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 Climbing ropes? I interrupted. It was only the second time I had spoken, but
the image of mountaineering monks was too incongruous for silence.
 We live on a cliff, Abbot Mattias pointed out with a smile.  There are times
when we need to rescue the straying kid of a Bedouin flock or remove a boulder
that threatens our heads or our roof tiles. Some of the younger brothers enjoy
the task. I know I did when I was younger. Also a small amount of money, he
said, returning to Holmes question.  We never keep much. Our needs are met by
our mother monastery in Jerusalem.
 Does that house also dress in the same habits?
 Of course.
 Ah.
 Yes. And one other thing. A small ikon. Not valuable monetarily outside the
community, but of historical significance and of great value to us. A
painting, six inches by eight, of the Holy Virgin Mother.
 Have you reported any of this?
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The abbot just smiled sadly. This land had a long way to go before it could
think of the police as either friendly or helpful.
 Father Abbot, may I suggest that your house in Jerusalem be warned to watch
for any strangers who might be trying to pass themselves off as monks?
 I shall write to them, yes. However, Jerusalem is filled with strangers in
monastic dress, from all the corners of the earth.
 One last thing. My head came around involuntarily at the tightness in
Holmes voice.  Can you give me a description of the man?
The question surprised the abbot enough to cause his eyes to narrow.  I
understood that you had met him.
 I& encountered him. I should know his voice if I heard it again, his smell,
possibly his step, but I never laid eyes upon him. Holmes face was shut up,
rock hard but for a tiny spasm of tension in his jaw. I looked back up at the
Virgin, who seemed to tell me that she had seen it all before, but I did not
find the thought comforting.
 I see, said the abbot.
 I do know a great deal about him. I know that he was born in the vicinity of
Istanbul approximately forty years ago. I know that he went to university in
Germany and spent time in Buda-Pest. I know he is highly educated, thinks of
himself as cultured, is near my own height, and right-handed. He is missing
two or three teeth in the back of his mouth, and he prefers Western-style
trousers and boots with soft heels. He bathes twice a day, uses a French hair
pomade, and smokes expensive Turkish cigarettes. I know that he has read
widely in European philosophy, that he speaks German, English, Turkish, and
three dialects of Arabic fluently, and other tongues with a lesser degree of
comfort. I know that he controls his subordinates with a combination of reward
and fear, that they are terrified of his temper, which is cold and vicious
rather than violent. I know that he enjoys causing pain in the innocent. I
know he is a dangerous man. I do not, however, know what he looks like,
because he never& approached me to my face.
He was, I think, telling me what he had been through as much as he was
answering the abbot, and my stomach turned at the picture. To be strung up
with one s arms together so as to make turning the head impossible; to stare
at a blank wall and have pain inflicted without even seeing it coming, by a
person no, the abbot was right, this was not a person by a creature who was no
more than an accented voice, an elusive drift of odours, a step of shoes, and
a rustle of clothing.
The abbot blinked his lizard blink.  Your ears and nose told you all this?
 My mind told me this, Holmes replied coldly.
 God has given you a great gift, my son. It was Holmes turn to blink.  The
man is, as you say, tall, perhaps an inch less tall than you, and heavier, but
not fat. His hair is black and beginning to thin, his skin slightly swarthy,
his eyes dark. His beard was full but neatly trimmed. Not a distinctive face,
but his mouth betrays him. His lips are too heavy. His is a greedy mouth,
never satisfied.
 Would he appear European, if he had no beard?
 No, the abbot replied.  Not the least bit.
So, this was not the man who had spoken with the mullah in Jaffa.
 Any scars, marks, features that stand out?
The abbot thought.  A small scar, here. He laid his finger at the outside
edge of his left eye.  And a mark, a mole, just past his beard here. He
raised his chin and tapped the right side of his throat.  Also, I believe he
was accustomed to wearing a ring on his right hand, although he did not have
it on while he was here. There was a light patch on the finger, he said.
 Abbot Mattias, you would have made a good detective, said Holmes.
 And you, my son, in very different circumstances, might have made a good
abbot.
I had not thought to hear Holmes laugh for a long time. The sound cheered me a
great deal.
The half-moon lit our way as we followed a sleepy brother up a path to a pair
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of cells enlarged caves, in the hillside. The night was cold, but heavy wraps
made it bearable, and I fell asleep quickly.
During the night a noise outside my monastic cell woke me: Holmes moving past,
outlined against the moonlit sky. I slid from my pallet and went out onto the
pathway, where I watched him make his way down from our quarters to the
central portion of the monastery. He stopped outside the abbot s door, and
must have tapped or called quietly, because after a minute the door opened and
Holmes went inside. He was still there an hour later when I went back to
sleep.
I did not awaken until the sun crept through the cave entrance. I knocked a
scorpion out of my boots, fixed my turban firmly in place, and came out to
find Holmes sitting on the ground in front of his cell, watching the small
signs of life in the wadi before us. He looked rested: the bruises were
fading, his eyes were clear again. I sat down ten feet away from him, and
considered asking him about his midnight visit to the abbot. If it was about
information, it clearly had no urgency about it, but there was also the
distinct possibility that he had gone to the man for what could only be called
pastoral care. In that case it would be best to pretend I had slept through
his nocturnal excursion. We sat together in the morning sun and meditated on
the life of the Wadi Qelt.
The sun heated the rocks around us, causing a smell of warm dust to rise up
and mingle with the crisp odour of the wet stones of the stream below. Our
clothing smelt, too, although I was becoming accustomed to that, and the air
moving down the valley brought with it a hint of incense from the chapel,
accompanied now and then by the rhythm of chanted prayer. Bells had sounded
earlier, the dull clatter so different from the resonant English bells; now I
heard a tiny scuffle coming from beneath a bare shrub, which proved to be a
small brown bird scratching in the dry leaf fall for its breakfast. Other
birds squabbled and gossipped in the fronds of a palm tree, an eagle rode the [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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