They fell silent again. The stillness seized hold of them, transporting them far, far away.
7 Ewar
No one leaving the oases for the desert has ever been totally free of infection. Similarly, no son of the desert has gone to the oases attempting to escape a drought without eventually returning to the desert carried on the beast of a passing caravan, a feeble shadow of his former self, so famished he barely has the strength to draw his final breaths.
The day a passing caravan carried back to the desert its son Ewar and dropped him in the tribe’s custody, no one imagined that this specter could be brought back to life, not even by a miracle. The wretch who had fled from a prolonged drought that had once settled over the central desert was not merely famished on his disastrous return but carried in his body something worse than hunger. He harbored an affliction even worse than the fires of drought. He had smallpox.
Desert people prefer to receive from the oases a prodigal son who has lost his bodily strength to hunger rather than to receive back a prodigal son who carries an infectious disease. Over the course of the centuries their reason for avoiding the manacles of sedentary life within the walls of oases has been fear of infection associated with house walls, foul air, and virulent diseases.
They consider diseases that come to their dwellings from the world of the oases a lethal threat, since they are certain that these diseases are far more virulent than those carried by the desert’s winds, since the former do not respond to desert antidotes or medicines derived from desert plants. For this reason they have established a law that decrees quarantining a patient in a tent erected for him in a deserted area far from their settlement. Medical experts and herbalists visit him, but if the disease resists their treatments and they despair of finding a cure, they signal people, and the tribe packs up to seek refuge in the desert from this curse, leaving the invalid to his fate, because according to the customary law handed down through the generations, to sacrifice the whole community for the sake of one of its members would be an unforgivable act of ignorance, even though the choice is cruel.
The day the miserable Ewar, who was covered with terrible sores from which oozed purulence and pus, was carried by a mount to the tribe’s encampment, people also gave him a wide berth, set up a distant tent for him, and dispatched some specialists for a diagnosis. Meanwhile, groups of people – men and children – stood at the entrances of their dwellings, apprehensively awaiting a signal. That day the medical examination did not last long. The specialists left the invalid’s tent with bowed heads and stood there with the gravity of priests, clinging to silence while they recited cryptic prayers to the Unknown. Then they departed, dragging their sandals across the earth. Thus people learned that the experts were stymied and that the poor man was to await his fate in the desert world, alone. So the men turned back inside and pulled the tent posts, collapsing the tents on their heads. Children wept together while women hurried back and forth, beginning the process of packing up their belongings. This was not a departure to gain pasture lands in some other desert. They did not depart for the sake of change or because they felt they had stayed in one place too long. Their journey was not to flee from an enemy, as happened during years of armed raids. This journey was terrible in two respects: first, because it reminded one – like any journey – of that journey from which one does not return, and, secondly, because it presaged a death and served as an elegy. Departure meant not only that they were burying themselves in the folds of an unknown from which they might never return but also that they were burying a brother who had sought their help with an affliction for which they had been unable to find a cure. They were burying a son who had sought asylum with them only to have them refuse. Their inability to offer asylum to a relative was not merely a sin but a punishment from which they could not escape, not even by the most grandiose sacrificial offering. Thus with their journey that day they were not merely offering an elegy for one man but for the whole clan. They were not offering an elegy merely for strangers but for themselves, because they had violated the precepts of the lost Law, which prods people to act heroically. These precepts instruct a person to sacrifice his life to save the life of another person hard-pressed by a calamity and to sacrifice his own life in an attempt to rescue a victim of a calamity, even if he fears this will be in vain. They definitely would not have fled from an enemy if that had meant leaving behind them someone whose life would be in danger, even if they were powerless to resist the enemy, because raiders are enemies who originate in the physical world, unlike diseases, which are considered enemies from the spirit world. They had the fortitude to defy death when the enemy could be seen and heard. They had no strategy, however, for combating invisible and inaudible adversaries from the spirit world. For this reason they carried their calamity away with them in their hearts that day, just as they carried away their possessions on the backs of their camels, racing off to seek sanctuary in the great outdoors, which had never disappointed them, more from a hope of burying their rout in its vast expanses than from a hope of finding deliverance for themselves in its labyrinth, because flight in response to a whispered suggestion of the heart is more difficult even than one caused by avoidance of an epidemic.
The invalid whom they left alone, inside the tent, however, was not conscious of any whispered suggestion and did not feel any rout, because he required no medical expertise to realize that he had to summon all the strength he could muster to fight off the disease if he wished to stay alive. So he stretched out a trembling hand to seize a piece of bread they had left near him and struggled to chew it, not from hunger but because his ailing body needed nourishment to help it struggle against a disease. He swallowed a morsel with disgust. Then he undid the tie of the water skin that hung from the tent pole above his head and nursed from its mouth like a kid nursing from a goat’s teat. He took one sip and then refastened the tie, worried about exhausting the water. He knew he would perish from thirst even if he did not perish from the disease. His life now depended much more on the water in the skin than on the illness in his body. The tribes’ specialists who devised this stratagem understood this and therefore usually were stingy with a terminal patient’s water, because they were certain that plentiful water would only prolong his suffering. He moved slightly to check the sores on his face as the stink of purulence assailed his nose. He tried to stop his nostrils with the end of his veil, but it was enmeshed with his decomposing flesh and therefore difficult to pull off. It was, similarly, hard to free his garment, which was bonded to his body so tightly that it was no longer possible to distinguish cloth from flesh. The viscous purulence had coated and soaked the garment so that it adhered firmly to his carcass, even though the liquid had not dried yet. In fact, it continued to leak from his sores, flooding and flowing over the surface.
