There was once a merchant who set out with his wife on a
pilgrimage to Mecca. Their daughter, though, they left at home, with an
Arab slave girl to keep her company.
One evening quite late, the merchant’s daughter and
the Arab girl were singing and laughing and dancing about in the
upstairs apartment. By accident, the Arab girl knocked over the oil
lamp, leaving the young ladies in darkness.
“What should we do?” said the merchant’s daughter.
“It’s too late to rouse the servants.”
“I’ll go out and find a light,” said the Arab girl.
“But we’re locked in!” said the merchant’s daughter.
“The window’s open,” said the Arab girl.
So they knotted some bed sheets together and lowered
them from the window. Then the Arab girl took a basket and climbed
down.
She walked down the street till she came to a
restaurant still open. The customers had all gone, but a handsome young
man was in the kitchen, cleaning up and preparing for the next day. On
the table were dishes piled high with kebabs, dolma, pilaf, and baklava.
“May I come in?” said the Arab girl prettily.
The young man, who owned the restaurant, cast an eye
on the lovely young lady. “Please sit down!” he said.
As the two of them chatted, the young man moved
closer and closer to the Arab girl. She was almost in reach when she
asked him, “What’s in those huge crocks?”
“One has olive oil, one has clarified butter, and
one has honey.”
“Honey?” she said. “What’s that?”
“Surely you’ve had honey before!”
“Never! Please give me a taste.”
So the young man took off the lid and leaned into
the crock to spoon some out. The Arab girl came up behind and lifted his
feet, so he slid head first into the honey. Then she quickly loaded her
basket with dishes of food, grabbed an oil lamp, and ran off.
The young man came out of the honey dripping and
sputtering. “Ooh, that Arab girl! If I ever catch her, I’ll drink her
blood!”
The next night, the Arab girl was again dancing
about with the merchant’s daughter, but she was wondering about the
restaurant owner. So she knocked over the lamp a second time.
“I’ll have to go out again,” she said.
They lowered the bed sheets, and the Arab girl
climbed down with her basket. When she reached the restaurant, she again
found the young man alone.
“How dare you come back!” he demanded. “Do you know
what I’ll do to you now?”
“Kiss me?” she asked.
“Well, well!” said the young man, with a smile.
“What a fine idea!” He came close to embrace her.
“Not yet,” she said. “First we must eat and drink.”
So they ate and drank, and the Arab girl kept
pouring him more and more wine, and he kept drinking it, till his head
dropped down and rested on the table. She found some rope, tied him up,
and gagged him. Then she took more dishes of food and a lamp and ran
off.
His customers found him the next morning and set him
free. “Ooh, that Arab girl! If I ever catch her, I’ll drink her blood!”
Later that same day, the young man disguised himself
as an old flower peddler, with ragged clothes and a long white beard.
Then he walked up and down the streets, calling, “Roses for sale! Roses
for sale!”
When he came by the merchant’s house, he spotted the
Arab girl looking out the upstairs window. “I have her now!” he
muttered.
Meanwhile, the Arab girl was telling the merchant’s
daughter, “There’s that handsome restaurant owner. I wonder what he’s up
to.” She called down to him, “We would like some roses.”
“Then please come to the door,” said the young man,
in an old man’s voice.
“We’re locked in,” she said. “But you can climb to
the window.”
She lowered the bed sheets, and the young man
started up. He was just a few feet away when the Arab girl took a knife
and sliced through the top sheet. Roses flew everywhere as the young man
tumbled to the ground.
While a crowd gathered around him, the young man
painfully struggled to his feet. “Ooh, that Arab girl! If I ever catch
her, I’ll drink her blood!”
Not long after that, the merchant returned with his
wife from their pilgrimage. To thank the Arab slave girl for keeping his
daughter good company, he asked, “What would you like as a gift?”
“A doll made of rubber,” she told him. “It should be
just my height and look just like me and wear clothes just like mine.
And when you shake it, it should say, ‘Yes, yes.’” So the merchant had
the doll made and gave it to her.
A few days later, the merchant spoke again to the
Arab girl. “I’ve received a note from a man who does not name himself.
He wishes to buy you for an incredibly high price. But if you object,
I’ll refuse him.”
“I don’t mind,” she said, smiling.
The next morning, a messenger came with a carriage
and drove the Arab girl to a house a few streets away. She and her
belongings were left alone in a room upstairs.
The Arab girl took her doll and stood it in the
middle of the room. She poured red sherbet into its hollow center,
filling it with the sweet fruit drink. Then she hid in a closet.
Before long, the door flew open. There stood the
young restaurant owner, a dagger in his hand. He glared at the doll.
“You wicked girl! I’ve caught you at last!”
Gripping it by the shoulder, he demanded, “Do you
remember how you pushed me into the honey?” He shook it back and forth.
“Yes, yes,” said the doll.
“And do you remember how you tied me up and gagged
me?”
“Yes, yes.”
“And do you remember how you made me fall to the
street?”
“Yes, yes.”
“You admit everything! Then prepare to die, for now I
will drink your blood!”
He plunged the dagger into the doll, and red liquid
spurted out. As the doll fell over, he caught a few drops in his cupped
hand, and raised them greedily to his lips.
“But what’s this? Her blood is so sweet! And if her
blood is this sweet, how much sweeter must be the rest of her! What have
I done? I have killed the sweetest woman in the world! Oh, if only I
could bring her back to life, I would free her and marry her! But it’s
too late. All I can do now is end my own life!” He raised the dagger
above his chest.
“Hey, dummy! I’m right here!”
The young man stared at the Arab girl.
“Darling!” he cried.
“Dearest!” she answered.
And they lived happily ever after.
About the Story
In traditional Turkish culture, women were closely
guarded, living in a separate upstairs apartment called a harem.
The only men allowed there were family members. Servants in the harem
were generally female slaves imported from other lands, since slaves
didn’t have to wear veils in front of their male owners.
This female slavery was less harsh than the slavery
in some other cultures. Slaves were generally treated well and were
freed after seven years, often to marry Turkish husbands. Following the
establishment of Turkey as a republic in 1923, the country was largely
Westernized, and both slavery and the harem disappeared.
This story is retold from “The Arab Girl in Hate and
Love,” in More Tales Alive in Turkey, by Warren S. Walker and
Ahmet E. Uysal, Texas Tech University Press, Lubbock, Texas, 1992. That
version is translated from a 1966 recording made of Ali Çuga, a Turkish
storyteller. My retelling includes only a selection of the Arab girl’s
exploits.
For more on traditional Turkish life, see The
Women of Turkey and Their Folk-Lore, Vol. 2, by Lucy M. J. Garnett,
Nutt, London, 1891, chapters 16–22.
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