporting him without drawing attention to themselves. They had given and expected nothing in return.
Sultan Selim was determined to enjoy, revive and expand the menagerie. Unlike his father, who had barely acknowledged the existence of his animal subjects, the new sovereign took an interest in their lives. He often visited the wild beasts, sometimes on his own, mostly in the company of his courtiers. In particular, he was enthralled by the big cats tigers, cheetahs and lions and, for a reason unbeknown to anyone, had taken a shine to the ostrich. The apes aroused his curiosity with their arcane sounds and gestures. Yet it was Chota he loved best. He was fond of rides atop the elephant. To this end he had ordered a larger howdah with a foldable ladder to be supplied. Chota had been presented with a new headdress: bright turquoise, lined with golden ta.s.sels and adorned with peac.o.c.k feathers. To Jahan"s dismay there was an equally and ridiculously showy outfit for him a shimmering silvery jerkin with embroidered blue tulips and a white turban. The Sultan had a penchant for ornateness both in himself and in those around him. He liked spending time with dwarves, mutes, buffoons, preferring their company to that of his viziers and advisers with their dreary talk.
A poet and an archer, Selim was a sad, troubled man, with a neck so short as to be almost non-existent, a florid complexion and shoulders rounded as though crushed under an invisible weight. He became Sultan at the age of forty-two, no longer in his springtime. All his life he had been waiting, praying and plotting for the Ottoman throne; yet when the moment came, he was not ready. Jahan thought of him as a flickering candlelight nervous, erratic, awaiting the wind that would one day put him out.
His brother Bayezid his biggest rival had been executed in Iran, leaving Selim the sole heir. That must have gratified him, one would expect. Instead, it had turned him fretful. If princes could be killed so easily, and without any remorse or recriminations, whom could he trust in this world? He drank amply. He ate voraciously. He slept with the prettiest women. He went hunting deer, duck, partridge, wild boar. Nothing quenched his thirst. One glance at his dress was enough to see the difference between him and his father. In his pa.s.sion for opulence he adorned himself with rare gems, wore refined brocade, heady perfumes. He lined his eyes with kohl, which gave his gaze a hardness that didn"t quite match his personality. That his turbans, decorated with plumes in garish colours, were taller than Sultan Suleiman"s did not escape anyone"s notice.
His many women had many children. But there was one concubine who surpa.s.sed all others and became his wife Nurbanu the Venetian, the enchantress. The name her mother had given her was Cecilia. She said she came from a family of high standing and would have lived as a n.o.blewoman had she not been taken as a slave by the corsairs at the age of twelve. Unfriendly mouths completed the parts of the story she left out that though fathered by a patrician, she was born out of wedlock. Nurbanu never gave up sending letters to her relatives in Corfu and Venice. She also wrote to the Bailo, the Doge, the Senate.
In response she not only received a round of correspondence but also gifts. Like Selim himself, Nurbanu cherished splendour. Recently, upon her request, she had been sent a pair of lap-dogs from Venice, with clipped, creamy coats, that never left her side. Funny creatures they were, barking at every moving thing, unmindful of their size. Before each meal their food was tried by a taster in case some wicked soul attempted to poison them. There were quite a few who would have liked to do so.
At nights, around the fireplace, the tamers talked about her, exchanging rumours and tall tales. The code that required everyone to be silent was still observed, but not as strictly as before. Though they were careful with their choice of words and used a secret tongue, they gossiped to their heart"s content. Other things changed, too. From the courtyard of the eunuchs to the tower of the Chief Physician, from the chambers of the princes to the dormitories of the Zuluflu Baltaclar, the Halberdiers of the Tresses, the seraglio rang with sound. Every noise that had been suppressed during the reign of Suleiman was now set free, eddying round the corridors.
On days when the weather was balmy the Sultan delighted in boating with his companions, eating and drinking as they glided round the Golden Horn, sucking on musk lozenges to sweeten their breath. Selim believed that as long as his Grand Vizier Sokollu held the reins the empire would run just fine. Although he was not capable of absorbing the intricacies of the state, there was a part of him that would rather have remained a poet, or an itinerant bard, had he not been confined to the throne.
The ulema hated his ways and accused him of being a sinner. The Janissaries berated him for not leading the army from battlefield to battlefield. The people compared him with his father, finding him weak and cursing the ghost of Hurrem which still roamed the marble halls for giving birth to no better. Selim placated them, making endowments, distributing riches, just so they would leave him alone. Thanks to his generosity, the nasty things that were said about him were washed away like writing on wet sand only to be written all over again a short time afterwards.
Among Selim"s closest courtiers were poets, elegists and musicians. There was a poetess called Hubbi Hatun. She could recite for hours, her eyes closed, her voice rising and falling like a seagull in the gust. There were balladeers who knew songs from all corners of the empire and could sing in a dozen languages, sending their audience from bliss to despair, from despair to bliss. There was a painter who, when he got a bit tipsy, said some day he would use his own blood for the colour red.
