登陆注册
10450200000004

第4章

The ?anzelize Boutique

THE SERIES of events and coincidences that were to change my entire life had begun a month before on April 27, 1975, when Sibel happened to spot a handbag designed by the famous Jenny Colon in a shop window as we were walking along Valikona?? Avenue, enjoying the cool spring evening. Our formal engagement was not far off; we were tipsy and in high spirits. We'd just been to Fuaye, a posh new restaurant in Ni?anta??; over supper with my parents, we had discussed at length the preparations for the engagement party, which was scheduled for the middle of June so that Nurcihan, Sibel's friend since her days at Notre Dame de Sion Lycée and then her years in Paris, could come from France to attend. Sibel had long ago arranged for her engagement dress to be made by Silky ?smet, then the most expensive and sought-after dressmaker in Istanbul, and that evening Sibel and my mother discussed how they might sew on the pearls my mother had given her for the dress. It was my future father-in-law's express wish that his only daughter's engagement party be as extravagant as a wedding, and my mother was only too delighted to help fulfill that wish as best as she could. As for my father, he was charmed enough by the prospect of a daughter-in-law who had "studied at the Sorbonne," as was said in those days among the Istanbul bourgeoisie of any girl who had gone to Paris for any kind of study.

It was as I walked Sibel home that evening, my arm wrapped lovingly around her sturdy shoulders, noting to myself with pride how happy and lucky I was, that Sibel said, "Oh what a beautiful bag!" Though my mind was clouded by the wine, I took note of the handbag and the name of the shop, and at noon the next day I went back. In fact I had never been one of those suave, chivalrous playboys always looking for the least excuse to buy women presents or send them flowers, though perhaps I longed to be one. In those days, bored Westernized housewives of the affluent neighborhoods like ?i?li, Ni?anta??, and Bebek did not open "art galleries" but boutiques, and stocked them with trinkets and whole ensembles smuggled in luggage from Paris and Milan, or copies of "the latest" dresses featured in imported magazines like Elle and Vogue, selling these goods at ridiculously inflated prices to other rich housewives who were as bored as they were. As she would remind me when I tracked her down many years later, ?enay Han?m, then proprietress of the ?anzelize (its name a transliteration of the legendary Parisian avenue), was, like Füsun, a very distant relation on my mother's side. The fact that she gave me the shop sign that had once hung on the door as well as any other object connected to Füsun without once questioning the reasons for my excessive interest in the since-shuttered establishment led me to understand that some of the odder details of our story were known to her, and indeed had had a much wider circulation than I had assumed.

When I walked into the ?anzelize at around half past twelve the next day, the small bronze double-knobbed camel bell jingled two notes that can still make my heart pound. It was a warm spring day, and inside the shop it was cool and dark. At first I thought there was no one there, my eyes still adjusting to the gloom after the noonday sunlight. Then I felt my heart in my throat, with the force of an immense wave about to crash against the shore.

"I'd like to buy the handbag on the mannequin in the window," I managed to say, staggered at the sight of her.

"Do you mean the cream-colored Jenny Colon?"

When we came eye to eye, I immediately remembered her.

"The handbag on the mannequin in the window," I repeated dreamily.

"Oh, right," she said and walked over to the window. In a flash she had slipped off her yellow high-heeled pump, extending her bare foot, whose nails she'd carefully painted red, onto the floor of the display area, stretching her arm toward the mannequin. My eyes traveled from her empty shoe over her long bare legs. It wasn't even May yet, and they were already tanned.

Their length made her lacy yellow skirt seem even shorter. Hooking the bag, she returned to the counter and with her long, dexterous fingers she removed the balls of crumpled cream-colored tissue paper, showing me the inside of the zippered pocket, the two smaller pockets (both empty) as well as the secret compartment, from which she produced a card inscribed JENNY COLON, her whole demeanor suggesting mystery and seriousness, as if she were showing me something very personal.

"Hello, Füsun. You're all grown up! Perhaps you don't recognize me."

"Not at all, Cousin Kemal, I recognized you right away, but when I saw you did not recognize me, I thought it would be better not to disturb you."

There was a silence. I looked again into one of the pockets she had just pointed to inside the bag. Her beauty, or her skirt, which was in fact too short, or something else altogether, had unsettled me, and I couldn't act naturally.

