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Howdy. The below was originally the (false) start of a short story, but
quickly metamorphisized into something close to autobiography. Some of the original atmospherics have lingered, and don't necessarily reflect anything about yours truly. Later. At The Galata Tower Cafe Cigarette smoke, ignoring the lazy sweep of an old ceiling fan, hangs in the air above me. It seems to mock my obsessive, rambling thoughts about teaching and writing and learning Turkish and, of course, HER. "Take it easy", it says with a smirk. "Relax." A phony look of concern clouds it further. "What about taking a deep breath?" Surreptitiously (I think), I take in the recommended breath, but the smoke has drifted in closer, notices. "There! Isn't that better?" "No", I say to myself. (Don't worry, I am not so far gone as to take this internal dialogue thing outside.) I flick my hand through one particularly annoying cloud of the stuff. "Now get lost!" Outside, at the base of the ancient Galata Tower, kids on their way home from school set off an M-80. I flinch at the explosion, which is amplified by the tight dimensions of the square and the old stone walls surrounding it. The square itself, left in a premature dusk by the huge tower's shadow, is temporarily emptied of the teenaged mob. I stare out the window into the gloom. Though only the bottom few meters yards of the tower are visible to me, I am aware of its tremendous bulk. The tower, first built by the Genoese in the 1300's, dominates my entire neighborhood, the Kuledibi. It should remind us all, I suppose, of the durability of stone and dirt, and of the significantly less impressive characteristics of flesh and blood. Day and night (amused, perhaps, by the slim activity of this generation's version of flesh and blood?), it stands obdurate, unmoved, like the leg of a giant one dare not disturb. Emboldened by the lack of any official response to the bombing, one-by-one the would be terrorists (or freedom fighters; who's to say?) drift back into the square. I suspect the tower isn't nearly half as bothered by these kid's budding pyromania as me, since it has no doubt been subject to much more serious attacks during its 700 or so year history. Seeing that no adult has stormed into the square to re-establish order, I brace myself for another blast. Maybe I'm the only one who really minds. Every male in this country does have to serve in the army for eighteen months. Perhaps the noise doesn't bother them, or maybe they see that this rather serious version of child's play has a practical side to it, giving the kids a head start on basic training. I am surprised to discover that the waiter, Yusuf, is standing next to me. He has his head thrown back slightly, a gesture that has become, for my benefit, his version of the question "More tea?" (He has given up on words, as the ones he knows still don't much match the ones I know.) "Evet, cay lutfen. Bir az sutlu, lutfen. [Yes, tea please. With a little milk, please.]" (Never would have guessed that, huh. And yes, I agree [and have been told before] too many "lutfens". There are probably other mistakes too, but my words seem to get the job done. I'll work on perfecting them, "sonra [later]".) Yusuf nods, walks away. I realize I have my head bent forward, a subconscious adjustment I must have made to dodge some of the smoke. I see a cat under one of the tables looking up at me. It opens its mouth for what I figure is the beginning of a yawn. But, instead, it emits a strange, high-pitched wail, sounding more like a bird than a cat. Embarrassed for the poor thing, I look away. For maybe the first time since I have been coming to this cafe, I take a close look around. (I must be getting more comfortable. "Dikkat! [Watch out!]") There are very few other people in the cafe, which is surprising, given the amount of smoke. They are all sitting alone, their heads, like mine, bent forward. I suspect that boredom, however -- and not the smoke -- is the proximate cause. Every table is covered with green felt table clothes, all of which are seriously spotted with tea stains and cigarette burns. In the middle of each table, looking like a tiny shrunken crown, is a silver ashtray. Above the kitchen, which is squeezed unnecessarily tight into a corner of the otherwise spacious caf?, hangs a huge painting of a beach scene from somewhere in the Pacific. Once no doubt bright and evocative, it has aged and has now almost completely blended into and disappeared amongst the dull wood panels covering the top half of the room. The green of the palm trees lining the beach is now so dark it is approaching black. The sand, probably once pure white, is the color of the mud in the streets outside and the sea close to the color of the tea served here. There are several boats pictured, all pulled up onto the sand, but they are now no more than ghosts and, indeed, look as if someone may have tried to erase them. The painting is as changed and distorted as the dreams of those who sit below it absent-mindedly stirring their tea, their feet crammed into shoes stiff from having walked through too much winter rain, their fingernails having long ago surrendered to the dirt now permanently built up under them, wearing clothes that didn't smell so bad this morning they couldn't be worn just one more day, drinking the cheap tea they can scarcely afford, dreaming perhaps of little more than an early spring. I sit up in my chair, let my head fall back, take in a deep breath and, surprisingly, begin to relax. ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
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