The boy approached the guard at the front of the huge
white tent at the center of the oasis.
"I want
to see the chieftains. I've brought omens from the desert."
Without responding, the guard
entered the tent, where he remained for
some
time. When he emerged, it was with a young Arab, dressed in white and gold. The
boy told the younger man what he had seen, and the man asked him to wait there.
He disappeared into the tent.
Night fell, and an assortment of fighting men and
merchants entered and exited the tent. One by one, the campfires were
extinguished, and the oasis fell as quiet as the desert. Only the lights in the
great tent remained. During all this time, the boy thought about Fatima, and he
was still unable to understand his last conversation with her.
Finally,
after hours of waiting, the guard bade the boy enter. The boy was astonished by
what he saw inside. Never could he have imagined that, there in the middle of
the desert, there existed a tent like this one. The ground was covered with the
most beautiful carpets he had ever walked upon, and from the top of the
structure hung lamps of hand-wrought gold, each with a lighted candle. The
tribal chieftains were seated at the back of the tent in a semicircle, resting
upon richly embroidered silk cushions. Servants came and went with silver trays
laden with spices and tea. Other servants maintained the fires in the hookahs.
The atmosphere was suffused with the sweet scent of smoke.
There were eight chieftains, but the boy could see
immediately which of them was the most important: an Arab dressed in white and
gold, seated at the center of the semicircle. At his side was the young Arab the
boy had spoken with earlier.
"Who is this stranger who speaks of omens?" asked one of
the chieftains, eyeing the boy.
"It is
I," the boy answered. And he told what he had seen.
"Why would the desert reveal such things to a stranger,
when it knows that we have been here for generations?" said another of the
chieftains.
"Because my eyes are not yet accustomed to the desert,"
the boy said. "I can see things that eyes habituated to the desert might not
see."
And also
because I know about the Soul of the World, he thought to himself.
"The oasis is neutral ground. No one attacks an oasis,"
said a third chieftain.
"I can only tell you what I saw. If you don't want to
believe me, you don't have to do anything about it."
The men fell into an animated discussion. They spoke in
an Arabic dialect that the boy didn't understand, but, when he made to leave,
the guard told him to stay. The boy became fearful; the omens told him that
something was wrong. He regretted having spoken to the camel driver about what
he had seen in the desert.
Suddenly, the elder at the center smiled almost imperceptibly, and
the boy felt better. The man hadn't participated in the discussion, and, in
fact, hadn't said a word up to that point. But the boy was already used to the
Language of the World, and he could feel the vibrations of peace throughout the
tent. Now his intuition was that he had been right in coming.
The
discussion ended. The chieftains were silent for a few moments as they listened
to what the old man was saying. Then he turned to the boy: this time his
expression was cold and distant.
"Two thousand years ago, in a distant land, a man who
believed in dreams was thrown into a dungeon and then sold as a slave," the old
man said, now in the dialect the boy understood. "Our merchants bought that man,
and brought him to Egypt. All of us know that whoever believes in dreams also
knows how to interpret them."
The elder continued, "When the pharaoh dreamed of cows
that were thin and cows that were fat, this man I'm speaking of rescued Egypt
from famine. His name was Joseph. He, too, was a stranger in a strange land,
like you, and he was probably about your age."
He
paused, and his eyes were still unfriendly.
"We
always observe the Tradition. The Tradition saved Egypt from famine in those
days, and made the Egyptians the wealthiest of peoples. The Tradition teaches
men how to cross the desert, and how their children should marry. The Tradition
says that an oasis is neutral territory, because both sides have oases, and so
both are vulnerable."
No one
said a word as the old man continued.
"But the Tradition also says that we should believe the
messages of the desert. Everything we know was taught to us by the desert."
The old
man gave a signal, and everyone stood. The meeting was over. The hookahs were
extinguished, and the guards stood at attention. The boy made ready to leave,
but the old man spoke again:
"Tomorrow, we are going to break the agreement that says
that no one at the oasis may carry arms. Throughout the entire day we will be on
the lookout for our enemies. When the sun sets, the men will once again
surrender their arms to me. For every ten dead men among our enemies, you will
receive a piece of gold.
"But arms
cannot be drawn unless they also go into battle. Arms are as capricious as the
desert, and, if they are not used, the next time they might not function. If at
least one of them hasn't been used by the end of the day tomorrow, one will be
used on you."
