pulling the door shut behind him. I think I had expected an august presence, an aging man in a business suit, but Selim Aksoy was young and slight, dressed in loose-fitting and rather shabby dark trousers and a white shirt. He hurried toward us with an eager, intense look on his face that was not quite a smile. It wasn't until I was shaking his bony hand that I recognized the green eyes and long thin nose. I had seen his face before, and up close. It took me another second to place him, until I had the sudden memory of a slender hand passing me a volume of Shakespeare. He was the bookseller from the little shop in the bazaar.
"'But we've already met!' I exclaimed, and he was exclaiming something similar at the same moment, in what I took to be an amalgamation of Turkish and English. Turgut looked from one to the other of us, clearly perplexed, and when I explained, he laughed, then shook his head as if in wonder. 'Coincidences' was all he said.
"'Are you ready to go?' Mr. Aksoy waved aside Turgut's offer of a seat in the parlor.
"'Not quite,' I said. 'If you don't mind, I will see where Miss Rossi is and when she can join us.'
"Turgut nodded a little too guilelessly.
"I ran into Helen on the stairs - literally, for I suddenly found myself taking the steps three at a time. She grabbed the railing to keep herself from toppling down the staircase. 'Ouch!' she said crossly. 'What in the name of heaven are you doing?' She was rubbing her elbow, and I was trying not to keep feeling the brush of her black suit and firm shoulder against my arm.
"'Looking for you,' I said. 'I'm sorry - are you hurt? I just got a little worried because I'd left you alone up there so long.'
"'I'm fine,' she told me more mildly. 'I've had some ideas. How long before Professor Bora arrives?'
"'He's here already,' I reported, 'and he brought a friend.'
"Helen recognized the young bookseller, too, and they talked, haltingly, while Turgut dialed up Mr. Erozan and shouted into the receiver. 'There has been a rainstorm,' he explained when he returned to us. 'The lines get a little furry in this part of town when it rains. My friend can meet us at once at the archive. He sounded sick, actually, maybe with a cold, but he said he'd come right away. Do you want coffee, madam? And I will buy you some sesame rolls on the way.' He kissed Helen's hand, to my displeasure, and we all hurried out.
"I was hoping to keep Turgut back as we walked so that I could tell him privately about the appearance of the vicious librarian from home; I didn't think I could explain this in front of a stranger, particularly one Turgut had described as having little real sympathy for vampire hunts. Turgut was deep in conversation with Helen before we'd walked a block, however, and I had the double misery of watching her bestow her rare smile on him and of knowing I was keeping back information I ought to give him at once. Mr. Aksoy walked next to me, casting a glance at me now and then, but for the most part he seemed so lost in his own thoughts that I didn't feel I should interrupt him with observations on the beauty of the morning streets.
"We found the outer door to the library unlocked - Turgut said with a smile that he'd known his friend would be prompt - and went quietly in, Turgut ushering Helen gallantly before him. The little entrance hall, with its fine mosaics and the registration book lying open and ready for the day's visitors, was deserted. Turgut held the inner door for Helen, and she had gone well into the hushed, dim hall of the library before I heard her intake of breath and saw her stop so suddenly that our friend almost tripped behind her. Something made the hair on the back of my neck rise even before I could tell what was happening, and then something quite different made me push rudely past the professor to Helen's side.
"The librarian waiting for us stood motionless in the middle of the room, his face turned, as if eagerly, toward our arrival. He was not, however, the friendly figure we'd expected, nor was he already bringing out the box we'd hoped to examine again, or some pile