The Fifth Mountain - LightNovelsOnl.com
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To rebuild Akbar. What Elijah thought was a challenge to G.o.d was, in truth, his reencounter with Him.
THE WOMAN WHO HAD ASKED ABOUT FOOD REAPPEARED the next morning. She was accompanied by several other women.
"We found some deposits," she said. "Because so many died, and so many fled with the governor, we have enough food for a year."
"Seek older people to oversee the distribution of food," Elijah said. "They have experience at organization."
"The old ones have lost the will to live."
"Ask them to come anyway."
The woman was making ready to leave when Elijah stopped her.
"Do you know how to write, using letters?"
"No."
"I have learned, and I can teach you. You'll need this skill to help me administer the city."
"But the a.s.syrians will return."
"When they arrive, they'll need our help to manage the affairs of the city."
"Why should we do this for the enemy?"
"So that each of us can give a name to his life. The enemy is only a pretext to test our strength."
AS ELIJAH HAD FORESEEN, the old people came.
"Akbar needs your help," he told them. "Because of that, you don't have the luxury of being old; we need the youth that you once had and have lost."
"We do not know where to find it," one of them replied. "It vanished among the wrinkles and the disillusion."
"That's not true. You never had illusions, and it is that which caused your youth to hide itself away. Now is the moment to find it again, for we have a dream in common: to rebuild Akbar."
"How can we do the impossible?"
"With ardor."
Eyes veiled behind sorrow and discouragement made an effort to s.h.i.+ne again. They were no longer the useless citizens who attended judgments searching for something to talk about later in the day; now they had an important mission before them. They were needed.
The stronger among them separated the usable materials from the damaged houses and utilized them to repair those that were still standing. The older ones helped spread in the fields the ashes of the incinerated bodies, so that the city's dead might be remembered at the next harvest; others took on the task of separating the grains stocked haphazardly throughout the city, making bread, and raising water from the well.
TWO NIGHTS LATER, ELIJAH GATHERED ALL THE INHABITANTS in the square, now cleared of most of the debris. Torches were lit, and he began to speak.
"We have no choice," he said. "We can leave this work for the foreigner to do; but that means giving away the only chance that a tragedy offers us: that of rebuilding our lives.
"The ashes of the dead that we burned some days ago will become the plants that are reborn in the spring. The son who was lost the night of the invasion will become the many children running freely through the ruined streets and amusing themselves by invading forbidden places and houses they had never known. Until now only the children have been able to overcome what took place, because they have no pastfor them, everything that matters is the present moment. So we shall try to act as they do."
"Can a man cast from his heart the pain of a loss?" asked a woman.
"No. But he can find joy in something won."
Elijah turned, pointed to the top of the Fifth Mountain, forever covered in clouds. The destruction of the walls had made it visible from the middle of the square.
"I believe in One G.o.d, though you think that the G.o.ds dwell in those clouds on the Fifth Mountain. I don't want to argue whether my G.o.d is stronger or more powerful; I would speak not of our differences but of our similarities. Tragedy has united us in a single sentiment: despair.
Why has that come to pa.s.s? Because we thought that everything was answered and decided in our souls, and we could accept no changes.
"Both you and I belong to trading nations, but we also know how to act as warriors," he continued. "And a warrior is always aware of what is worth fighting for. He does not go into combat over things that do not concern him, and he never wastes his time over provocations.
"A warrior accepts defeat. He does not treat it as a matter of indifference, nor does he attempt to transform it into a victory. The pain of defeat is bitter to him; he suffers at indifference and becomes desperate with loneliness. After all this has pa.s.sed, he licks his wounds and begins everything anew. A warrior knows that war is made of many battles; he goes on.
"Tragedies do happen. We can discover the reason, blame others, imagine how different our lives would be had they not occurred. But none of that is important: they did occur, and so be it. From there onward we must put aside the fear that they awoke in us and begin to rebuild.
"Each of you will give yourselves a new name, beginning at this very moment. This will be the sacred name that brings together in a single word all that you have dreamed of fighting for. For my name, I have chosen Liberation."
The square was silent for some time. Then the woman who had been the first to help Elijah rose to her feet.
"My name is Reencounter," she said.
"My name is Wisdom," said an old man.
The son of the widow whom Elijah had loved shouted, "My name is Alphabet."
