It seemed as though his luck had turned again and was smiling on the tenacious traveler. The Jews of Metz, whom the news of the ban had not yet reached, had been ready to come, with the satisfaction of fulfilling a command as their only reward, to make up a quorum of ten for a Jewish wayfarer whose sister-in-law, his wife’s sister, had fallen sick. So Rabbi Elbaz had chosen again, as in Rouen, to attach the two women to each other by a more usual and acceptable relationship, in order not to arouse unnecessary thoughts. Only one slight cloud darkened the joy. On the way, one of the Jews had had second thoughts and had turned back to Metz, leaving seven men instead of eight. If no other Jews could be found in Verdun, how would they make up the quorum?
Since the sun in the sky could not wait for another Jew to be born in Verdun and reach the age of legal majority—for from India to Abyssinia and from Babylon to Spain, the Jews of the entire world were standing and waiting to inaugurate the solemn fast—and while the seven Jews from Metz were hastening to atone for themselves with the doves left in the sack and decapitating and plucking them to add them to the stewpot steaming in the smoke of the fire, it was clear to the shrewd Andalusian rabbi by what device he might produce another Jew, although only a temporary one, for the purposes of the prayer. As usual without disclosing anything of his plan to Ben Attar, who had gone into the physician’s house to hurry his first wife, who for some reason was lingering with the second wife, he separated himself from the group and went behind the gray church to the pasture where the horses were grazing, to tell the wise Abd el-Shafi that if the prayers of supplication for the recovery of the sick woman were to be accepted in heaven on the holy day, there was no alternative but to transform the black African into a Jew for the space of a single day.
While Ben Attar joined his first wife and the apostate physician’s wife, who were both trying, one with words and the other with pleading looks, to persuade the ill woman to taste at least a thimbleful of the reddish stew, in the green meadow Abd el-Shafi and the rabbi from Seville were stripping the young slave of his robe and immersing the smoothness of his black nakedness in a little pool of water that the River Meuse had managed to send this far. Since Abu Lutfi had farsightedly circumcised the black youth before taking him on board, so the sailors would not attempt to do it themselves, all that remained for Rabbi Elbaz to do was to turn him into a Jew by immersing him twice, once to wash away his idolatrous delusions and once to purge him for his reception by the chosen people. At once the other Jews were called to immerse themselves and to confess to one another sins both genuine and feigned, and if possible to flagellate themselves a little, before saying the afternoon prayers and gathering around the fire to eat their last supper—eight born Jews and one proselyte, waiting for the leader of the expedition to make up the number ten.
But the leader of the expedition was not yet able to leave his second wife. After sending the two other women out of the dimly lit room, he tried, using the soft language of love, not only to feed her some tender morsels of pigeon with his own hands but to repeat to her that the only effect of despair and guilt was to poison the world. A new hope was brewing in the North African’s mind that everything that had befallen them would fly away like dust, and the ban and interdict, having failed to overtake them on their rapid flight westward, would turn tail despondently and sink forever into the soggy mire that surrounded the prayer house in Worms. The second wife listened attentively to his words and yielded to his entreaties to swallow some of the bean stew, including some pieces of the flesh of her tender expiation, encouraged by her husband, who set her an example by eating some with her. Despite an occasional tremor in the muscles of her back, Ben Attar did not relent until between them they had licked the platter clean.
When Ben Attar emerged into the evening twilight, completing by his presence the congregation of ten males required for public prayer, there was no reason for further delay. Indeed, the first wife had resourcefully located in the luggage a prayer shawl for the new black Jew, who was seized with excitement and dread on realizing that he had been attached to the faith of the Jews at their most sacred and awesome hour. Although Abd el-Shafi assured him that his affiliation was temporary and short-lived, the slave’s heart still quaked within him as the strange Jews closed in all around him and turned to face the east. It was evident from the first moment that two different prayer rites would have to be combined somehow in the course of the holy day—that of the Jews of the Christian kingdoms, who were faithful to the abbreviated but intense rite of Rav Amram Gaon, in which the service for the Day of Atonement began with the words “O God and God of our fathers, let our prayer come before thee and do not reject our supplication, for we are arrogant and stiff-necked,” and that of the Jews of the Muslim caliphate, who were accustomed to the more expansive and detailed wording of the older rite compiled by Rav Saadia Gaon, which brooded over the opening of the Atonement liturgy in these words: “Thou knowest the mysteries of the universe and the innermost secrets of all living beings. Thou searchest the chambers of the belly and seest the innards and the heart. Nothing is hidden from thee, nor is aught concealed from thine eyes …”
Therefore the two rites were attentively and respectfully blended together, and even the melodies adapted themselves to each other, and all was done cautiously, quietly, and properly, so as not to attract undue attention from the Verdun folk, who were gathering to pray in the gray church of Notre Dame, and also not to disturb the devotions of the two Ishmaelite sailors, who had been moved by the religious fervor of those around them to prostrate themselves on the ground in testimony to others and to themselves too that they also had a prophet, who was all the younger and fresher for having come more recently. In the face of such pluri-religious piety, the apostate physician, who had returned from his visits and his bloodletting, did not hasten to church but sat down in the dark on the doorstep of his house, hugging his two small sons and staring unseeingly at the outlines of the Jews which filled the little wood nearby.
Does our worship make him feel regret or hatred? wondered Rabbi Elbaz, who had been sent by Ben Attar at the end of the evening service to the second wife, to bolster her spirits with a special prayer, and who now stumbled over the physician as he sat in the doorway of his house, flanked by his two sons, as though to block the entrance against the Jews, who had turned his home into their own domain. But when the physician saw that the rabbi bowed his head humbly and withdrew, he felt a pang of remorse in case he had offended the small man of God, and he hastened to straighten himself and dismiss the sons, and he invited the rabbi into the inner chamber, possibly so they could resume the conversation they had embarked on during the previous visit, which had been peremptorily cut short by a look from the blue-eyed woman. The inner chamber was very somber, being lit by only a single small candle fixed to a crucifix. The physician’s wife was sitting at the bedside of the second wife, who was lying peacefully with her head inclined backward, as though an invisible hand were drawing it like a bowstring.
At the sight of the rabbi a spark of life flared in the sad amber-colored eyes. She sat up a little in bed, and in hoarse Arabic she implored Elbaz to ask the physician to extinguish the candle, for even its faint light pained her eyes. Although he was surprised at her request, he translated it into his quaint Latin for the benefit of the physician, who, unperturbed, nodded his agreement, as though confirming to himself his diagnosis of the illness. Picking up the candlestick in the form of a crucifix, he handed it to his wife to put in a seemly place in the other chamber. Now that the room was in darkness, the moonlight shone more brightly through the single small window, and the second wife at once turned toward it in wonder, as though not understanding how she had failed to notice it before and wondering how she could diminish it, if not extinguish it altogether. She turned her flushed face toward the rabbi from Seville with a kind of smile in her bloodshot eyes, as though surprised that she could ask him to put out the moon for her sake. He responded with a wide, open smile, perhaps the first smile since they had met on the old guardship, and the sweet smell of his late wife’s sickbed assailed his nostrils, so that a hard knot of tears constricted his throat. Suddenly he could stand it no more, and in a whisper he turned to the physician and asked in the ancient Hebrew tongue, Will she live?