and this Frenchman he didn’t like.
Lefevre clutched at his words with weary gratitude. “I don’t know what to say. They know who I am, you see, but you—you can find me the ship?”
“Of course. You must stay here, and in the morning I shall find you a way out.” There was a bond between them now. It couldn’t be helped. He must act with grace. “You must eat first, and sleep. Then all things will seem better.”
Yashim turned to his little kitchen and with rice, saffron and butter created a pilaf
Later, Lefevre dropped off to sleep cross-legged. Yashim eased him into a recumbent position and then, for want of anywhere better, lay down on the sofa beside him. Twice in the night, Lefevre had bad dreams; he twitched and ran his hands excitedly across his face.
Yashim was not superstitious, but the sight made him shudder.
19
EARLY the next morning, leaving the Frenchman sleeping on the divan, Yashim walked down to the Horn and took a caique over to Galata, the center of foreign commerce. In the harbormaster’s office he asked for the shipping list and scanned it for a suitable vessel. There was a French 400-tonner,
He found the
He handed Yashim a spyglass and encouraged him to look out for the ship.
“You’ll see her close in to shore, signor. Two-masted brig, high in the poop. Old?
Yashim squinted down the telescope and found the ship, low in the water, with a couple of sailors standing in the waist and the white and gold of Naples hanging limply from her stern. Rather old, for sure, and fairly small—but there, she was the vessel he’d have taken himself, if he was in a hurry. Lefevre seemed to be in a hurry.
The captain spread out a few papers on the table. “Half in advance, forty piastres, it’s normal.” He made some notes on a worn sheet of paper. “Your friend’s name?”
Yashim’s mind went momentarily blank. “Lefevre,” he stammered finally.
The captain glanced up. “
Yashim said yes, he had all the right documents. He hoped it was true; at least Lefefvre would be on board and under way before anything was known about it. Lefevre wasn’t an innocent: he’d take care of himself.
The captain wrote the name down on his sheet and put the folded papers away in his coat. Yashim dug out the purse from his belt and counted out forty piastres in silver onto the table. The captain picked two coins at random, bit them, and returned them to the pile with a grunt. “It’ll pass,” he said.
They shook hands. “What are you carrying?”
The Italian grimaced. “You name it. Rice. Egyptian cotton. Pepper. Bees. Eighty pieces of Ottoman silver, I hope, and a Frenchman!”
They both laughed, meaninglessly.
20
THE archaeologist was still sprawled out on the divan when Yashim returned home. He raised his head weakly when the door opened, but he seemed to have lost some of the nervous energy of the night before. Yashim set about making coffee while he explained the arrangements he had made.
“Tonight? That is very soon.
“Palermo.”
“Palermo?” Lefevre frowned. “It’s certainly not France.”
“No. There was a French ship, but she wasn’t leaving until Monday.”
“Monday. Perhaps the French ship would have been better. I might spend a fortune waiting in Sicily.”
“Well, you owe me forty piastres for the berth. You must pay the same again to the captain.”