The people in the square burst into laughter. The boy, embarra.s.sed, sat down again.
"How can anybody call himself Alphabet?" shouted another boy.
Elijah could have interfered, but it was good for the boy to learn to defend himself.
"Because that was what my mother did," the boy said. "Whenever I look at drawn letters, I'll remember her."
This time no one laughed. One by one, the orphans, widows, and old people of Akbar spoke their names, and their new ident.i.ties. When the ceremony was over, Elijah asked everyone to go to sleep early: they had to resume their labors the next morning.
He took the boy by the hand, and the two went to the place in the square where a few pieces of cloth had been extended to form a tent.
Starting that night, he began teaching him the writing of Byblos.
THE DAYS BECAME WEEKS, AND THE FACE OF AKBAR was changing. The boy quickly learned to draw the letters and had already begun creating words that made sense; Elijah charged him with writing on clay tablets the history of the rebuilding of the city.
The clay tablets were baked in an improvised oven, transformed into ceramics, and carefully stored away by an aged couple. At the meetings at the end of each afternoon, Elijah asked the old folk to tell of what they had seen in their childhood, and he wrote down the greatest possible number of stories.
"We shall keep Akbar's memory on a material that fire cannot destroy,"
he explained. "One day our children and the children of their children will know that defeat was not accepted, and that the unavoidable was overcome. This can serve as an example for them."
Each night, after his lessons with the boy, Elijah would walk through the deserted city until he came to the beginning of the road leading to Jerusalem; he would think about departing, then turn around.
The heavy work demanded that he concentrate on the present moment.
He knew that the inhabitants of Akbar were relying on him for the rebuilding; he had already disappointed them once, when he had been unable to prevent the death of the enemy generaland thus avoid war.
But G.o.d always gives His children a second chance, and he must take advantage of this new opportunity. In addition, he was becoming ever fonder of the boy and desired to teach him not only the characters of Byblos but also faith in the Lord and the wisdom of his ancestors.
Even so, he did not forget that in his own land reigned a foreign princess and a foreign G.o.d. There were no more angels bearing flaming swords; he was free to leave whenever he desired, and to do whatever he wished.
Each night, he thought of departing. And each night he would lift his hands to the heavens and pray.
"Jacob fought the whole night through and was blessed at daybreak. I have fought Thee for days, for months, and Thou refusest me Thy ear.
But if Thou lookest about Thee, Thou wilt know that I am winning: Akbar is rising from its ruins, and I am rebuilding what Thou, using the a.s.syrian sword, made ashes and dust.
"I shall struggle with Thee until Thou bless me, and bless the fruits of my labor. One day Thou shalt have to answer me."
WOMEN AND CHILDREN carried water to the fields, struggling against the drought that seemed to have no end. One day, when the inclement sun shone down in all its force, Elijah heard someone say, "We work without ceasing, we no longer recall the pains of that night, and we even forget that the a.s.syrians will return as soon as they have sacked Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, and all of Phoenicia. This is a good thing for us.
"But because we concentrate so much on rebuilding the city, it seems that everything remains the same; we do not see the result of our effort."
Elijah reflected for some time on what he had heard. And he ordered that, at the end of each day of work, the people gather at the foot of the Fifth Mountain to contemplate together the sunset.
Most were so weary that they exchanged not a word, but they discovered that it is important to allow thought to wander as aimlessly as the clouds in the sky. In this way, anxiety fled from each person's heart and they found inspiration and strength for the day to come.
ELIJAH AWOKE SAYING THAT TODAY HE WOULD NOT LABOR.
"In my land, this is the Day of Atonement."
"There is no sin in your soul," a woman told him. "You have done the best that you can."
"But custom must be maintained. And I shall keep it."
The women left, bearing water for the fields, the old men went back to their task of erecting walls and shaping the wood for doors and windows.
The children helped to mold the small clay bricks that would later be baked in fire. Elijah watched them with immense joy in his heart. Then he went out from Akbar and walked toward the valley.
He wandered about aimlessly, praying the prayers that he had learned in childhood. The sun was not yet completely risen, and from the place where he stood he could see the enormous shadow of the Fifth Mountain covering part of the valley. He felt a horrible premonition: the struggle between the G.o.d of Israel and the G.o.ds of the Phoenicians would go on for many generations, and for many thousands of years.