From the entrance wafted some breaths of noonday heat. He wished for an attack of the Qibli wind, which sucks up water from wells and even absorbs the dampness from water skins, leaving plants in the desert little more than desiccated waste and deadwood, no different from rocks and dirt. He wished for an assault from the south wind, which would effect the deliverance that thus far the disease had failed to provide. He attempted to open his eyes to see how light it was, but his stupor veiled the light, making night and day equivalent. He had lost the sense of sight but not his senses of smell or of touch, despite the frightful devastation to which the disease had exposed his body. He also experienced the fiery breaths of the desert via his ruined body, although he could not hear it howl across the wasteland or keen while struggling with the tent. He remained rigid, powerless, abandoned, waiting for a deliverance that did not come. He lost consciousness several times, although he knew he had not slept even for a moment. He began to lose his sense of time just as previously he had lost his sense of pain, but still deliverance did not come. He felt very thirsty but had reached a tipping point where drinking or feeling thirsty seem equivalent. He did not try to move his hand to unfasten the water skin b
ecause he felt nauseous. He was nauseated by his own body, which stank with the foulest odor in the whole desert: the smell of a body decomposing, the smell of a body festering, the smell of purulence.
He fell into a stupor again but before beginning this trip into altered consciousness made the wish never to return from this journey to the beyond, but. . . . But what the spirit world wishes is always different from what we wish. The spirit world wants to return us from a voyage to the beyond when we do not care to. The spirit world takes us on this journey, which we do not even want to make. Its justification is that it provides us with a form of deliverance on each of these trips.
This time, too, the spirit world laid the type of snare that grows ever murkier the clearer we think it has become; this cunning strategist brought back to life this body, which was covered with sores and ulcers, by the hand of a messenger disguised in the rags of a wayfarer. He held tightly in his right hand the halter of a jenny, which trailed behind her a camel laden with his belongings, and his left hand grasped a prescription hidden in a fodder bag.
8 Fire
The jenny master bound his veil tightly around his nose, leaned over the inert body, and examined it for a long time. Once he had ascertained that maggots had yet to assail the body, which was awash in vile liquids, he straightened up and grumbled aloud, “Wherever there’s a putrid stink, there’s some plague. Wherever a plague holds sway, an oasis has played a part.” He removed his belongings from the pack animal and lit a fire in front of the tent. He took some herbs from the fodder bag and then selected from his belongings a container, which he filled with water. He steeped the pungent, grimlooking herb in the water and intoned a mournful song while waiting for the fire to transform the sticks to hot coals. From a stick he fashioned a poker with which he pushed aside the flaming logs. He then placed the earthenware vessel over the coals without pausing in his repetition of the mournful elegy. A traveler must sing. He sings even when nothing prompts him to sing, for – if he does not sing – he will speak, and the spoken word is what the traveler cannot bear, not because it is wrong for a solitary person to talk to himself, but because it distracts him from the wayfarer’s sole enjoyment, which is listening. Eavesdropping on the spirit world is impossible unless one listens carefully. Silence is the spirit world’s protective amulet that can only be foiled by adroit listening, for the desert’s sound is masked by other sounds and the desert’s sound is a prophecy. Prophecy is always located in a place beyond sound, in a place beyond place. Prophecy is the rambling man’s secret. Prophecy is the wayfarer’s goal. If he does not reach it through speech, he searches for it in silence. If he cannot attain it through silence, he circles its sanctuary by singing. For this reason, a wayfarer communicates through song, not words.
In the vessel, the herbal brew thickened and its color became even less appetizing. He removed the container from the fire pit and allowed time for the liquid to cool. From his kit he took out a wooden spoon marked with arcane symbols. He then carried his treasure to the body stretched out beside the tent pole. With difficulty he tore away the veil that had dried onto the victim’s face. He leaned the man’s head against his knee and started to feed him the disgusting liquid from the wooden spoon, which was decorated with talismans. He emptied the potion into the man’s belly, down to the last drop and then jumped up. Standing above the head of the prone body, he declared as if reciting a charm: “Now we shall see. Either you turn back or you proceed forward. Either way, you won’t lose much.” Then he left the tent and stood by its entrance, contemplating the eternal plain that spread to the four corners of the world; indeed its nakedness stretched all the way to the naked sky. There he sang another prophecy: “It’s not the disease that kills but the drug.”
He roamed across the plain. That evening, when he returned, he found the victim writhing in the tent, bickering with specters in an audible but indistinct voice. He raved for a long time in the language of the Unknown but finally said: “Fire! Fire! Fire!”
