Authors: Alex Mitchell
After breakfast, she started preparing for the interview. It was her understanding that the grant had been practically offered to her, but you never quite knew with these things and it was not in her nature to go anywhere unprepared; she would express her gratitude for the offer, try to show off the little she knew about the Foundation's goals and explain what her project encompassed. If the grant was as substantial as she thought it might be, she would need to add all the postfieldwork expenses: various expert opinions, chemical analyses, thermo-luminescence, 3D digital scanning, the whole works. She needed to put together a much more extensive budget than she had first planned when applying for the in-house grant at Columbia.
She did a couple of hours' work and then decided to take a break and walk around Tel Aviv. Mina still had a day to get ready and loved discovering new cities. She went downstairs and picked up a few flyers and a map of the city in the lobby. She walked along the beach for a while thinking how disappointing it was she had not come during the summer, as she would have loved to swim in the Mediterranean. Instead, she headed resolutely into the city, following the directions on one of the leaflets to the best shopping areas. After some pleasurable window shopping on Dizengoff Street, she arrived at the crossroad with Gordon Street, where she saw a café with a large bay window and people sitting out on the terrace. She sat down and ordered a double espresso. It was brought to her promptly, along with a glass of water, by a charming and clearly gay waiter in an extremely tight t-shirt and designer sunglasses; in fact, all the customers looked somewhat flamboyant. She was surrounded by artists, media people and intellectuals â it was so different from Mosul. Mina felt almost reborn, back in a mini-New York. She looked on her map and found the Eretz Israel museum, but it was quite a hike from where she was, so she thought that she would take a taxi and surprise Liat. She hoped her friend was at work today and could spare some time.
âAre you a tourist?' a young man seated at the next table asked her in English. He said he'd be delighted to take her sightseeing. Mina thanked him and told him she was waiting for a friend. He did not insist. She really wasn't interested in him, but she was impressed by the direct yet courteous way in which he had approached her. The truth was that she could not help thinking of Jack. Had she been too harsh with him? She kept replaying their last meeting on the military base, over and over again. As she often did when she felt lost, Mina took out her notebook. It was her preferred method for clarifying her thoughts and feelings â she would often make detailed lists of pros and cons. In Jack's case, she had been brutally direct with him and had made it clear she did not want to see him again. And yet she had a nagging, irrational feeling that she might have been wrong. Even though he had lied to her, she had loved that magical evening with the villagers, and their walk up the hill in the desert. And above all, he had saved her life. Something told her she would be seeing him again, whether she liked it or not. More pressingly, she knew that she was in deep trouble with the department and needed to email Professor Almeini to clear things up. She would email him once she knew the result of the grant interview. She also had to try to find out what had happened to Hassan, but doing so would make her relive her ordeal at the hands of the three men in the flat.
Natasha was at Ben Gurion airport, waiting for Oberon Wheatley. She had spent the previous night checking and re-checking every aspect of security at the harbour. No-one could approach the yacht uninvited, nor leave it for that matter. Natasha could not help but admire how her boss gathered information on everyone. Mina Osman had arrived at her hotel just as he said she would. Wheatley suddenly appeared outside the main entrance, saw her, and walked straight to the car. She took his luggage, put it in the boot and together they drove off immediately to the harbour.
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Oberon had bought his yacht from the famous Italian yacht designer Benetti, for an obscene amount of money. With its steel hull and aluminium superstructure, the 230ft Rêverie moved at a maximum speed of 16 knots, weighed 1600 tons, had seven decks and an interior designed by John Munford. Oberon had had his eye on the boat for some time and once it became his, he had had his technicians transform it into much more than a dilettante's pleasure vessel. One sensed that under the aristocratic veneer of absolute comfort and luxury, dark mahogany and top-quality marble, the yacht possessed every technological amenity that the modern world had to offer.
Oberon had not said a word to Natasha since his arrival making her feel exceedingly uncomfortable. He climbed to the upper deck, into the yacht's saloon, sat down in his favourite Chesterfield armchair and nodded at the barman to make him his usual drink, a dirty martini. He waited silently until the man brought it to him then, taking a sip, he finally uttered his first word.
âNatasha?'
âYes sir?'
âIs everything set?'
âYes, sir. Miss Osman has checked into the hotel.'
âExcellent. That's my girl.'
He smiled at her.
The taxi dropped Mina at the entrance of the Eretz Israel Museum. From reading a leaflet she had picked up at the hotel she knew that it presented the history and culture of Israel through a number of varied exhibitions, including the ethnography, folklore, cultural history, traditional crafts and archaeology of the land. It was very much a model of avant-garde museography, Mina thought, and decided to take a quick tour before calling on Liat.
Although she thought the Planetarium was a tad gimmicky with its âVoyage through the Universe' show, she really enjoyed the inner gardens. The entire museum was built like a beautiful shrine around an ancient mound, Tel Qasile. She soon realised that a proper visit of the museum would take hours, so she went to the main desk and asked to speak to Liat Hoffman. The lady at the front desk asked her to wait in the lobby, âDr. Hoffman will be with you in a few minutes'. âDr. Hoffmanâ¦!' Mina thought, âwell she didn't waste any time'. Liat had only been studying for her Masters' degree when they last spoke in New York. Mina felt slightly envious of her friend's academic achievements, but the feeling quickly passed as Liat entered in the lobby. They rushed into each others arms and Liat gave her a long hug.