Jahan knew them all. They strolled through the rose gardens in their easy-going fashion, after which they would stop by the menagerie, watching and feeding the animals. They were a raucous bunch that loved to feast and roister as much as their patron did. Their visits were sudden, random. It could be at any hour of the afternoon or the evening.
One Thursday, in the dead of night, the tamers woke up to the sound of music and laughter. They blinked at each other through sleepy eyes, struggling to fathom what was going on.
"Where are the d.a.m.n servants?" a voice boomed in the dark.
Donning their garments, they rushed out, lined up. The Sultan and three guests were there sprightly and, by the look of things, heavily drunk.
Selim bellowed, "Where"s the mahout?"
Jahan took a step forward, bowed low.
"We"ve been looking for you. We wish to ride the elephant."
"Now, my Sultan?"
The question was met with bursts of t.i.ttering while the Sultan glowered. Jahan mumbled his apologies and hurried to the barn. Chota grumbled, not willing to abandon the land of dreams where he was stomping merrily. Half pleading half threatening, Jahan was able to bring him out and put on the howdah.
The Sultan, the musician, the poet and the minstrel climbed up. Jahan noticed the Sultan had gained weight; he puffed as he made his way. The servants who had come with them were carrying baskets loaded with food and drink. With ropes each basket was hoisted into the howdah. Chota lifted Jahan with his trunk and placed him on his neck. In this state they began their night-time promenade.
Jahan thought they would stay inside the imperial gardens, but, as they reached the outer gate, he heard Selim say, "Keep going, mahout."
"Where, my Lord?"
"Go, don"t stop until I tell you."
The guards, their eyes wide with astonishment, moved aside to let them pa.s.s. Chota, still sleepy and in an ill mood, plodded at a snail"s pace, refusing to speed up despite Jahan"s prodding. Inside the howdah, they didn"t seem to mind. They were singing. The sound of a lute filled the air. They pa.s.sed through the winding streets where nothing, not even a leaf or a shadow, stirred.
"Mahout, stop!" ordered the Sultan.
Jahan did as told.
"Jump down!"
This, too, Jahan did.
"Now catch!"
Giggling like children, they lowered a basket. Inside there was a wine bottle and a cup. The Sultan said, "Drink!"
"My Lord "
"Come on. Do you have any idea how annoying the sober are to the merry?"
Jahan filled the cup and downed it. A peal of laughter followed. The Sultan, clearly amused, said, "Drink another."
So it went. Before he knew it he had consumed the whole bottle. He asked Chota to pull him up, and, as the animal did so, Jahan"s head spun like a cartwheel. He sat there, his face blotchy, his anguish hidden, until he heard the Sultan say, "Tell me, mahout, have you ever been in love?"
Jahan said, a little uncertainly, "All I know about love is that it brings heartache, your Highness."
From the howdah came the saddest melody, fluttering in the breeze like a feather from a bird long gone. The poet recited: Behold the beauty that expands the heart within the mirror of the rose In that moment Jahan thought that G.o.d, who must be watching them, would understand the pain and the fear that they felt for being so small, so perishable. He clapped heartily. His forwardness, which any other time would have brought trouble, was met with laughter and joy.
All at once a howling voice pierced the air. "What the h.e.l.l is goin" on?"
In front of their eyes was a man, tottering. He had the raw look of someone who had just woken up. The doorway where they had stopped was his bed, apparently. Too drunk to find his way home, he had dozed off there.
Jahan tried to warn the poor fellow. He leaned over and whispered, "It"s the Sultan sitting here!"
"Aye," the man barked. He pointed at Selim. "That"s the Sultan!" He pointed at the courtiers. "These are the archangels ..." He pointed at Chota. "This beast is the zebani in h.e.l.l. And I am dead."
The Sultan broke in, "What are you doing on the streets at this hour?"
"Nothing," said the man.
"You can barely stand but you are searching for more drink, right? Don"t lie! Have you no shame?"
Dazed, lost, the man leaned forward as if he wanted to kiss Chota"s trunk. "Searching, yes. But not wine." He patted his chest. "I am looking for love!"
The courtiers chortled and so did the Sultan, despite his irritation. "At this hour, on empty streets. You"re hopeless."
The drunk lifted his head, his arms folded over his chest. "Maybe I am. But how about you?"
Jahan was worried sick. He dared not glance at the Sultan, fearing the punishment he would now inflict on this insolent subject. Yet when Selim spoke again he sounded calm, almost compa.s.sionate. "Catch!" Something rattled on the cobblestones. The man picked it up and stared quizzically at the ring in his hand.
The Sultan said, "If you find what you"re looking for, come to the palace and show my seal. Tell them you have a message for the Lord of the Empire."
The drunk, only now realizing this really was the Sultan, lurched forward to kiss his hand or his hem or his feet, but, being unable to reach any of those, hugged Chota"s leg instead.
