The Seventh Scroll - Smith Wilbur - Страница 76
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the boy.
"I think we should start with Tamre, our faithful guide," she said, and
took his hand. "Listen to me, Tamre. Listen very carefully!" Obediently
he cocked his head and stared at her face, summoning all his errant
concentration.
"We are looking for a place where the square stones come from." He
looked mystified, so she tried again. "Long ago there were men who cut
the rock from the mountains.
Somewhere near here, they left a big hole. Perhaps there are still
square blocks of stone lying in the hole?"
Suddenly the boy's face cleared and split into a beatific smile. "The
Jesus stone!the cried happily.
He sprang to his feet without relinquishing his grip on her hand. "I
show you my Jesus stone." He dragged her after him as he bounded away
down the valley.
"Wait, Tamre! she pleaded. "Not so fast." But in vain.
Tamre kept up the pace and burst into an Amharic hymn as he ran.
Nicholas followed at a more sedate pace, and caught up with them a
quarter of a mile down the valley.
There he found Tamre on his knees, pressing his forehead against the
rock wall of the valley, his eyes shut tightly as he prayed. He had
dragged Royan down beside him.
"What on earth are you doing?"Nicholas demanded, as he came up.
"We are praying," she told him primly. "Tamre's instructions. We have to
pray before we can go to the Jesus stone." She turned away from
Nicholas, closed her eyes and clasped her hands in front of her eyes,
then began to pray softly.
Nicholas found a seat on a boulder a little way from them. "I don't
suppose it can do any harm," he consoled himself, as he settled down to
wait.
Abruptly Tamre sprang to his feet and performed a giddy little dance,
flapping his arms and whirling around until he raised the dust. Then he
stopped and chanted. "It is done. We can go in to the Jesus stone."
Once again he seized Royan's hand and led her to the rock wall. In front
of Nicholas's eyes the two of them seemed to vanish, and he stood up in
mild alarm.
"Royan!" he called. "Where are you? What's going on?"
"This way, Nicky. Come this way!'
He went to the wall and exclaimed with astonishment, "My oath! We would
never have found this in a year of searching."
The cliff face was folded back upon itself, forming a concealed
entrance. He walked through the opening, gazing up the vertical sides,
and within thirty paces came out into an open amphitheatre that was at
least a hundred yards across and open to the sky. The walls were of
solid rock, and he could see at a glance that it was the same micaceous
schist as the block which Royan had found lying on the floor of the
valley.
It was apparent that the bowl had been quarried out of the living rock,
leaving tiers rising up to the top of the walls. The recesses from which
the blocks had been hacked were still plain to see and had left deep
steps with rightangled profiles. Some scrub and undergrowth had found a
precarious foothold in the cracks, but the open quarry was not choked
with this growth and Nicholas could see that a stockpile of finished
granite blocks remained scattered about the bottom of the excavation. He
was so awed by the discovery that he could find no words to express
himself. He stood just inside the entrance, his head slowly turning from
side to side as he tried to take it all in.
Tamre had led Royan to the centre of the quarry where one large slab lay
on its own. It was obvious that the ancients had been on the point -of
removing it and transporting it up the valley, for it was finished and
dressed into a perfect rectangle.
"The Jesus stone!" Tamre chanted, kneeling before the slab and pulling
Royan down beside him. "Jesus led me here. The first time I came here I
saw him standing on the stone. He had a long white beard and eyes that
were kind and sad." He crossed himself and began to recite one of the
psalms, swaying and bobbing to the rhythm.
As Nicholas moved up quietly behind them he saw the evidence that Tamre
had visited this sacred place of his regularly. The Jesus stone was his
own private altar, and his pathetic little offerings were lying where he
had laid them. There were old tej flasks and baked clay pots, most of
them cracked and broken. In them stood bunches of wild flowers that had
long ago wilted and dried out. There were other treasures that he had
gathered and placed upon his altar - tortoise shells and porcupine
quills, a cross that had been hand-carved from wood and decorated with
scraps of coloured cloth, necklaces of lucky beans, and models of
animals and birds moulded from blue river clay.
Nicholas stood and watched the two of them kneeling and praying together
in front of the primitive altar. He felt deeply moved by this evidence
of the boy's faith, and by his childlike trust in bringing them to this
place.
At last Royan stood up and came to join him. Together she and Nicholas
began to make a slow circuit of the quarry floor. They spoke little, and
then only in whispers as though they were in a cathedral or some holy
place. She touched his arm and pointed. A number of the square blocks
still lay in their original positions in the quarry walls. They had not
been completely freed from the mother rock, like a foetus attached by an
umbilical cord which had never been severed by the ancient masons.
It was a perfect illustration of the quarrying methods used by the
ancients. Work could be seen in progress in all the various stages, from
the marking out of the blocks by the master craftsman, the drilling of
the tap holes, the wedging of the cleavage lines, right up to the
finished product lifted out of the wall and ready for transport to the
dam site.
The sun had set and it was almost dark by the time they came round to
the entrance of the quarry again. They sat together on one of the
finished blocks, with Tamre sitting at their feet like a puppy, looking
up at Royan's face.
"If he had a tail he would wag it,'Nicholas smiled.
"We can never betray his trust, and desecrate this place in any way. He
has made it his own temple. I don't think he has ever brought another
living soul here. Will you promise me that we will always respect it, no
matter what?"
"That is the very least I can do," he agreed. Then, turning to Tamre, he
said, "You have done a very good thing by bringing us here to your Jesus
stone. I am very pleased with you. The lady is very pleased with you."
"We should start back to camp now," Royan suggested, looking up at the
patch of sky above them. Already it was purple and indigo, shot through
with the last rays of the sunset.
"I don't think that would be very wise," he disagreed.
"Because it is a moonless night one of us could very easily break a leg
in the dark. That is something not to be recommended out here. It might
take a week to get back to any adequate medical attention."
"You plan to sleep here?" she asked, with surprise.
"Why not? I can whip up a fire in no time and I also have a pack of
survival rations for dinner - I have done this kind of thing before, you
know! And you have your chaperon with you, so your honour is safe. So
why not?"
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