And who can blame them for their modesty? But for me denial
and enlightenment are twins. We only meet the god within our
true selves through suffering. \V e seek the wilderness because in
this solitude we can hear ourselves more clearly . . . '
Perhaps this was the moment he should spit, and then deliver
them a homily on the higher disciplines of fasting. He rolled the
phlegm inside his mouth, looking for an uncovered patch of
ground, but once again he did not have the chance to spit. Musa,
with surprising speed, had fallen forward and was holding the
handsome man of principle and fortitude by the ankle, pressing
with his nails into the hollows of the heel. 'How does that hurt?
Is god here yet?' With his other hand, he pulled the little toe
out of Shim's sandal, bent it back from the other four, and
tugged, like someone snapping the bone out of a piece of roasted
chicken.
'Don't speak,' he said, though Shim hadn't got the breath to
do anything but whine. 'Be quiet. Do what I say. Go back and
bring him here, the fifth.'
'He . . . might not . . .'
'Go back and bring him here.' He gave the little toe a final,
warning tug and let go of Shim's foot. 'Did that feel good? Is
that the suffering you're looking for?'
Shim stepped back out of reach. The pain persisted. His toe
was red and oddly angled.
'Hurry,' Musa said.
Shim's ankle would not take his weight. He made the most
of standing on one leg. 'He will have gone by now,' he said at
last. He did not recognize the tremor in his voice. 'It was a
shepherd. Just collecting eggs. Or looking for a stray.'
' Go back and see.'
Shim could have said, Go back yourself and see. But he didn't
want to risk more pain, another dislocated toe. He must stay
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calm and dignified. 'Pain and enlightenment are twins,' he said
instead. And then, 'Send her, your wife. Send him.' The badu
was still squatting outside the tent. 'Send someone who can
walk.' He turned his back on his landlord. He was a holy man.
He'd return to his own cave at once - if he could bear the
pressure on his ankle and his toes - to continue with the solemn
business of his quarantine.
Musa wished he had the pestle close at hand. He'd show what
damage he could do to this man's hands and knees. He'd never
pray again. Musa did not like to be defied. Men were just like
donkeys, and their memories were long. If he allowed this Shim
to succeed in challenging him just once, then he would challenge
Musa at every turn. If the caravan had not gone off, and there
were cousins close by, then it would be a simple matter. Musa
would only have to clap his hands and there would be five men
to teach the blond the rules of tenancy. But there weren't cousins.
His only ally was his wife, and she could hardly break the blond
man's fingers with a rock, as he deserved. Revenge would have
to wait. Musa would pretend to compromise. He'd seem to be
a diplomat - if that was what it took to see the Galilean once
a gam.
He waved his hands at Miri. 'Up, up,' he said. She held him
by his wrists and pulled. The dates were heavy on his breath.
His breath was heavy on her face.
When he was sitting down or standing up, Musa was an
imposing man - but anything in between and, like a camel, he
was vulnerable and comic. Miri had only got him halfway to his
feet; his legs were doubled up, his knees were spread, his buttocks
were just clear of his bed-mat. She'd had to hold him like that
many times before, when he was drunk or, merely lazy, he
demanded help with defecating beyond the tent. If she let go
on those occasions, her husband would collapse on to his own
waste. A mesmerizing thought. She always wanted to let go. She
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never did. She didn't now, though it was tempting. She had so
many grudges to express. She held him steady while he threw
his head and shoulders forward so that his weight shifted from
his buttocks to his knees, and then she pulled again. Musa was
standing on his feet at last, and he was slow and dangerous.
Shim was by now a hundred paces from the tent, and hurrying
- only limping when he remembered to. His toe and ankle had
survived. He had alarmed himself, and yet he was elated too. So
this was why he'd travelled all these days into these numb and
listless hills, he thought. Musa was sent to test his fortitude. Musa
would be his quarantine. He'd kept his dignity so far, he thought,
and he'd been admired for it, by the old man and the Jewish
woman at least. But he would need to be alert and cautious from
now on. Musa would be an unremitting enemy. He was the sort
who'd come up to the caves at night and smoke his tenants out,
or take away their water rights, or worse. There would be no
escaping him. So when he heard the fat man's oily voice calling
to him across the scrub, he stopped and turned. He felt a little
nauseous, to tell the truth, when he saw Musa standing up so
solidly, with one arm hidden behind his back and all his pleats
and folds of flesh made smooth and monumental by the falling,
heavy cloth of his tunic. What magic was afoot? He'd not be
the least surprised to see the fat man running in the scrub towards
him, leaping boulders like a little deer, or somersaulting at him,
as fast and weightless as a tumble bush. He'd grasp his ankles
once again and pull his toes off, one by one.
