The boy awoke before dawn. It had been eleven months and
nine days since he had first set foot on the African continent.
He
dressed in his Arabian clothing of white linen, bought especially for this day.
He put his headcloth in place and secured it with a ring made of camel skin.
Wearing his new sandals, he descended the stairs silently.
The city
was still sleeping. He prepared himself a sandwich and drank some hot tea from a
crystal glass. Then he sat in the sun-filled doorway, smoking the hookah.
He smoked
in silence, thinking of nothing, and listening to the sound of the wind that
brought the scent of the desert. When he had finished his smoke, he reached into
one of his pockets, and sat there for a few moments, regarding what he had
withdrawn.
It was a bundle of money. Enough to buy himself a
hundred and twenty sheep, a return ticket, and a license to import products from
Africa into his own country.
He waited
patiently for the merchant to awaken and open the shop. Then the two went off to
have some more tea.
"I'm
leaving today," said the boy. "I have the money I need to buy my sheep. And you
have the money you need to go to Mecca."
The old
man said nothing.
"Will you
give me your blessing?" asked the boy. "You have helped me." The man continued
to prepare his tea, saying nothing. Then he turned to the boy.
"I am proud of you," he said. "You brought a new feeling
into my crystal shop. But you know that I'm not going to go to Mecca. Just as
you know that you're not going to buy your sheep."
"Who told
you that?" asked the boy, startled.
"Maktub" said the old crystal merchant.