The Saffron Gate (36 page)

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Authors: Linda Holeman

Tags: #Fiction - Historical, #Romance & Love Stories, #1930s, #New York, #Africa

BOOK: The Saffron Gate
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Now the woman simply tucked her amulet into her kaftan and stepped back inside, slamming the gate.
I went to the gate she'd indicated. It was a brilliant yellow-gold, in the way of many of the gates: the colour of saffron. There was a heavy, tarnished brass knocker in the shape of a hand: the
hamsa.
Again, it was a familiar sight. I had seen many of these knockers on other doors, to afford protection from the supernatural.
I stood in front of the gate, breathing heavily. Had I actually found Manon? I lifted my hand to grasp the knocker, then dropped it to my side.
What if I knocked and it was Etienne who opened the door? Wasn't that what I had hoped would happen? Hadn't I made this terribly difficult journey, all the way to Marrakesh, for this very reason, this very moment? Hadn't I been so afraid, and felt so alone? Hadn't I, more than once, wondered if I would ever reach Marrakesh, and, if I did, actually find Etienne?
Here was the moment.
And I was terrified.
What if he simply looked at me, frowning, shaking his head, telling me to go, that I had no right to come here? To leave, that he didn't want me? What if — when I tried to talk to him, to tell him it didn't matter that he'd left me, that I could forgive him, that whatever he was hiding from me couldn't be so terrible — he simply closed the door in my face?
No. Etienne wouldn't do that to me. He wouldn't.
And what if it was Manon who opened the door? What if what she had to tell me about her brother was unbearable?
I couldn't catch my breath. There was a loud buzzing in my ears, and the saffon gate grew brighter and brighter, until it was a shimmering brilliant light. I put one hand on it to brace myself, but I was trembling too violently, and had to lean my shoulder against it, closing my eyes. I didn't want to be here, not now. I needed more time. I would come tomorrow, when I was more in control. This was enough for one day — to find where Manon lived. I needed another day, one more, before I confronted her. Or Etienne.
Finally I could open my eyes, and my ears cleared. I straightened, and with one last look at the gate, turned from it and walked away.
Part-way down the alley I stopped. I had left Albany well over a month ago. I had had enough time. I was not a coward; I had proved that many times over to myself since I'd left Juniper Road.
I retraced my steps and again stood in front of the gate. Instinctively I put my ear against it, but could hear nothing.
Then I lifted the heavy
hamsa,
raised it, and brought it down, once, twice, three times, with firm, heavy thuds.

 

 

