16. THE TURK IS ALL MAN

Never rest on your laurels.

Never get blinded by fame.

Think about Ahmed’s revenge race.

And most important—maintain a strict diet!

Mount your mare next Sunday without the overconfidence of the gullible rabbit racing against the wise turtle.

Nevertheless, do not forget that your victory last Sunday was a promise of future victories.

A promise for you to keep.

And one more thing—don’t fall in love with your mare.

Remember what happened to your father, when he became attached to Leila with chains of love. Her tragic death killed my career. I became a trainer, but a trainer is but a pale shadow of the jockey, his pleasure and excitement merely shadows of the pleasure and excitement enjoyed by the jockey. The trouble is, other horses are merely the shadow of Leila. I could never get used to other horses. Don’t fall in love with your mare, my son! Horses are more loyal than women, but they don’t live as long.

David nodded and nodded, and his silent father sipped his Turkish coffee and talked and talked. They were alone on the balcony, in the light breeze. Joseph was not one for conversation. He was shy and uncomfortable around people. The scents of dainty women’s perfumes and of the tobacco of cleanly-shaven men filled his heart with yearning for the smell of horses in their stable. He loved the noble silence of the horse, its serious eyes, the respect it awoke in anyone who watched. Nothing like a donkey or a mule. He raised his eyes toward his son: handsome, tall, thin (but for that tendency to put on weight—an endless battle!) and a shadow passed over his face. Why was his heart not content with the glittering joy in David’s eyes? Why did he have a bad hunch? He was worried about Ahmed Al-Tal’ooni’s cold, penetrating stare. After the match, he came over to shake David’s hand. His shake was friendly, sportsmanlike, a hand that had learned from the Brits how to lose gracefully and not hold a grudge, but his eyes, oh, his eyes were of the desert. Blood vengeance, they cried. And who knows if it wasn’t by order of the lady, the consul’s wife, that he came over with his gesture of camaraderie? Ahmed would not rest. He’d do anything to win back his glory. The Muslim isn’t one to give up his honor lightly. Who knew better than Joseph? But it had to be stopped, at all costs. His dream was about to come true. Not through him, but through his son. What’s the difference? What he couldn’t achieve, his son would, with his assistance. A flame ignited in Joseph’s green-hued eyes. A look of clear determination shot a flash of steel through them. He searched for the same sternness in his son’s eyes, the one that provides heroes with the glow of glory, but couldn’t find it. A dull worry gnawed at his heart. Something of Emilie’s refined softness had transferred to their son. He lacked the desire for perfection, and perhaps a masculine pride, without which, how are men better than women? Joseph loved Emilie more than life itself. He always had. Nevertheless, in their early years of marriage, he occasionally tied her to the bed frame and whipped her bare back with his belt, not because of something she’d done, but just to maintain balance, or rather, to maintain the superiority Allah had given man over his wife. Emilie accepted her sentence, because that was the oossool, the law of man and nature, and that was how it should be! The Turk is all man. Not like the Egyptian men here. The Turk knows about respect, and loyalty, and love … A deep yearning for Emilie’s soft, white skin dulled the daggers of his eyes for a moment. He reached for his son, and as he caressed his face he imagined for a moment that the face was actually his young wife’s. He wanted to tie the boy to the bed frame and lash his bare back, but knew that these were new times, and he had to accept them. A foul taste filled his mouth, almost making him sick. Tender ululations sounded from the Arab café on the corner, the divine voice of Umm Kulthum, legendary mother of song, emerging like a ray of light through red clouds … oh, the hookah … the beads … and Umm Kulthum.

Suddenly the clear voice of the godly singer was disrupted by an off-tune screech. An old man in britches and a turban was turning the lever on an organ down in the street, playing some cheap Western tune. A young man in a ratty sailor’s uniform broke into a monkey dance to the sounds, and joked nonstop about the monkey’s red but-tocks. A boy walked among the crowd with a hat in his hand, and once the show was over, solicited tips from the onlookers. Some paid and others refrained. The old man pulled the hat off the sailor’s head and raised it toward the balconies. David laughed and threw a few coins down, and the three of them dispersed to collect the ringing treasure, simultaneously bowing.

Joseph wanted to ask his son, “Did you screw her?” but how dare he ask his son such a thing? Let him sleep with her and be done with it! A man should not walk around with pain in his testicles. Especially not a jockey. A jockey mustn’t be in love. Love gives you an appetite, and appetite makes you eat—oh, that tendency to put on weight!

Joseph shook his head, and the jolly fringe of his fez moved along with him.