"Well … what are you up to these days?"

"I'm studying for my university entrance exams. And I come here every day, too. Here in the shop, I'm meeting lots of new people."

"That's wonderful. So tell me, how much is this handbag?"

Furrowing her brow, she peered at the handwritten price tag on the bottom: "One thousand five hundred lira." (At the time this would have been six months' pay for a junior civil servant.) "But I am sure ?enay Han?m would want to offer you a special price. She's gone home for lunch and must be napping now, so I can't phone her. But if you could come by this evening …"

"It's not important," I said, and taking out my wallet—a clumsy gesture that, later, at our secret meeting place, Füsun would often mimic—I counted out the damp bills. Füsun wrapped the bag in paper, carefully but with evident inexperience, and then put it into a plastic bag. Throughout this silence she knew that I was admiring her honey-hued arms, and her quick, elegant gestures. When she politely handed me the shopping bag, I thanked her. "Please give my respects to Aunt Nesibe and your father," I said (having failed to remember Tar?k Bey's name in time). For a moment I paused: My ghost had left my body and now, in some corner of heaven, was embracing Füsun and kissing her. I made quickly for the door. What an absurd daydream, especially since Füsun wasn't as beautiful as all that. The bell on the door jingled, and I heard a canary warbling. I went out into the street, glad to feel the heat. I was pleased with my purchase; I loved Sibel very much. I decided to forget this shop, and Füsun.

同类推荐
  • Death by Rock 'n' Roll

    Death by Rock 'n' Roll

    (A 90-page True Crime Short with photographs) On April 1, 1984, Marvin Gaye--one of the world's most beloved singers--was gunned down by his own father. A generation later, fans still puzzle over how it could be that a man who crooned about peace, love, and understanding could possibly meet with such a violent end--and from his own flesh and blood. Yet the history of popular music is written in blood.
  • Cause to Dread (An Avery Black Mystery—Book 6)

    Cause to Dread (An Avery Black Mystery—Book 6)

    "A dynamic story line that grips from the first chapter and doesn't let go."--Midwest Book Review, Diane Donovan (regarding Once Gone)From #1 bestselling author Blake Pierce comes a new masterpiece of psychological suspense—the AVERY BLACK SERIES—which continues here with CAUSE TO DREAD (Book #6), also a standalone novel. The series begins with CAUSE TO KILL (Book #1)—a free download with over 200 five star reviews!
  • Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter

    Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter

    'A comic novel on the grand scale written with tremendous confidence and verve. Mario, 18-year-old law student and radio news-editor, falls scandalously for his Aunt Julia, the 32-year-old divorced wife of a cousin, and the progressively lunatic story of this affair is interwoven with episodes from a series of radio soap-operas written by his friend Pedro Comacho. Vargas Llosa's huge energy and inventiveness is extravagant and fabulously funny.'
  • Poison Most Vial

    Poison Most Vial

    Murder in the lab! The famous forensic scientist Dr. Ramachandran is stone-cold dead, and Ruby Rose's father is the prime suspect. It's one more reason for Ruby to hate the Gardens, the funky urban neighborhood to which she has been transplanted. Wise but shy, artistic but an outsider, Ruby must marshal everything and everyone she can to help solve the mystery and prove her father didn't poison his boss. Everyone? The list isn't too long: there's T. Rex, Ruby's big, goofy but goodhearted friend; maybe those other two weird kids from class; and that mysterious old lady in the apartment upstairs, who seems to know a lot about chemistry … which could come in very wkkk.net for Poison Most Vial“Carey mixes toxic chemistry and logic problems in his second middle-grade mystery to good, if not great effect. Budding chemists and crime-scene investigators will especially enjoy this science whodunit."
  • President Elect (A Luke Stone Thriller—Book 5)

    President Elect (A Luke Stone Thriller—Book 5)

    "One of the best thrillers I have read this year. The plot is intelligent and will keep you hooked from the beginning. The author did a superb job creating a set of characters who are fully developed and very much enjoyable. I can hardly wait for the sequel."--Books and Movie Reviews, Roberto Mattos (re Any Means Necessary)PRESIDENT ELECT is book #5 in the bestselling Luke Stone thriller series, which begins with ANY MEANS NECESSARY (book #1), a free download with over 500 five star reviews!When China threatens to bankrupt the U.S. by calling in its debt, Americans are desperate for radical change. President Susan Hopkins, running for re-election, is floored as she watches the returns come in. Her rival—a madman senator from West Virginia who ran on the promise to nuke China's islands out of the South China Sea—has, inconceivably, won.
热门推荐
  • 重生女配不炮灰