TWENTY
T
here was no sound from the other side of the door. I knocked again, harder this time, hitting the
hamsa
against the wood with more force. Finally I heard footsteps, and the door creaked open.
A woman, holding her
haik
to cover her face in the way I was now accustomed to, peered through the narrow opening. Her eyes were long and dark, and she blinked rapidly, as though surprised, as she looked at me. She carried a metal bucket in one hand. In it was a stick wrapped round with a rag. Splashes of white dripped from the rag on to the ground. I assumed her to be a servant.
'Bonjour
, madame,' I said, hoping she spoke French. 'I'm looking for Madame Maliki.' I smelled the fresh scent of the whitewash.
When she didn't answer, I assumed she didn't understand. I used the Arabic greeting —
assalaam alykum,
peace be upon you — and then slowly repeated Manon's name.
Still she studied me, her eyes now strangely flat, the earlier light gone from them. I was thankful she didn't reach for an amulet as the woman in the street had. Perhaps, I wondered for a moment, she was simple-minded. But although she was silent, there was intelligence in her eyes as she studied my face. She shifted, setting down the bucket. At this point she could have been any of the covered women I had passed in the alleys of Marrakesh since I had arrived.
'Madame Maliki,' I said, for the third time, trying to keep the exasperation out of my voice.
'Why do you seek her?' she asked, in perfect French, her voice slightly muffled by the
haik.
I immediately straightened my shoulders. 'Oh,' I said, somehow surprised by the firm and almost melodic tone of her voice. How could I have thought, only seconds ago, that she might have been simple-minded? 'I . . . I have come to speak with her,' I said, not wanting to divulge the complicated reason as I stood in this dim alley.
'Is there some trouble?' she asked, and again I was encouraged by the modulated tone of her voice, and yet also annoyed by a Moroccan servant expecting me to speak on a personal note.
'There is no trouble for Madame Maliki,' I said. 'Pardon me, madame, but I have gone to great lengths to find her. If she is at home, I should very much like to speak to her. Would you fetch her, please?'
The woman wiped her hand down the front of her
haik.
Her fingers were long, and the half-moons on her oval nails very white.
'Come,' she said, pulling the gate open further, and I caught my breath as I stepped over the pail of whitewash and into the courtyard. My eyes darted over every surface, into every corner. What did I expect? To see Etienne sitting there? Or perhaps a sign of him: a familiar jacket, a book with a pair of spectacles on it?
But there was no such indication. Some sort of housecleaning was under way, as there was furniture sitting about the tiled courtyard — stuffed ottomans and stools and long, narrow mattresses covered in multicoloured fabric, which I knew were used for both sitting during the day and sleeping at night. There was a fountain in the centre of the courtyard, but instead of water it contained only dead, dry leaves and the small, stiff body of a yellow bird, its tiny black feet curled against its torso. A few large earthenware pots held bedraggled geraniums. There was a set of steep, narrow tiled steps leading to an upper floor with shuttered windows that looked into the courtyard.
The woman still studied me. 'Latch the gate,' she said, and watched me as I did. Then she turned and walked across the courtyard slowly, her body swaying under the
haik.
I was uncertain whether to follow her or remain at the gate. A child, perhaps four or five, ran into the courtyard from the house.
Maman,
it said, but the woman ignored it, sitting on one of the mattresses. And then a girl appeared in the doorway. She was ten or eleven, her skin the colour of milky coffee. She was painfully thin in her simple muslin shift. Her knees and elbows looked too large for her legs and arms, her jaw too narrow. Her right arm was covered in bruises, and one of her eyes was bloodshot, the eyelid puffy. A flowered kerchief was tied around her head, and her hair — the same colour as her skin — hung in long, tangled tight curls. She also held a whitewashing stick, and stared openly at me.
I couldn't tell if the younger child was a boy or girl; the thick black hair was cut in a straight line across the nape of the neck as well as the forehead, almost hiding large eyes that were as black as its hair. The child's skin was pale. It wore a little draped garment too long to be a shirt and too short to be a dress, and cotton trousers, torn off at the knees, with dangling threads. Its feet were bare. 'Who is the lady, Maman?' the child cried. 'Who is she?'
Like its mother, the child's French was impeccable. It came to stand in front of me, its little neck, long and delicate, tilted back to look at my face.
'Please, madame,' I called to the woman. 'Please. Would you ask Madame Maliki to come to the courtyard?' My heart was thumping. I realised, as I spoke, that if Etienne was inside the house he might have heard my voice. I looked at the upper-floor windows, but the shutters remained closed.
'What's your name, madame?' the child asked me, with no hint of shyness.
'Mademoiselle O'Shea,' I said, in a distracted way, still watching the woman. Why did she not do as I asked?
'I am Badou.' Like the child's appearance, the name didn't specify gender; it was a French name used for a boy or a girl. 'We're whitewashing the walls inside. I'm helping,' Badou said proudly. 'I moved the furniture with Falida.'
The woman spoke in Arabic, and Badou and the girl — who put down her stick — pushed, in a slow and painstaking manner, a heavy cork stool until it was across from the woman. I briefly thought that Etienne's sister must be kind to allow the servant to keep her children with her. Or perhaps it was a Moroccan custom, mother and children working together. I didn't know.
'Sit,' the woman said to me, languidly pointing to the cork stool. Badou climbed into her lap, leaning against her, but she paid no attention. The girl — I assumed this was Falida — had gone back to the doorway and picked up her stick, but still stared at me.
My anxiety was growing by the minute, and I was losing patience with this woman. I had asked her repeatedly to fetch her mistress, and yet it was obvious she was in no hurry to do as I wished. I made a small clicking sound with my tongue. 'Madame, please. I would like you to fetch Madame Maliki for me. Is she at home?' I asked, sitting stiffly on the stool. 'Or . . . or is anyone else here? Is . . .' I stopped.
The woman was looking at me sharply now, although still she held her
haik
over the lower half of her face.
'Madame Maliki,' the child repeated in a reedy voice, lacing a bit of string over and around its fingers, creating a small webbed pattern. 'Badou Maliki,' it said, more of a whisper, as if to itself.
'Why do you seek her?' the woman asked again, as she had in the doorway.
'It's a private affair, for Madame Maliki only,' I said, slowly. Suddenly I was very tired, and very thirsty.
At that the woman dropped the hand holding her
haik,
and it fell open. She had a straight nose and well-formed mouth. Her eyes were as dark as mine, but her skin tone was paler. There were a number of fine lines emanating from the corners of her eyes, and something about her expression was infinitely weary. She was definitely older than I. Hers was a sad and delicate face. It was obvious that she had, at some point, been quite beautiful. Although now she looked drawn, she still had a certain sensuousness to her. I realised that while I had seen a few uncovered Berber women in the square, I hadn't seen behind the face coverings of any other woman since I'd arrived in this country.
When she still didn't speak, I said, 'Please, madame. It's Madame Maliki I must see. As I keep saying.' The courtyard was so hot. A cicada screamed, and the sound pierced my ears.
'I am she,' the woman said, calmly. I had to shake my head the slightest. The cicada's shriek had partly obscured the woman's voice. Surely I had misunderstood.

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