When the boy left the tent, the oasis was illuminated only by the
light of the full moon. He was twenty minutes from his tent, and began to make
his way there.
He was
alarmed by what had happened. He had succeeded in reaching through to the Soul
of the World, and now the price for having done so might be his life. It was a
frightening bet. But he had been making risky bets ever since the day he had
sold his sheep to pursue his destiny. And, as the camel driver had said, to die
tomorrow was no worse than dying on any other day. Every day was there to be
lived or to mark one's departure from this world. Everything depended on one
word: "Maktub."
Walking along in the silence, he had no regrets. If he
died tomorrow, it would be because God was not willing to change the future. He
would at least have died after having crossed the strait, after having worked in
a crystal shop, and after having known the silence of the desert and Fatima's
eyes. He had lived every one of his days intensely since he had left home so
long ago. If he died tomorrow, he would already have seen more than other
shepherds, and he was proud of that.
Suddenly
he heard a thundering sound, and he was thrown to the ground by a wind such as
he had never known. The area was swirling in dust so intense that it hid the
moon from view. Before him was an enormous white horse, rearing over him with a
frightening scream.
When the
blinding dust had settled a bit, the boy trembled at what he saw. Astride the
animal was a horseman dressed completely in black, with a falcon perched on his
left shoulder. He wore a turban and his entire face, except for his eyes, was
covered with a black kerchief. He appeared to be a messenger from the desert,
but his presence was much more powerful than that of a mere messenger.
The strange horseman drew an enormous, curved sword from
a scabbard mounted on his saddle. The steel of its blade glittered in the light
of the moon.
"Who dares to read the meaning of the flight of the
hawks?" he demanded, so loudly that his words seemed to echo through the fifty
thousand palm trees of Al-Fayoum.
"It is I who dared to do so," said the boy. He was
reminded of the image of Santiago Matamoros, mounted on his white horse, with
the infidels beneath his hooves. This man looked exactly the same, except that
now the roles were reversed.
"It is I
who dared to do so," he repeated, and he lowered his head to receive a blow from
the sword. "Many lives will be saved, because I was able to see through to the
Soul of the World."
The sword didn't fall. Instead, the stranger lowered it
slowly, until the point touched the boy's forehead. It drew a droplet of blood.
The horseman was completely immobile, as was the boy. It
didn't even occur to the boy to flee. In his heart, he felt a strange sense of
joy: he was about to die in pursuit of his destiny. And for Fatima. The omens
had been true, after all. Here he was, face-to-face with his enemy, but there
was no need to be concerned about dying—the Soul of the World awaited him, and
he would soon be a part of it. And, tomorrow, his enemy would also be apart of
that Soul.
The stranger continued to hold the sword at the boy's
forehead. "Why did you read the flight of the birds?"
"I read
only what the birds wanted to tell me. They wanted to save the oasis. Tomorrow
all of you will die, because there are more men at the oasis than you have."
The sword remained where it was. "Who are you to change
what Allah has willed?"
"Allah created the armies, and he also created the
hawks. Allah taught me the language of the birds. Everything has been written by
the same hand," the boy said, remembering the camel driver's words.
The stranger withdrew the sword from the boy's forehead,
and the boy felt immensely relieved. But he still couldn't flee.
"Be careful with your prognostications," said the
stranger. "When something is written, there is no way to change it."
"All I saw was an army," said the boy. "I didn't see the
outcome of the battle."
The stranger seemed satisfied with the answer. But he
kept the sword in his hand. "What is a stranger doing in a strange land?"
"I am
following my destiny. It's not something you would understand."
The
stranger placed his sword in its scabbard, and the boy relaxed.
"I had to
test your courage," the stranger said. "Courage is the quality most essential to
understanding the Language of the World."
The boy
was surprised. The stranger was speaking of things that very few people knew
about.
"You must not let up, even after having come so far," he
continued. "You must love the desert, but never trust it completely. Because the
desert tests all men: it challenges every step, and kills those who become
distracted."
What he
said reminded the boy of the old king.
"If the warriors come here, and your head is still on
your shoulders at sunset, come and find me," said the stranger.
The same hand that had brandished the sword now held a
whip. The horse reared again, raising a cloud of dust.
"Where do
you live?" shouted the boy, as the horseman rode away.
The hand
with the whip pointed to the south.