He continued to writhe as a new liquid oozed forth. This was not pus, purulence, or blood. It was disagreeable-looking too, but this liquid’s sharp scent was not that of pus or purulence. It was the scent of the suspect herb. He repeated again: “Fire! Fire! Fire in my belly!”
Tightening the veil around his nostrils first, he proceeded to examine his patient, on whose forehead he noticed beads of sweat. As this sweat coated the man’s whole body, the flesh started to liberate itself from the garment that had dried, adhering to the body’s flesh. He rejoiced in a loud voice: “Ha, ha . . . I knew I wouldn’t succeed in saving the ailing body from destruction until I burned off its infected sweat.”
The miserable wretch moaned loudly and opened his eyes for the first time. His eyeballs looked so white that they did not seem capable of seeing anything. His eyes expressed astonishment mixed with fright. This was the astonishment of an eye that had grown accustomed to darkness and that had gazed into eternity for a long time. His eye was frightened by the light marking its return. It felt perplexed at having lost space and at having been deprived of the sensation of existing in space. Now the only evidence left to it of its existence in time was the fire burning inside it. The next moment the wretch screamed in a repulsive voice, repeating the appeal: “Fire! Fire! A drop of water to put out the fire!”
He, however, did not grant his patient a drop of water to extinguish the flame, because he had no intention of putting it out. He knew that extinguishing the fire inside a body suffering from smallpox would allow the disease to gain the upper hand over the medicine. The fire was the medicine. The fire was a noble emissary because it would only overpower the strongest adversary. Smallpox, once established in a body, is stronger than the body. For this reason, he had bet on the nobility of fire, on the innate disposition of fire, which recedes unless it can combat champions. Smallpox was the champion to which he had dispatched the fire as a terminator. Now the fire was close to completing its mission. Here the belly was begging for help and thus announcing the victory of fire. Fire’s victory was the cure, a cure for which one paid a steep price in suffering. It was, however, still a cure. He knew the truth about fire, because he would not have been the lord of fire had he not known fire’s true nature.
9 The Promise
Following his patient’s recovery, he started a debate with him: “It would be better for you not to settle in an oasis again.” With total candor, the other man replied, “The truth is that I don’t know what I can do with myself if I don’t.”
“Is sedentary life that attractive?”
“The worst thing about sedentary life is its ability to co-opt people. We disdain it and then it gains control of us. We mock it and then it slays us.”
“The most accursed snare is one we disdain.”
“You’re right. We must never disdain anything. I set foot in an oasis for the first time to satisfy my curiosity.”
“Curiosity is dangerous too.”
“I enjoyed my stay and sold a camel.”
“Then you followed that with the sale of another camel after a few days.”
“After some weeks.”
“Then you looked around you and noticed a beautiful woman.”
Ewar smiled and adjusted the end of his veil to hide his cheeks, which were scarred by smallpox. “You’re not mistaken, but. . . .”
“There’s no need to be ashamed. A man doesn’t need to be a diviner to understand that the curiosity that leads a person to set foot in an oasis will necessarily lead to the sale of a camel and the entrance of a woman. I wager that the next step was the purchase of some land.”
“You’re not mistaken this time either. What astonishes me is not your ability to discern this but your narration of the tale, apparently from painful, first-hand experience.”
“Once a beautiful woman appears, land must necessarily follow. Is there any peg stronger than land? Is there any tie stronger than a beautiful woman?”
His throat rattled with contemptuous laughter
. Then he added, “A man has only two companions when embracing slavery: a piece of property and a woman.”
The convalescent did not capitulate: “Do you know why?”
He did not wait for a reply but allowed his gaze to roam the plain, which was flooded by deceptive mirages. Then, fed up with the mean-spirited mirage, he glanced at the horizon and pressed beyond it, as well, to end with the sky. He tarried there and did not return from this journey until he was burdened by a prophecy: “What is there in our world besides land and women? What would become of this lethal maze we call the desert if we did not find land and a woman in it?”
“Ha, ha . . . you take the earth and you take the woman. But then you mustn’t complain when you have to pay for the deal with your body, which a plague has mauled in compensation.”
The man suddenly trembled, however, and asked with strange despair: “But what can we do, master, if departure is this painful? Doesn’t our master think the contractual price of migration oppressive?”
“The matter would be simple if smallpox was the only price we paid for the deal. What’s worse than smallpox during this slumber is another plague you could call the heart’s demise.”
“But, master, in the place we quit we lose things we don’t find in the place we seek. That’s the hardest aspect of the contract to migrate.”
“This is the price of the message.”
“Message?”
Migration’s messenger remained silent for a time. He adjusted his veil across his face to cover even his eyes, as if he were a priest wishing to conceal some emotion, weakness, sorrow, delight, or prophecy. “Yes, nomadism is also a message. Nomadism is a prophecy.”
“What an inhumane prophecy!”
“Has the desert ever known a form of prophecy that was humane?”
Seven Veils of Seth Page 12