passed the night in caves. She'd pointed to the coppery, pockmarked cliffs. 'Not far,' she'd said. Not far, perhaps, for someone built like her. A chicken, all skin and bone and beak. No meat
on her, except for the slight, high swelling of her stomach. But
for Musa, this outing was hard work. He was a duck to Miri's
chicken, flat-footed and ungainly. His thighs were so thick that
they required him to walk in opposing quarters: his right foot
took him to Jerusalem, his left foot set off for Negev. He tacked
his way across the scrub, with tiny steps.
At first Miri was required to walk behind with the water-bag
and a mat, throwing her narrow shade across his back. Musa was
not pleased with her. Everything had been her fault; the fever,
his abandonment, his immobility, his loss of goods. He'd ordered
her to pull the donkey carcass out of sight. It smelled. It bothered
him. Even the vultures had only circled it, and gone away without
tasting its disease. Something, though, less discriminating than a
vulture had chewed its stomach out during the night. The scrub
dogs, probably. Its eyes had gone. And there were flies. But Miri
claimed the body was too heavy for her to move alone. She had
refused to even try - and that was something she had never done
before. For fear of a clout. What was happening to his wife?
He'd caught her weeping in the night. Crying for the donkey?
Surely not. Now she was sulking like a disappointed child,
throwing things about the tent, making too much noise, complaining that her buttocks ached. Not that she had buttocks worthy of the name. Perhaps that was the price of pregnancy -
disobedience, bad temper, aches. Did she expect that he would
tolerate such disrespect for four more months?
'Keep out of sight,' he'd said to her when they began their
walk. But the ground was stony and uncomfortable. He did not
see why he should suffer first, and so he sent his wife ahead to
simplify a path for him. She had to clap her hands to scare off
any snakes. She had to kick away scrub balls and snap off any
thorny branches in his way. She had to find the softest ground,
and pull aside the loose rocks which might block his path. She
hardly made a difference. It would have taken twenty men to
clear a path. For Musa, though, his little chicken wife, clapping
as she led the way for him, would have to do. He had his dreams.
There would be twenty men at his command when he was rich.
He'd be preceded everywhere he went by twenty men. They'd
clear the path of stones. They'd throw down rushes. There'd be
twenty girls as well - and none of them would look like chickens.
At last they reached the valley bed with its soft clay. Musa
didn't have to stamp to make his mark. His feet sank in. His
5 9
ankles twisted when he walked. He summoned his wife to his
side, and leaned on her. His buttocks and calves were aching
now. Compared to Miri's, his were buttocks ten times worthy
of the name. So his pains were ten times worse than hers. His
lungs were bursting. He wasn't built for hiking. He was built
for litters, or for camels. Perhaps he had been hasty when he
killed the donkey. He could, perhaps, have ridden on her back
to meet the Galilean or got Miri to assemble a donkey cart. That
would have been more dignified.
Except there was no Galilean there, as far as he could tell. When
Miri had finally pushed him up the last few steps of the scarp,
through the rash of poppies, to the shaded foot of the cliffs, and he
had settled down with his exhaustion on the mat, there wasn't any
sign oflife at all, except the congregation ofbirds.
'Call out,' he ordered Miri. 'Unless, of course, a call's too
heavy for you.'
She obeyed, and called 'Gather, gather!', her husband's market
cry; and soon the quarantiners came down from their caves, one
by one, and stood a little nervously in line in front ofMusa while
he looked each of them in the face as if they were for sale. He
could tell at once what they were worth. Not much, the badu.
Musa could trade two badus for one goat. Except this one had
silver bracelets. The old Jew was an artisan and dying, by the
looks of him. A man like him would be too proud to travel
without money. The blond was carrying a walking staff, made
out of spiralled tarbony. Quite valuable. Musa knew his type, a
seasoned traveller and, probably, prepared for thieves. He'd have
some hidden coins sewn in his cloak. The woman? Good clothes
- a woven hair veil in fine material, a long sleeveless tunic,
girdled twice as was the fashion, once beneath her bosom, once
around her waist. Good cloth. Good skin. Good teeth. Good
heavy purse, as well, he thought. And easy pickings.
The four cave-dwellers seemed to know they should not
6o
speak. The badu tugged and twisted his hair in high strands. The
other three stood patiently, glad - so far, at least - of this diversion
in their day. What was it about her husband, Miri wondered,
that made strangers treat him regally, defer to him? His size?
Were they afraid of size? Or was their meekness more deliberate,
not signifying their respect for Musa, but a token of their own
tranquillity?
'Just four of you,' he said at last. The old one nodded in
agreement. 'And where's the other one?' The woman shook her
head, and for an instant caught Miri's eye. Just half a smile. Miri
had seen smiles like that before - from people who were surprised
by Musa's adolescent, reedy voice.
The old Jew spoke for all of them. He thought, perhaps,
there'd been a fifth when they were walking to the hills the day
before. It might have been a boy, a woman or a man. He could
not tell. His eyesight was not good. The figure was too far away.