HE RECALLED that one night he had climbed to the top of the mountain and spoken with an angel. But since Akbar's destruction he had never again heard the voices from heaven.
"O Lord, today is the Day of Atonement, and my list of sins against Thee is long," he said, turning toward Jerusalem. "I have been weak, for I have forgotten my strength. I have been compa.s.sionate when I should have been firm. I have failed to choose, for fear of making the wrong decision. I have yielded before the time to do so, and I have blasphemed when I should have given thanks.
"Still, Lord, I have also a long list of Thy sins against me. Thou hast made me suffer more than was just, by taking from this world one that I loved. Thou hast destroyed the city that received me, Thou hast confounded my search, Thy harshness almost made me forget the love I have for Thee. For all that time I have struggled with Thee, yet Thou dost not accept the worthiness of my combat.
"If we compare the list of my sins with the list of Thy sins, Thou shalt see that Thou art in my debt. But, as today is the Day of Atonement, give me Thy forgiveness and I shall forgive Thee, so that we may go on walking at each other's side."At that moment, a wind blew, and he heard his angel say to him, "Thou hast done well, Elijah. G.o.d hath accepted thy combat."
Tears streamed from his eyes. He knelt and kissed the valley's arid soil.
"Thanks unto you for having come, for I still have one doubt: is it not a sin to do this?"
The angel said, "If a warrior fight with his instructor, doth he offend him?"
"No. It is the only way to teach the technique that he must learn."
"Then continue, until the Lord call thee back to Israel," said the angel.
"Rise and go on proving that thy struggle hath meaning, because thou hast known how to cross the current of the unavoidable. Many navigate it and founder; others are swept to places for which they were not fated.
But thou confrontest the crossing with dignity; thou hast guided the path of thy vessel well and transformed pain into action."
"How sad that you are blind," said Elijah. "Otherwise you would see how orphans, widows, old people have been able to rebuild a city. Soon, all will be as it was."
"Would that it not be so," said the angel. "Remember that they have paid a high price so that their lives could be changed."
Elijah smiled. The angel was right.
"Would that thou mightest act as do men who are given a second chance: do not twice commit the same error. Never forget the reason for thy life."
"I shall not forget," he replied, happy that the angel had returned.
CARAVANS NO LONGER CAME THROUGH THE VALLEY; the a.s.syrians must have destroyed the roads and changed the trade routes. Day after day, children scaled the only turret in the wall that had escaped destruction; they were charged with watching the horizon and alerting the city to the return of enemy warriors. Elijah planned to receive them with dignity and hand over command.
Then he could depart.
But with each pa.s.sing day the feeling grew that Akbar had become part of his life. Perhaps his mission was not to remove Jezebel from the throne but to be there with these people for the rest of his life, carrying out the humble role of servant for the a.s.syrian conqueror. He would help to reestablish trade routes, learn the language of the enemy, and during his moments of repose, oversee the library, which was daily more complete.
Whereas on a night already lost in time the city had appeared to be at its end, it now seemed possible to make it even more beautiful than it had been. The work of rebuilding encompa.s.sed widening streets, erecting st.u.r.dier roofs, and creating an ingenious system for bringing water from the well to the most distant places. And his soul too was being restored; each day he learned something new from the old people, from the children, from the women. That group, which had not abandoned Akbar only because of the absolute impossibility of doing so, was now a competent, disciplined company.
"If the governor had known that they were of such help, he would have created another type of defense, and Akbar would not have been destroyed."
Elijah thought a moment, then saw that he was mistaken. Akbar needed to be destroyed so that all could awaken the forces that lay dormant inside their own being.
Months went by without the a.s.syrians showing any sign of life. By now Akbar was almost complete, and Elijah could think of the future. The women had repaired pieces of cloth and made new garments from them.
The old folk were reorganizing the dwellings and attending to the city's sanitation. The children were helping when asked, but they usually spent the day at play: that is a child's foremost obligation.
Elijah lived with the boy in a small stone house rebuilt on the site that had once been a storage place for merchandise. Each night the inhabitants of Akbar would sit around a fire in the main square, telling stories that they had heard earlier in their lives, alongside the boy, who noted everything on clay tablets that were baked the next day. The library was growing before their very eyes.