The Lamp of Darkness - - (best finance books of all time TXT) š
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āThis isnāt for us,ā Daniel whispered. āCome, we can speak in the musiciansā cave.ā
I stood and reluctantly followed Daniel. I knew that prophecy could come through dreamsāJacobās vision of the ladder came in a dreamābut I had never known that my own dreams might contain prophecy. I longed to hear about unlocking their secrets, but as I followed Daniel away from the eating area, I realized that it didnāt matter much. Yosef said that to decipher your dreams, you needed to remember them. There was only one dream I really wanted to understand, but I could never remember the slightest detail of my old nightmare. Besides, if I ever could remember what the dream contained, I was pretty sure I wouldnāt need a master to help me interpret itāit felt more like an evil memory than a prophecy.
Pale blue light still filled the western horizon, but with the moon only a sliver, the trail was little more than a gray smudge on dark ground. Daniel led us, walking with the comfort of one who knew his way.
āWill they also wake us in the middle of the night?ā Zim asked.
āNo, they donāt need us until an hour or two after sunrise.ā
āGood, because the second watch is when I normally go to sleep.ā
Thistles snagged the hem of my tunic as the path narrowed at the foot of the cliff. It wound upwards, in some spots little more than a ledge bound by a sheer drop, widening out as we passed cave openings. We stayed close to Daniel, the darkness forcing us to rely on his position to avoid a deadly misstep.
āWhy do you go to sleep so late?ā Yonaton asked Zim.
āItās when I play my best musicāthereās a special energy to the night.ā
āI wouldnāt know,ā Yonaton replied. āIn my house, we go to sleep as soon as we can after sunset and wake before dawn. My father says sleep is the bodyās reward. I couldnāt get up if I stayed awake playing.ā
āThatās why I never rise before the third hour of the day if I can help it.ā
My jaw dropped. āAre you royalty?ā
Zim laughed, āWhy would you say that?ā
āWhenever Iām slow out of bed, my uncle tells me that only princes sleep until the third hour of the day.ā
āNo, I have no noble blood. My fatherās a farmer, and so was his. But farmingās not for me. I left home for good a year ago.ā
The path flattened out, and we stepped onto a rock ledge at the mouth of the highest cave. The cliff face rose above us into the darkness. Even in the dim light, I saw a circle of boulders out front, surrounding a fire pit dark with charcoal.
āThen how do you eat?ā Yonaton asked.
āMy music.ā Zim retrieved a drum from inside the cave, sat down on one of the boulders, and gently tapped the taut hide with his fingertips. Though hardly focused on his drumming, his sense of rhythm was excellent. āIāve found enough work between weddings and festivals.ā
āWhat kind of festivals?ā
āAll kinds. The best is coming up at the full moon in ShilohāI never miss it.ā
I swung my kinnor off my shoulder and straddled one of the boulders. āBut youāll still be here then, wonāt you?ā
āWhen Master Yosef hired me I told him Iād come only if I could still play Shiloh.ā
āHow about you, Daniel? Is that what you do too?ā Yonaton asked.
āMe?ā Daniel chuckled as he sat down, clutching his nevel, a standup harp twice the size of my kinnor. āNo, I have a wife and three daughters; I canāt be running around to festivals all the time. Itās only while my wheat is drying that I can devote myself to music.ā
āIsnāt it hard being away from your family?ā Yonaton asked.
āSure itās hard, but my nevel is easier to work than my land, and copper doesnāt spoil.ā Daniel began to pick out notes and tighten strings.
Zim cocked his head toward Yonaton, āFirst time away from home?ā
Yonaton nodded, āIāve never even slept away before.ā
āHow far did you come?ā I asked.
āNot far. We live just on the other side of that hill.ā
āSo why not go home at night?ā
āMy father told me I canāt expect the prophets to send someone round to the farm every time they need me. Still, itās nice to know I can run home if I need to, and my sisters said theyād visit.ā Yonaton pulled a halil, a wooden fife two handbreadths long, from his belt. āHow about you, Lev? Do you play festivals or do you also work your fatherās land?ā
I plucked the strings of my kinnor, feeling their eyes but not looking up. āMy fatherās dead. My mother too. I shepherd my uncleās flock.ā
My words killed the conversation. I knew this moment, having experienced it so many times in the pastāthe awkward quiet, the eyes turning away. Zim filled the silence with his drumming, increasing his pace and power. Daniel joined in, picking up Zimās beat, with crisp plucks against the long strings of his nevel, the notes reverberating into the cool evening air. Only Yonaton remained silent. My eyes were dryāI learned long ago that tears would neither bring back my parents nor water the flockābut I was surprised to see that Yonatonās reflected more of the night sky than my dry eyes ever could. I smiled and raised my kinnor, indicating that there was no more to say. Yonaton wiped his eyes across his sleeve, smiled back, and raised his halil to his lips.
The stars were already bright in the sky when I saw twinkling lights ascend the trail toward the caves. āWhat are those lights?ā
āLamps,ā Daniel said. āThe disciples are going to sleep.ā
āAnd they carry their own lamps?ā At my uncleās house, lamps were reserved for holy timesāolive oil was too precious to burn during the week.