    重生女配不炮灰

    前世苦苦挣扎24年,死了之后才知道自己只是一本霸道总裁甜宠文的炮灰女配。重活一世,林暮雪已经不是前世单纯热情的红枫叶,她要让哥哥幸福,还要报仇……
  • 时空幻想波

    时空幻想波

    随便写,想到哪里写哪里,没有方向没有目的,主角性格偏向黑暗,行事风格幕后,绝对不会和别人拼命,真小人也
  • 林黛玉笔记

    林黛玉笔记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 浮生:芷宁电影札记

    浮生:芷宁电影札记

    《浮生:芷宁电影札记》由少年的灰色时光、旧时已逝,天地默然、无语凝噎的史实、趣与意的有致结合、以含泪的爱送别疮痍、没有华丽外衣只有艰难求生、不到死亡不能解脱、“我愿意为你朗读”、一部颇具气质的电影、记录个体对战争的反应方式、于获释中幸存等构成。
  • 王爷妃要翻身

    王爷妃要翻身

    【邪魅出品】她,本性天真,只为了打破诅咒。而后的一次次漩涡令她身陷囫囵,一场不明所以的背离令她愤然挥袖离去。十年后,一袭艳红名震天下,绝色容颜却带着嗜血的狠戾,朱唇噙起一抹蔑视天下的笑容。她凤眸轻扫,傲然骄嚣:“宁我负天下,不允天下负我。”一场谁与争锋的角逐,一次惊心动魄的对峙,问鼎天下的赌博中,谁才是最后的赢家?曰是:天畔星降,生死两难,非正非邪,问鼎天下。
  • 网游之龙吟之王

    网游之龙吟之王

    华夏国际集团经过近三十年的发展,已经成为全球最大的网络游戏公司,没有之一。其花重金打造的《龙吟天下》即将开放,在这个时刻,全球人民都激动不已。《龙吟天下》,华夏国际集团所开发的最新网络游戏。这是一部世界级的网游。这是一部史诗般的网游。这是一部引领全世界潮流的网游!
  • 白桦林中的两座坟茔

    白桦林中的两座坟茔

    天上沉重着大块大块的雨云。云压在大野上,翻腾起伏着。在云天与大野之间,一条白色大道伸向远方,由南向北,像一条银灰色的河,无声无息泻着。道上没有行人,只有一辆白色的尼桑停在路边。石兰走出小车,站在大开的车门内侧,直了直腰,这才把目光投向路边的白桦林。白桦树棵棵笔直着身材,像一群穿白连衣裙的少女准备登上六一国际儿童节的舞台。这让石兰想到了自己少年时的一次演出,禁不住心头升起一缕惆怅,淡淡的。弯腰,她用左手从副驾驶座上拿起两束鲜花,又用右手提起裙摆,走下大道,朝白桦林走去。白桦林外,靠近大道的这一边,有两座坟茔。
  • 第一男装——芙蓉妃传

    第一男装——芙蓉妃传

    他是纪忠轩?是一个驰骋沙场、快意恩仇的将军。她是甄芙蓉?是一个貌若倾城、闭月羞花的美人。在二十岁之后,她和宿命仇人的他相遇,为了报仇雪恨,她孤身的进入勾心斗角的皇宫,过上尔虞我诈的生活,成为一个善于谋权的一代太后的故事。
  • 实用公务员文书写作大全

    实用公务员文书写作大全

    公文的含义公文,即公务文书,又称文件,是国家机关及其他社会组织在行使职权和实施管理的过程中所形成的具有法定效力与规范格式的文书,是传达政令、指导、布置和商洽工作,请示和答复向题,报告和交流情况,联系公务。
  • 千金逆袭之别闹陈先生

    千金逆袭之别闹陈先生

    一场因妹妹扑朔迷离失踪的代嫁,生不见人,死不见尸,因此将她卷入这暗无天日的万丈深渊……陈勋爵忽然抱着她说道:“云,今生,我与你相守一生,今世,我们不离不弃。”