A card hanging in the doorway
announced that several languages were spoken in the shop. The boy saw a man
appear behind the counter.
"I can clean up those glasses in the
window, if you want," said the boy.
"The way they look now, nobody is
going to want to buy them."
The man looked at him without
responding.
"In exchange, you could give me
something to eat."
The man still said nothing, and the
boy sensed that he was going to have to make a decision. In his pouch, he had
his jacket—he certainly wasn't going to need it in the desert. Taking the jacket
out, he began to clean the glasses. In half an hour, he had cleaned all the
glasses in the window, and, as he was doing so, two customers had entered the
shop and bought some crystal.
When he had completed the cleaning,
he asked the man for something to eat. "Let's go and have some lunch," said the
crystal merchant. He put a sign on the door, and they went to a small café
nearby. As they sat down at the only table in the place, the crystal merchant
laughed.
"You didn't have to do any
cleaning," he said. "The Koran requires me to feed a hungry person."
"Well then, why did you let me do
it?" the boy asked.
"Because the crystal was dirty. And
both you and I needed to cleanse our minds of negative thoughts."
When they had eaten, the merchant
turned to the boy and said, "I'd like you to work in my shop. Two customers came
in today while you were working, and that's a good omen."
People talk a lot about omens,
thought the shepherd. But they really don't know what they're saying. Just as I
hadn't realized that for so many years I had been speaking a language without
words to my sheep.
"Do you want to go to work for me?"
the merchant asked.
"I can work for the rest of today,"
the boy answered. "I'll work all night, until dawn, and I'll clean every piece
of crystal in your shop. In return, I need money to get to Egypt tomorrow."
The merchant laughed. "Even if you
cleaned my crystal for an entire year… even if you earned a good commission
selling every piece, you would still have to borrow money to get to Egypt. There
are thousands of kilometers of desert between here and there."
There was a moment of silence so
profound that it seemed the city was asleep. No sound from the bazaars, no
arguments among the merchants, no men climbing to the towers to chant. No hope,
no adventure, no old kings or destinies, no treasure, and no Pyramids. It was as
if the world had fallen silent because the boy's soul had. He sat there, staring
blankly through the door of the café wishing that he had died, and that
everything would end forever at that moment.
The merchant looked anxiously at the
boy. All the joy he had seen that morning had suddenly disappeared.
"I can give you the money you need
to get back to your country, my son," said the crystal merchant.
The boy said nothing. He got up,
adjusted his clothing, and picked up his pouch.
"I'll work for you," he said.
And after another long silence, he
added, "I need money to buy some sheep."