Quite tall. It might have been a shepherd even. But there were
only four of them who'd come to carry out devotions in these
caves. 'My name is Aphas. From Jerusalem . . .' he began.
'And you?' Musa said, ignoring Aphas from Jerusalem. He
pointed with his chin at Marta. 'Why are you here?'
'To pray and fast. Like them,' she said. 'For quarantine . . .'
'Why fast? What will you gain from it?'
She shook her head. She didn't want to say. She smiled and
shrugged and blushed. Musa watched her breasts and shoulders
lift. She might be Miri's age, perhaps, but she was tall and
generous, he thought. She was the kind of woman Musa would
have twenty of when he was rich. She'd move a donkey without
arguing. She wouldn't make a bother of her pregnancy. He wet
his lips and smiled at her. 'Where is the other one?' he asked.
'The water thief?'
'Not us,' the old man interrupted. 'We have our own.' He
pointed to the pit in the ground behind his back.
6 1
'What's there?' asked Musa, indicating his own grave with,
again, the slightest movement of his chin. Miri stepped back,
out of Musa's sight. She put her hand up to her mouth. Would
anybody say, 'That's where your wife spent yesterday. She dug
that grave for you'? Miri pinched her lips between her fingers.
'Our water cistern,' Aphas said. 'It was already here . . . For
god provides. '
Already there? Musa was inspired. His mind was as quick and
direct as his body was clumsy. He could see a trading opportunity
at once, and a fast solution to the problems of his unsought delay
in the wilderness. Here was an opening for him. God provides,
indeed. He looked from face to face to satisfy himself that none
of them could be the Galilean and that none of them were
worldly or local enough to spot his lie. And then: 'It's there
because I put it there,' he said. 'My land. My water. ' He pointed
to the rows of caves up in the cliff. 'My caves.'
Miri took her hand away from her mouth. She had to smile.
Her husband was the demon of the mat. She listened with her
mouth open while he recounted how he had dug that hole
himself, with some help from his wife. He turned his head as
best he could and closed an eye at her. She should keep quiet.
It was hard work, he said. The ground was full of stones: 'My
wife is pregnant. Look at her. She's not as young as me. She isn't
fit to dig a hole in mud let alone in stones. She isn't big enough
to even lift a stone. She broke her fingernails. Show them your
hands.' Miri did as she was told. 'Hard work,' he said again. He
wasn't at this point quite sure why he and Miri had dug the hole.
He needed time to think, and this he gained by making Miri
show her damaged fingernails to each of them. By the time she'd
come back to his shoulder he had found the next verse to his
song. 'My little donkey died,' he said. She was diseased. It was
a cruel kindness to end her misery. She was an animal he'd
owned since he was a boy. She was his sister. 'That pit . . .' (the
62
slightest movement of the chin again) ' . . . was to be her grave. '
H e couldn't let a donkey rot, out i n the open, not a donkey so
much loved, he said. She would attract wolves, or leopards. He
didn't have to tell them how d::mgerous that was. For everyone.
What, then, should he do now? Put the donkey in the grave
and bury her under stones, as he had planned? Or let his hard
work come to nothing for the sake of a drop of water, and some
strangers? He closed his eyes and hummed to himself as if even
Solomon would be taxed by such a choice. Here was a further
opportunity to think of ways of turning these four into profit.
'And then, of course, there is the other matter, too,' he said
at last. The matter of the caves. Accommodation is not free, he
explained. They wouldn't call in at an inn and expect to eat and
sleep for nothing. That was not dignified or rational. This was
not common land, and travellers would have to pay a tribute of
some kind. A token tribute. Nothing large. A gesture only. 'A
sip, a sip, the merest sip,' he said, and liked the sound of it. They
did not have to pay, of course. They could choose to move
elsewhere. And that was free. They might imagine they could
stay and not pay rent. 'You can imagine, too, how sad I'd be if
you decided that,' he said. 'And how my hundred burly cousins
in these hills might feel justified to come with sticks and tum
you out. I only have to belch round here for there to be a storm.
Your choice.' He'd give them till midday to make up their
minds.
While the badu concentrated on his hair, the other two men
debated what they could do about the water and the caves and
Musa's uncouth cousins. It looked as if their quarantine was
doomed. Musa entwined his fingers in his lap and closed his
eyes. He made himself too large and placid to defy. His world
was such a shapely place. He had the sweetest, simplest plan.
He'd stick around until he'd shaken all their pockets out. It
wouldn't take him forty days. He'd have his fingers on the
63
spiralled staff, the silver bracelets, the old man's purse, the hidden
coins in the cloak, in less than ten. He'd have his fingers on the
woman's breasts, as well, if only he could bide his time. She was
worth the forty days, and more. He liked her fabrics and her
cloths. Her textiles made his penis twitch. His eyes were not
entirely shut. He looked at Marta through his lashes. He liked
the way she lifted up her tunic hem, and ran the fabric through
her fingers like a set of beads.
Marta knew that Musa was watching her. He was as subtle as
a hungry dog. Her husband, Thaniel, was a jewel compared to
him. She would not want to be married to a man like that; his
little wife was hardly better than a slave. But Marta was jealous