The crystal merchant awoke with the
day, and felt the same anxiety that he felt every morning. He had been in the
same place for thirty years: a shop at the top of a hilly street where few
customers passed. Now it was too late to change anything—the only thing he had
ever learned to do was to buy and sell crystal glassware. There had been a time
when many people knew of his shop: Arab merchants, French and English
geologists, German soldiers who were always well-heeled. In those days it had
been wonderful to be selling crystal, and he had thought how he would become
rich, and have beautiful women at his side as he grew older.
But, as time passed, Tangier had
changed. The nearby city of Ceuta had grown faster than Tangier, and business
had fallen off. Neighbors moved away, and there remained only a few small shops
on the hill. And no one was going to climb the hill just to browse through a few
small shops. But the crystal merchant had no choice. He had lived thirty years
of his life buying and selling crystal pieces, and now it was too late to do
anything else.
He spent the entire morning
observing the infrequent comings and goings in the street. He had done this for
years, and knew the schedule of everyone who passed. But, just before lunchtime,
a boy stopped in front of the shop. He was dressed normally, but the practiced
eyes of the crystal merchant could see that the boy had no money to spend.
Nevertheless, the merchant decided to delay his lunch for a few minutes until
the boy moved on.