if I detected a sudden tension in the room. Transylvania, for Hungarian historians, as for many other Hungarians, was touchy material. 'As you know, the Ottoman Empire held territories across Eastern Europe for more than five hundred years, administering them from a secure base after its conquest of ancient Constantinople in 1453. The Empire was successful in its invasions of a dozen countries, but there were a few areas it never managed to completely subdue, many of them mountainous pockets of Eastern Europe's backwoods, whose topography and natives both defied conquest. One of these areas was Transylvania.'
"I went on like this, partly from my notes and partly from memory, experiencing now and then a wave of scholarly panic; I didn't know the material well yet, although Helen's lessons about it were vividly etched in my mind. After this introduction, I gave a brief overview of Ottoman trade routes in the region and then described the various princes and nobles who had attempted to repulse the Ottoman incursion. I included Vlad Dracula among them, as casually as I could, because Helen and I had agreed that to leave him out of the talk altogether might appear suspicious to any historian who knew of his importance as a destroyer of Ottoman armies. It must have cost me more than I'd thought it would to utter that name in front of a crowd of strangers, because as I began to describe his impalement of twenty thousand Turkish soldiers, my hand flew out a little too suddenly and I knocked over my glass of water.
"'Oh, I'm sorry!' I exclaimed, glancing miserably out at a mass of sympathetic faces - sympathetic with the exception of two. Helen looked pale and tense, and G篓¦za J篓®szef was leaning a little forward, unsmiling, as if he took the keenest interest in my blunder. The blue-shirted student and Professor S篓¢ndor both rushed to my rescue with their handkerchiefs, and after a second I was able to proceed, which I did with all the dignity I could muster. I pointed out that although the Turks had eventually overcome Vlad Dracula and many of his comrades - I thought I should work the word in somewhere - uprisings of this sort had persisted over generations until one local revolution after another toppled the Empire. It was the local nature of these uprisings, with their ability to fade back into their own terrain after each attack, that had ultimately undermined the great Ottoman machine.
"I had meant to end more eloquently than this, but it seemed to please the crowd, and there was ringing applause. To my surprise, I had finished. Nothing terrible had occurred. Helen slumped back, visibly relieved, and Professor S篓¢ndor came beaming up to shake my hand. Looking around, I noted ?va in the back, clapping away with her lovely smile very wide. Something was amiss in the room, however, and after a minute I realized that G篓¦za's stately form had vanished. I couldn't recall his slipping out, but perhaps the end of my lecture had been too dull for him.
"As soon as I was done, everyone stood up and began to talk in a babble of languages. Three or four of the Hungarian historians came over to shake my hand and congratulate me. Professor S篓¢ndor was radiant. 'Excellent!' he cried. 'I am full of pleasure to know you understand so well our Transylvanian history in America.' I wondered what he would have thought if he'd known I'd learned everything in my lecture from one of his colleagues, seated at a restaurant table in Istanbul.
"?va came up and gave me her hand, too. I wasn't sure whether to kiss or shake it, but finally decided on the latter. She looked if anything taller and more imposing today in the midst of this gathering of men in shabby suits. She had on a dark green dress and heavy gold earrings, and her hair, curling under a little green hat, had changed from magenta to black overnight. "Helen came over to talk with her, too, and I noticed how formal they were with each other in this gathering; it was hard to believe Helen had run to her arms the night before. Helen translated her aunt's congratulations for me: 'Very nice work, young man. I could see by everyone's faces that you managed to offend no one, so probably you didn't say very much. But you stand up straight at the podium and look your audience in the eye - that will