Shim's hands were shaking. So were his toes. He could not
move. He stood amongst the goats and cupped his ears to hear
what Musa was saying.
'What have you forgotten now?' the big man called. There
was, at least, no anger in his voice.
Shim had no idea what best to say. Had he forgotten to ask
permission to depart? He'd not apologize. Had he neglected
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some propriety? The question puzzled him. He could not speak.
He was a fish caught on a line. He took a step or two back
towards the tent. Then ten, then twenty more. He was prepared
to talk at least.
'You have left this, ' Musa said, when Shim was halfWay back.
'Look here. Come on.' He showed his hidden hand. It held
Shim's spiralled walking stick, his talisman, his peace of mind,
his one companion on the road. It was his sign of holiness. He
had forgotten it.
Shim would not be safe or comfortable without his staff It
was not Greek or logical, but he loved the twisting wood, each
curl a cycle of his life. It was as much a part of him as curls cut
from his hair. It could be used, like stolen hair or fingernails, to
torment him with pains and nightmares if it fell - as now - into
ill-meaning hands. He had to get it back. Should he retrace
his steps more slowly, to show his unconcern? Or should he
hurry with a careless stride to demonstrate his fearlessness? He
hurried, almost ran back to the tent. He saw that Musa held his
walking stick in his two fists, ready to hand it over or to strike.
An image of the donkey came to mind. He understood her
bruises now, the blood, the broken bones. The donkey was his
little toe.
'Go back and get the little Gaily. For me, ' Musa said, as soon
as Shim had returned and stood inside the tent, just out of reach.
Musa's tone was meek and pacifying. He was the merchant
forced to drop his price. 'Or at least let me keep this walking
stick for just a while and lead me to the place where you could
see him . . . You are not frightened of the precipice? You are
not frightened of a fall, I hope.' Musa reached forward and softly,
oddly, touched the end of the staff on Shim's leg. Shim neither
shook his head nor spoke.
'Miri,' continued Musa, 'bring honey water for my cousin.
And some dates. Put cushions down.' Miri frowned and shook
her head at Shim. He'd be a fool if he came close. She could
not tell if Musa meant to murder him or simply make him look
a fool.
'It is my quarantine,' said Shim, staying put. Miri nodded at
him, smiled. 'I will not eat while there is light. I will not drink.
I do not allow myself to recline on cushions. There is no
compromise, no matter that the task of seeing to your donkey
was exhausting.' Here was his opportunity. He spat into the sand
at last. 'I cannot even swallow phlegm for fear that it might slake
my thirst.'
'Are you allowed to swallow words?' asked Musa. 'Then,
perhaps, it would be well if you consume what you have said
today, and start afresh. Begin again. Do what I ask. Accompany
me. Show where he is. If it's the man I think, then he's as close
as you will ever get to angels. You're wrong, you see. He wasn't
only someone looking for his sheep or hunting eggs. Some
nobody. He is a healer and his flock are men. His eggs are . . .'
No, he couldn't think of anything for eggs. 'There's holiness in
him. If it's the man. He is the one who saved my life.'
Musa liked that final touch, ' . . . who saved my life.' A useful
lure, which he had used before. 'This gemstone is blemished.
That is true,' he'd told a customer earlier that spring, and made
the sale. 'But it has healing properties as well. This is the stone
that saved my life.'
Musa didn't need to talk to Shim now, or even look at him.
He could forget him. This was another market trick. Address
your comments to the crowd. Ignore the buyer. Let him battle
with himself. And there was a small crowd of eager listeners. His
wife, of course, whose listening was dutiful; the woman Marta;
the old man. Everybody lived in fear of death, and everybody
was beset by age or sickness. So everybody liked to hear of
healers. The badu - though he did not stop his rocking or let
go of his tortured hair - turned his attentions towards Musa.
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Even if he didn't understand a single word, he recognized the
storyteller's tone.
Musa sat on his rugs again, with Miri's help. He pulled his
hands across his face, and let them drop into his lap. Where
should he start? This one was hard. He only had to tell the truth.
Just tell the truth and see the man again. He was hungry for the
chance to see the man again. He'd even pay to see the man
again. Musa did not recognize himself Was he in love with that
frail voice, those hands? Had he gone mad? Or had he simply
drunk more than he'd realized?
'Two days ago,' he said, 'I had the fever. I was as good as
dead. Hot, cold and wet. My tongue was black. Ask her. She
sang for me all night. Her voice is like a goat's. A voice like hers
could drive the devil off, and clear the sky ofbirds. But even so
she couldn't lure the fever out. Miri, tell them it's true.' He
waited while his wife obliged with a nod. 'What could she do?