irritation, and the big man on the precipice would be no angel
out of hell. His shouted words would only be another earthly
test ofJesus's patience, simple to combat, safe to ignore.
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Jesus, though, was young and inexperienced. His life so far
had been unGreek. It was cheerless and demanding. Death was
still far enough away - and too improbable - for him to want
to believe that there might be no reckoning. He was, besides, a
villager, too direct and untutored to take much comfort from
abstract notions that life was finite or that the devil was not flesh
and blood. For him - although he could not put the words to
it - the living devil was just as real as god. Indeed, the devil was
the living proof of god, for everything that god had made was
weak and blemished and imperfect by design. God's pot had
cracked inside the kiln, so that his sons and daughters could by
their labours and their prayers restore perfection to the pot. The
devil occupied the crack, and lay in wait like a thief God put
him there. To deny the presence of the devil was to turn against
the perfect blemishes of god.
So Jesus was in little doubt that, should the devil choose, he
could easily appear as Musa on the precipice. He could produce
a thousand leather bags. He could invade his soul and jostle for
a perch inside his heart as truly and as tangibly as a raidingjackdaw
could invade an open nest and jostle out its chirping innocents
with its black wings. That was the drama and the cruel romance
ofJesus's theology. That's why he clung so greedily to god. This
was not the Galilee, with its flax fields and walnut groves and
rain, its cousins and its fig-shaded yards. He only had to stare
out of his cave to know for sure. The evidence was large. This
was the devil's kingdom. Hot winds. Hard rocks. Dry leaves. A
barren universe, and death disguised.
Jesus, then, could not be calmly Greek and radical in this
demonic scrub. How could he be when the devil called him
from the precipice, when the jackdaw's matted wing was hard
against his face? He was alone, exposed, a chirping innocent.
And yet he felt triumphant too. Thank heavens for the devil,
even, for the devil was the herald of god. 'The devil and the bee
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obstruct the way to heaven and to honey. The path to sweetness
is a stinging one,' according to the country psalm. As he grew
closer to his god, the devil's fat hand would wrap itself round
Jesus's thin wrist. The devil's lips would press against his ear.
God would watch and bide his time, and ifhis Galilean son stood
firm, god's cushioned fingers would take him by the elbow and
the hand and ease him from the devil's grasp. Why else had Jesus
come into the wilderness? To be the chosen one. To be the
battleground. To be eased to freedom from the devil's grasp.
So even though Jesus was distressed by Musa' s daily visitations,
he understood that god was watching him at last. That gave him
strength, and helped him to withstand the chilling offers from
the promontory and to see the devil's plan more clearly. Musa's
offers were too crudely tempting; his summonses for Jesus to
vacate the precipice and heal the sick were too bespoke to be
remotely innocent. The scriptures said, The devil comes and offers
you your heart's desire, beware; he promises a boat to fishermen, and
proffers horses to a man that hopes to ride; he places cushions at your
back and brings in figs on silver plates, and wine. And that had always
been Jesus's greatest, maddest hope, his heart's desire, to serve
god by driving out illnesses and spirits, to cure and to heal. He
did not see himself a hermit, engaging with his god forever in a
cave. He did not see himself a scholar, poring over texts. He did
not have the learning or the self-regard. He did not see himself
a priest. He was too shy.
He wanted most to serve his god in simpler ways which did
not require either confidence or reading, ways which could be
witnessed by his family and his neighbours. More cowardly ways,
perhaps? At best, he'd preach to villagers and children, anyone
who would not challenge him and not call out, 'Your head's in
heaven, Gally. Full of clouds.' He'd even be prepared - and
glad - to defile himself on those kept out of temples - lepers,
menstruating women, prostitutes, the blind, even the uncircum-
cized - if they would listen to him, if it would cause discomfort
to the priest. These were the ones, he thought, that god had
created weak and blemished and imperfect by design. These
were the chirping innocents that he should rescue from the
devil's claw, for he himself was weak and blemished and imperfect
by design. These people were his family.