The disciples reached their caves, and the lights went out. āIām glad Iām not one of them,ā Zim said.
My hand dropped from the strings of my kinnor, and I stared across at Zim. āIs it really so hard to go to sleep early?ā
Zim laughed and leaned into his drum. His right hand tapped out higher-pitched notes on the drumās edge as his left palm pounded the center with a booming bass.
And then it suddenly occurred to me: there could be only one explanation for his lack of interest. āYouāve never seen them taken by prophecy, have you?ā
Zim met my eyes without breaking his rhythm. āNo. Have you?ā
āYes.ā That one word was enough to silence Zim and draw the stares of Daniel and Yonaton, but I wasnāt done. āWhen you see it, youāll understandāā
āDonāt envy the prophets, Lev.ā Daniel let his hands rest on his nevel and our song unraveledāonly Zim kept up the beat.
I turned on Daniel, āWhatās not to envy?ā
Daniel sighed, āTheirs is a path that will lead you nowhere.ā
āWhy nowhere?ā Yonaton asked. āLook at the mastersāā
āYes, Yonaton, look at the masters. Take Master Uriel. Where do you think heāll be come harvest time when our backs are bent with labor? Out in the fields with us?ā Zim snorted, and Daniel turned to me. āCan you imagine him chasing your sheep over the hillsides?ā
He leaned over his nevel to press his point. āIāve been playing here for twelve years. The first day, thereās always a musician or two who dreams of becoming a prophet; but soon enough they learn thatās all they areādreams. And youāll learn too.ā
I recalled my last conversation with Dahlia, how she said that there was no telling where my future would lead. āBut even dreams can come trueācanāt they?ā
āNot this one. Itās as King Solomon said: Wisdom is good with an inheritance.ā
I winced at the word inheritance. āWhat does that mean?ā
āIt means that it doesnāt matter how wise or holy you are, Lev, youāll never become a navi. Look at the bnei neviāim: servants prepare their food, they light lamps to walk back to their cavesāsome even arrived on their own horses. They donāt dress like you. They donāt smell like you.ā Zim chortled. Yonaton quietly sniffed his tunic. āMost of the disciples study for years before receiving navua, if they receive it at all. Who do you think watches their farms or their flocks while theyāre searching for the Holy One?ā
I shrugged.
āYou have to be rich to become a prophet; thereās never been one that wasnāt. As far as I can tell, itās part of their Way.ā
I opened my mouth to respond but shut it again. What could I say? Uncle Menachem always told me that the smart man learns from his mistakes, but I never seemed to. When would I stop falling into the trap of clinging to dreams that could never come true? I was like the fool in Eliavās favorite story, the one who sat by a pool of still water, the moon reflected in its surface. Such a beautiful stone, he thought, if he could only get it for himself, heād be a rich man. But when he grabbed for it, his hands plunged into the cold water and the moon disappeared. He cursed himself for his stupidity, but when the water calmed, the moon reappeared, and he thought that perhaps this time heād be lucky.
Daniel watched me closely. āDonāt look like that. You have a surer path open to you.ā
āWhatās that?ā I asked, daring him to tout the joys of shepherding.
āThe neviāim use your music to lift themselves beyond this world. You may not reach prophecy, but it can uplift you as well. You just need to learn to play properlyāstart with this.ā Daniel leaned his nevel against the boulder, came around behind me, and laid his hands over mine. He pulled my left hand further down the front of my kinnor and placed it in an unfamiliar hold. He twisted the angle of my plucking hand, my right. I didnāt like the feel of his hands on mineāafter what he just told me I would have preferred to be left aloneābut I didnāt fight him. āGrip it like this, firm up your left hand, but loosen your right. Now listen.ā Daniel plucked the highest string, and the kinnor let out a crisp, clear note.
āIt feels awkward.ā
āYouāre used to doing it wrong. Give it timeāyouāll bring out the full voice of your kinnor. Itās a fine, fine instrument.ā
Yonaton pulled his halil away from his lips. āThey donāt smell like us?ā Daniel laughed, āSniff one tomorrow. Theyāre obsessed with purity. Most bathe at least once a day.ā He returned to his nevel and picked up the melody again. āThe way I see it, how much do they really have to tie them to this world? That must be why they can rise above it so easily.ā
āItās not so easy,ā Zim said, drumming now with his fingertips so as not to drown out his voice. āThey need us.ā
āJust the disciplesāthe masters donāt need musicians.ā
āBut Master Uriel did.ā I sat straighter now that I knew something that Daniel didnāt. āThe day we met, he came to me for my music. Thatās how I was hired.ā
Daniel inclined his head to the side and stared at me again, then turned his eyes away and shrugged. āIāve never seen a master use a musician before.ā
Zim waved off our words with the back of his hand. āEnough of this. We may not be prophets, but we know what we need.ā He stepped up his playing, and the rest of us followed his lead, bringing the conversation to an end.
The music indeed was unlike any Iād ever played. Few in Levonah had the time or patience to play instruments
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