
“I never thought of a British accent as seductive,” I said.
“Here.” She passed me her pipe. “You have not thought it so because to you it has nothing of the exotic. The ordinary cannot be inspiring.”
“It is this knowledge, I imagine, that brought you to the center of attention in the harem.” Surprised by its sweet taste, I drew smoke deep into my lungs—too deep—and was overwhelmed with a burst of coughing. Bezime laughed.
“You are unskilled in this art.”
“Smoking? Yes,” I said, still stuttering with continued coughs.
“Yes, that too.” She took back the çubuk. “But I refer to the exotic. Seeking it, finding it, capturing it.”
“We were talking about Ceyden.”
“If you insist, we can return to that subject.”
“I’m afraid we must.”
“Then your lesson in the exotic must wait for another day. Your husband would not be pleased to know your priorities.”
“Oh, he’s perfectly pleased.”
“You answer too fast,” she said. “But I will allow you your misguided thoughts.”
“I’m not sure I should thank you,” I said, and watched her force a thin stream of silver smoke through lips stretched wide in a smile. “Back to Ceyden, though. Perestu made it exceedingly clear that she kept the girl away from the sultan. Am I correct to suspect you helped her gain access to him?”
“I did.”
“And it caused a rift between you and Perestu?”
She shrugged. “There are so many rifts. We all fought for our survival in the harem.”
“But what of your stories of freedom?”
“I was free to fight for it. Concubines who are successful must be able to charm both the sultan and the women around them. It is only once you’ve reached a high enough status—given birth to the sultan’s child—that the necessity of alliance begins to fade. I do not think there is a man alive who would not have wanted Ceyden. But the other girls hated her.”