Jesus had always been ashamed of his ambition, but this is
what he'd dreamed since he was young. There was a congregation
on a hill slope in the Galilee. He was the tallest, and he looked
down on their heads. He recognized his brothers' hair, his
neighbours' hair, the baker's and the priest's, the leper's, and the
prostitute's uncovered hair. But they were tired of listening to
sermons. 'Come up to me, the sick, the troubled and the blind,'
he'd say. He'd put his hands on eyes and foreheads, rub out
pains, press his fingers into hardened flesh, remove their swellings
with a touch, kiss sores. Erase their sins. He'd cure them. They'd
be restored, through him, by god. And, yes, he'd find a boat for
fishermen, and horses for the men too weak to walk. They'd say
- a phrase he loved - 'We never knew our Gaily after all. He is
the bread of our short lives. He is the good shepherd who will
lead us out of suffering.'
He'd never boasted such a dream to anyone - not to his
parents or the priest, not even to his god in prayer, and hardly
to himself This was his smothered heart's desire, unspoken and
invisible. Yet here was someone - this resurrected fat man,
dangling provisions from the sununit of the precipice - who
called him by his other name and seemed to see inside his heart.
Someone who heard what was not said. Someone who saw what
was not on display. No one had ever offered Jesus such perfect
blandishments before, or such flattery. Yes, he was tempted to
go up and test his healing prayers at the tent, to sacrifice his fast
for them. He felt he had the cure in his fingertips. They only
had to touch. They trembled at the thought of it. The hands
that could remove the knots from wood, release the pigeons
pinioned by the twigs, could drive out fevers and disease. He'd
be the carpenter of damaged souls. But god was watching him,
beyond the devil and the bees, and saying nothing. He gave no
sign to Jesus. And no sign was the sign that these appeals to
vanity could only be the devil's work. He'd have to learn to
block his ears and eyes for fear of joining them, the demons on
the rock.
So Jesus closed himself against his tempters. He would not be
seduced or fooled by the contents of a leather bag. He half-heard,
through his fingertips, Musa calling from the rim, his voice
unnatural: 'Gaily. Gaily. Look outside. There's water. And some
food. Dates. Some bread. My wife. Has baked for you . . . Gaily,
Gaily. Speak to us.' He did not move. He hardly breathed. He
was beyond temptation now. His appetites were dead.
It was hard to concentrate, but he managed to expel Musa
from his thoughts and shut their voices out. He set his mind on
future, better times: his quarantine had ended; he had proved
his worthiness. He saw himself walking through Jerusalem
towards the temple, through the trading tables and the booths
which filled the outer courts. The merchants and the dealers and
the money-changers, the people who wore soft clothes and ate
wheat bread and reclined on couches like the Greeks, would all
call out to him in their high voices, 'Gaily, Gaily, eat our cakes
and drink our wine. Buy pigeons and dates from us.' Musa would
be there, with leather bags for sale. But Jesus could not be
seduced, not by the devil in the scrub, not by the devils crowding
at the temple walls. He'd turn their tables over, empty out their
bags, drive off their animals. He'd put his foot in Musa's flesh
and kick him through the gates.
But first he had the opportunity to kick a bag. It held the
devil's water and the devil's bread, the devil's finest dates. How
much he'd love to open up the bag and sup on it. How much
he'd be relieved to break his fast, and flood the valley of his
throat.
He managed to get up on to his feet, although his ankles ached
alarmingly and all his bones protested at the effort. He could not
swing his foot to kick the bag. He reached his arm out into the
early evening light. There was no sun to warm him; how foolish
and how strong he'd been to jettison his clothes. He wrapped
his fingers round the plaited rope. He pulled the bag towards
the cave, and caught it in both hands. He smelled the bread -
the water too - in those few moments that he held the bag. He
smelled the blood, the mildew and the carrion that lingered on
the leather. He tugged on it. The rope tightened for an instant
and came free as Musa or one of his accomplices let go of the
far end. He sensed their triumph. He would make it brief Before
the rope could slither from the rim and fall at the entrance to
the cave, Jesus had tossed the bag away as if it had claws and
teeth, a rabid bat. He hadn't got much strength. He was surprised
how heavy it had seemed, but still it cleared the platform of the
cave and fell towards the valley, bouncing on the precipice until
the water-pouch inside, unseen, split open from the impact of
the rocks. The leather bag became too empty and too light to
fall much more. It lay - forever; kippered by the sun - between