How Chapkin Halid Became Chief Detective
In Balata there lived, some years ago, two scapegraces, called Chapkin
Halid and Pitch Osman. These two young rascals lived by their wits and
at the expense of their neighbors. But they often had to lament the
ever-increasing difficulties they encountered in procuring the few
piasters they needed daily for bread and the tavern. They had tried
several schemes in their own neighborhood, with exceptionally poor
results, and were almost disheartened when Chapkin Halid conceived an
idea that seemed to offer every chance of success. He explained to his
chum Osman that Balata was "played out," at least for a time, and that
they must go elsewhere to satisfy their needs. Halid's plan was to go
to Stamboul, and feign death in the principal street, while Osman was
to collect the funeral expenses of his friend Halid.
Arriving in Stamboul, Halid stretched himself on his back on the
pavement and covered his face with an old sack, while Osman sat
himself down beside the supposed corpse, and every now and then
bewailed the hard fate of the stranger who had met with death on the
first day of his arrival. The corpse prompted Osman whenever the coast
was clear, and the touching tale told by Osman soon brought
contributions for the burial of the stranger. Osman had collected
about thirty piasters, and Halid was seriously thinking of a
resurrection, but was prevented by the passing of the Grand Vizier,
who, upon inquiring why the man lay on the ground in that fashion, was
told that he was a stranger who had died in the street. The Grand
Vizier thereupon gave instructions to an Imam, who happened to be at
hand, to bury the stranger and come for the money to the Sublime
Porte.
Halid was reverently carried off to the Mosque, and Osman thought that
it was time to leave the corpse to take care of itself. The Imam laid
Halid on the marble floor and prepared to wash him prior to interment.
He had taken off his turban and long cloak and got ready the water,
when he remembered that he had no soap, and immediately went out to
purchase some. No sooner had the Imam disappeared than Halid jumped
up, and, donning the Imam's turban and long cloak, repaired to the
Sublime Porte. Here he asked admittance to the Grand Vizier, but this
request was not granted until he told the nature of his business.
Halid said he was the Imam who, in compliance with the verbal
instructions received from his Highness, had buried a stranger and
that he had come for payment. The Grand Vizier sent five gold pieces
(twenty piasters each) to the supposed Imam, and Halid made off as
fast as possible.
No sooner had Halid departed than the cloakless Imam arrived in
breathless haste, and explained that he was the Imam who had received
instructions from the Grand Vizier to bury a stranger, but that the
supposed corpse had disappeared, and so had his cloak and turban.
Witnesses proved this man to be the bona-fide Imam of the quarter, and
the Grand Vizier gave orders to his Chief Detective to capture, within
three days, on pain of death, and bring to the Sublime Porte, this
fearless evil-doer.
The Chief Detective was soon on the track of Halid; but the latter was
on the keen lookout. With the aid of the money he had received from
the Grand Vizier to defray his burial expenses he successfully evaded
the clutches of the Chief Detective, who was greatly put about at
being thus frustrated. On the second day he again got scent of Halid
and determined to follow him till an opportunity offered for his
capture. Halid knew that he was followed and divined the intentions of
his pursuer. As he was passing a pharmacy he noticed there several
young men, so he entered and explained in Jewish-Spanish (one of his
accomplishments) to the Jew druggist, as he handed him one of the gold
pieces he had received from the Grand Vizier, that his uncle, who
would come in presently, was not right in his mind; but that if the
druggist could manage to douche his head and back with cold water, he
would be all right for a week or two. No sooner did the Chief
Detective enter the shop than, at a word from the apothecary, the
young men seized him and, by means of a large squirt, they did their
utmost to effectively give him the salutary and cooling douche. The
more the detective protested, the more the apothecary consolingly
explained that the operation would soon be over and that he would feel
much better, and told of the numerous similar cases he had cured in a
like manner. The detective saw that it was useless to struggle, so he
abandoned himself to the treatment; and in the meantime Halid made
off. The Chief Detective was so disheartened that he went to the Grand
Vizier and asked him to behead him, as death was preferable to the
annoyance he had received and might still receive at the hands of
Chapkin Halid. The Grand Vizier was both furious and amused, so he
spared the Chief Detective and gave orders that guards be placed at
the twenty-four gates of the city, and that Halid be seized at the
first opportunity. A reward was further promised to the person who
would bring him to the Sublime Porte.
Halid was finally caught one night as he was going out of the
Top-Kapou (Cannon Gate), and the guards, rejoicing in their capture,
after considerable consultation decided to bind Halid to a large tree
close to the Guard house, and thus both avoid the loss of sleep and
the anxiety incident to watching over so desperate a character. This
was done, and Halid now thought that his case was hopeless. Towards
dawn, Halid perceived a man with a lantern walking toward the Armenian
Church, and rightly concluded that it was the beadle going to make
ready for the early morning service. So he called out in a loud voice:
"Beadle! Brother! Beadle! Brother! come here quickly."
Now it happened that the beadle was a poor hunchback, and no sooner
did Halid perceive this than he said:
"Quick! Quick! Beadle, look at my back and see if it has gone!"
"See if what has gone?" asked the beadle, carefully looking behind the
tree.
"Why, my hump, of course," answered Halid.
The beadle made a close inspection and declared that he could see no
hump.
"A thousand thanks!" fervently exclaimed Halid, "then please undo the
rope."
The beadle set about to liberate Halid, and at the same time earnestly
begged to be told how he had got rid of the hump, so that he also
might free himself of his deformity. Halid agreed to tell him the
cure, provided the beadle had not yet broken fast, and also that he
was prepared to pay a certain small sum of money for the secret. The
beadle satisfied Halid on both of these points, and the latter
immediately set about binding the hunchback to the tree, and further
told him, on pain of breaking the spell, to repeat sixty-one times the
words: 'Esserti! Pesserti! Sersepeti!' if he did this, the hump would
of a certainty disappear. Halid left the poor beadle religiously and
earnestly repeating the words.
The guards were furious when they found, bound to the tree, a madman,
as they thought, repeating incoherent words, instead of Halid. They
began to unbind the captive, but the only answer they could get to
their host of questions was 'Esserti, Pesserti, Sersepeti.' As the
knots were loosened, the louder did the beadle in despair call out the
charmed words in the hopes of arresting them. No sooner was the beadle
freed than he asked God to bring down calamity on the destroyers of
the charm that was to remove his hunch. On hearing the beadle's tale,
the guards understood how their prisoner had secured his liberty, and
sent word to the Chief Detective. This gentleman told the Grand Vizier
of the unheard-of cunning of the escaped prisoner. The Grand Vizier
was amused and also very anxious to see this Chapkin Halid, so he sent
criers all over the city, giving full pardon to Halid on condition
that he would come to the Sublime Porte and confess in person to the
Grand Vizier. Halid obeyed the summons, and came to kiss the hem of
the Grand Vizier's garment, who was so favorably impressed by him that
he then and there appointed him to be his Chief Detective.