âMina, I'm so happy to see you! It's been so long. When did you arrive?'
âLast night. I thought I'd surprise you.'
âYou did,' Liat laughed âOK. Let's get out of here.'
âCan you leave your office just like that?' asked Mina.
âIt's the first day of Chanukah today. Things are a little lax. You know, people leaving early to be with their family.'
âOf course, Chanukah. I totally forgot. What about you?'
âYou know me⦠I enjoy lighting a candle from time to time, but I'm not really into religion.'
âOh. I thought Chanukah was all about fighting foreigners?' replied Mina, with a glint in her eye.
âMina, Mina. Had you said, âOh Liat, I thought it was a pagan festival of lights that you find everywhere from here to Timbuktu during the bleakest time of the winter season,' I would have thought, âshe hasn't changed one bit.' But political sarcasm?'
âI'm sorry. I've been through the mill recently.'
âDon't worry. You're in my town and I know it's your first time in Tel Aviv, so I'm going to take you on a tour! We'll get drunk and talk about all the boys we never slept with in New York.' Mina giggled, she felt like a feisty graduate student all over again.
âOh God, Liat, I'm so happy to see you.'
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The two women squeezed into Liat's car, a ludicrously bright yellow reconditioned Fiat Cinquecento, and drove towards Yafo, in the south of Tel Aviv. Liat knew her audience well, so she began her history of Tel Aviv with its biblical origins. Mina learned that Yafo was mentioned in the Old Testament as a border city of the Territory of Dan; that timber from the fragrant cedar trees of Lebanon was shipped to Yafo to build the temple of Salomon in Jerusalem. Some scholars even thought that the city, also known as Joppa or Jaffa or even Yafo, was named after Japheth, one of the sons of Noah.
Noah again! Mina wondered if she would ever escape the Flood saga.
Liat parked the car and as they started walking she reminded Mina that before getting swallowed by a giant whale, the prophet Jonah had left his hometown Nineveh for Yafo where he had hired a ship to flee âfrom the presence of the Lord'. âYou know why I've brought you to Yafo?' asked Liat.
âYes, of course. You want to show me the origins of Tel Aviv and its Arab quarter.'
âNope. As usual you're wrong. We are
here
because this is where we'll get the best hummus in town.'
Mina remembered vividly how during their time in New York Liat talked relentlessly about hummus, and had been on a mission to find the finest hummus in the World.
âSo, your hummus quest ended here?'
Liat put on her most serious face and said âYes. Why do you think I took the job at the museum, if not for the hummus?'
âYou're mad.'
âOf course I am, mad about hummus.'
They entered a tiny kebab joint, and the Arab owner's face lit up when he recognised Liat. He smiled at her, flashing all his golden teeth and said in Hebrew:
âAh. My favourite customer. I've kept you the best of the best!'
âHi Ahmed. This is my good friend Mina, she's only visiting Tel Aviv but what sort of visit would it be if she didn't taste your falafel and hummus?'
âQuite right. Take a seat and I'll be with you in a minute.' They sat down on mismatched plastic chairs.
âLiat, this is the tackiest sandwich shop I've ever sat in.'
âYes. A true pearl in a sea of mud.'
âIs that a political statement?'
âNo, a culinary one.'
âJust checking.'
âThanks. I remember the last time we had a political discussion. I thought I was going to tear your eyes out.'
âI was pretty close to slapping you.'
âBut we're all grown up now, aren't we?'
âI don't know. Are we?' They laughed, then, without any warning, as was her habit, Liat launched into a monologue on the modern history of Tel Aviv. Mina smiled at her old friend, thinking that people don't change much over time.
âThe name itself,
Tel Aviv
â Liat began, âmeans âthe hill of spring'. In a way, it is an apt description of a city that sprang from the desert. Although it began as a suburb of Yafo, an association called the âAhuzat Bayit' founded Tel Aviv in 1910 on sand dunes north of Yafo. A good example of the early socialist beginnings of Israel, the land was divided into parcels by drawing lots. Believe it or not, commercial enterprise was banned throughout the new city, it was practically communist! But the emigrants did not stick to these principles for long, or it might have become a hill of winter rather than one of spring. The book
Alteneuland
or
Old New Land
by Theodor Herzl, who is, after all, one of the founders of the Jewish emigration movement, was a tale of rebirth. In that sense, it's pretty close to the Hebrew meaning of Tel Aviv. In the early 1950s, the two cities of Tel Aviv and Yafo merged into one to form Tel Aviv-Yafo'.
âThat's what's surprised me so far,' interjected Mina, âthe contrast between old Yafo and Tel Aviv's high towers and modern buildings â.
âYes. The architecture of Tel Aviv is linked to the influx of German Jews after the modernist architectural movement was banned by the Nazis in the thirties. The immigrants built hundreds of Bauhaus constructions, all white or yellow, which gave rise to Tel Aviv's nickname: the White City. Today Tel Aviv is the second largest city in Israel, and because of its odd Old New culture, its beaches and swanky cafes, it has a youthful and hip feel to it.'
âYou're not referring to this snack-bar, I hope.'