"Stay away," Jahan said. "You"re going to get trampled."
The man took a step back, lost for words, shaking, sweating, mumbling his grat.i.tude, flummoxed and glad to be alive.
Selim ordered, "Let"s go, mahout."
On the way back they were silent and suddenly sombre.
Since they had arrived in the Ottoman palace, there were times when Chota had been neglected, even mistreated, but he had always been the one and only. There was no other elephant in the menagerie. No other royal elephant in the empire. Everything changed the day a carrack moored in the port of Galata.
The month of April it was. The Judas trees were in full bloom, the city wrapped in perfume, when the ship dropped anchor. Among its cargo were three animals: a zebra, a giraffe and an African bush elephant. They were brought to the palace on carts, wretched and ailing, after a harrowing voyage. The giraffe, with its black tongue and peaceful eyes, sadly did not survive for long. The zebra was sent off to the Lion House. As for the elephant a twenty-year-old male that was named Mahmood he recovered and stayed. Along with him came an unfriendly face Buziba.
By this time Chota had reached thirty years of age. Though not at all doddering in elephant years, he no longer had the agility of his heyday. Nonetheless, with each pa.s.sing summer he had become smarter, sharper. Jahan now understood why battle-scarred warriors preferred aged elephants to young ones. Sound in body and limb as they might be, the youths tended to be foolhardy like human beings.
Mahmood was placed in the same barn as Chota while Buziba joined the other tamers in the shed. Initially, Jahan tried to give him a wide berth but it was impossible. Every evening they supped together, every afternoon they attended to their elephants side by side. Had Buziba heard what a hamam was, he gave no indication of it. He seldom bathed, if at all, and never cleaned his surroundings. Contrary to the custom in the palace, he ate noisily. At meal times Jahan avoided the seat beside him to avoid the crumbs he spewed left and right.
Jahan wasn"t the only one who was vexed by the newcomers. Chota, too, was perturbed. Incensed. He resented Mahmood munching his hay, drinking his water, getting his treats. On occasion he would knock over the other"s bucket or filch his food. An angry elephant was a dedicated avenger.
One morning, when Jahan entered the barn, he found Chota stamping on the mantle that Buziba would throw upon Mahmood whenever they went out for a walk.
"Shame on you!" Jahan hissed, keeping his voice level so as not to be heard by anyone else. "Get off that thing."
Too late. The mantle was ground with grime.
"What"s the matter?" came Buziba"s voice from behind.
There was no point in denying Chota"s misbehaviour and Jahan didn"t try. "I shall clean it, I swear."
Buziba picked up the cloth but not before muttering under his breath something that Jahan took to be a curse. "You think I"m stupid? I know what"s happening," he said, his voice not so much upset as satisfied. "You and your beast are jealous."
"That"s not true."
"It is, for a reason. Soon you"re going to be shown the door, the two of you. Anyone can see which elephant"s better."
Jahan opened and closed his mouth, unable to object. Someone had seen his innermost fear and said it out loud and the universe had heard it.
The next day the Sultan appeared accompanied by his courtiers. Just as Jahan moved to get Chota ready for a ride, Selim said, "Let"s try the new elephant."
Buziba threw himself to the ground, declaring that he and the animal would happily serve the Sovereign of the House of Osman, the Commander of the Faithful and the Successor of the Prophet, the Shadow of G.o.d on Earth, the most generous and the most virtuous and the most righteous of all rulers who had come to the throne and were yet to come.
Jahan had never heard so many honeyed words, dripping with thick, sticky syrup. Even so, the Sultan seemed pleased. Like lightning, Chota"s howdah was placed on Mahmood, Jahan"s jacket was handed to Buziba that awful jacket that Jahan had hated with his entire being but now thought the world of. While Jahan gnawed his lips and Chota swung his trunk back and forth, Mahmood and his mahout replaced them, just like that.
Off they went. Even after they vanished from sight, the wind carried their sounds or so Jahan thought in his misery. He caressed Chota, who coiled his trunk around Jahan"s waist. They stayed like that for a good while, seeking refuge in each other"s company.
The next morning all h.e.l.l broke loose. There was a pond behind the barn, surrounded by moss like a green, furry carpet. The water was no more than a puddle with fish but Chota loved to spend time there. Jahan had obtained permission for him to take a dip, every now and then, since Selim found the sight of an elephant splashing water rather endearing.
When Chota and Jahan reached the pond they found Mahmood settled in Chota"s usual place. Next to him was Buziba, dangling his bare feet into the water, basking in the sunshine with his eyes closed, his mouth half open.
Jahan considered his options. There was no point in starting a fight, which would reach the ears of the Chief White Eunuch and get him in trouble. Yet he could not let this pa.s.s. Chota stood beside him, quiet as a mouse, as though he, too, was considering his options.
Gingerly, Jahan walked towards Buziba and tapped him on the shoulder. Yanked out of his reverie, he flinched. "What do you want?"