
Yasmin looked at me knowingly. "You'll see," she said. She turned to Lily, who nodded her
agreement. Dealing with my employees is sometimes very hard on my nerves. I thought about
having my first drink of the day, but I didn't. I went out to get something to eat instead.
Now, Chiriga's is about halfway between the eastern gate of the Budayeen and the
western end -- the cemetery. There are plenty of places to eat along the Street, and on this
particular occasion I decided to head toward Kiyoshi's. I hadn't walked far before I saw the
Lamb Lady.
"Oh boy," I muttered. Safiyya the Lamb Lady is a regular feature of the Budayeen, one of
our favorite odd characters. She's harmless, but she can talk at you so long you're sure you'll
never get away. She lives on money people give her and she sleeps wherever anybody will let
her. I've let her stay in my club a few times. She's completely honest, just addled a bit. That's
why I was surprised to see her wearing a lot of expensive-looking jewelry. She had on eight or
ten silver rings, two silver necklaces, silver earrings, and silver bracelets and bangles from her
wrists halfway to her elbows.
"Where'd you get all that, Safiyya?" I asked.
"Watch out for the lamb," she said in a hoarse voice. She used to have a lamb that
followed her around the Budayeen, but it was accidentally killed. Now Safiyya has an
imaginary lamb. I'd almost bumped into it.
"Sorry," I said.
"Isn't this nice stuff?" she said. She jingled her bracelets. "I found it all in the trash."
"In the trash?" The silver she was wearing must have been worth four or five hundred kiam.
"Where?"
"Oh, it's all gone now," Safiyya said. "I took it. I'll show you, though, if you want to see." I
followed her because I was curious. She led me to the back of a whitewashed, two-story
apartment building, where four trash cans had been upended. Garbage was strewn all over the
narrow passageway between buildings, but we didn't find any more jewelry.
When Safiyya started showing off all this silver, she would make herself a target for
robbery, or worse. I decided to mention this to one of my connections in the police
department; they'd keep an eye on Safiyya. With Crazy Vi's unsolved murder the night before,
I guessed there'd be a stronger police presence in the Budayeen tonight. I'd hate to see the
Lamb Lady become the killer's second victim.
However, the rest of the day passed quietly. Nothing happened to Safiyya, and nothing
happened to me. I went home, trimmed my beard, took a long shower, and sat down at my
desk to get some of my paperwork done. After a while, Kmuzu interrupted me.
"The master of the house wishes you to meet with him in an hour, yaa Sidi," he said.
I nodded. The master of the house was my great-grandfather, Friedlander Bey, who
controlled much of the illicit activities in the city. He was a very powerful man, so powerful
that he also found it profitable to control the rise and fall of certain nearby nations. It was like
a hobby with him.
Forty-five minutes later I was dressed the way Papa liked me to dress, standing at the
door to his office. It was guarded by Habib and Labib, Papa's huge, silent bodyguards. I wasn't
going in until they felt like letting me go in.
Tariq, Friedlander Bey's secretary and valet, came out and noticed me. "I hope you haven't
been waiting long," he said.
I shrugged. "I've just been watching these two guys. You know, they don't move at all.
They don't even breathe. How do they manage that?"
Tariq did the smart thing and ignored me. He ushered me into Papa's inner office.
Friedlander Bey reclined on a lacquered divan. He indicated that I should seat myself across
from him. Between us was a table loaded down with trays of food and fruit, juices and silver
coffee things. We chatted informally while we drank the customary cups of coffee. Then,
suddenly, Papa was all business.