The Cole Trilogy: The Physician, Shaman, and Matters of Choice (54 page)

BOOK: The Cole Trilogy: The Physician, Shaman, and Matters of Choice
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Musing on the puzzle that was Persia, he went home on unsteady legs under pearling skies and to the lovely sound of the
muezzin
from the minaret of the Friday Mosque.

43

THE MEDICAL PARTY

Ibn Sina was accustomed to the pious doomsaying of Imam Qandrasseh, who could not control the Shah but who had been warning his advisers with increasing stridency that wine-drinking and licentiousness would bring retribution from a force higher than the throne. To this end the Vizier had been collecting intelligence from abroad and presenting a pattern of evidence that Allah (all-powerful is He!) was furious with sinners all over the earth.

Travelers along the Silk Road had brought word of disastrous earthquakes and pestilential fogs in the part of China watered by the Kiang and Hoai rivers. In India, a year of drought had been followed by plentiful spring rain, but the burgeoning crops were devoured by a plague of locusts. Great storms had battered the coast of the Arabian Sea, causing flooding that drowned many, while in Egypt there was famine due to the failure of the Nile to rise to the requisite level. In Maluchistan, a smoking mountain opened and spewed forth a river of molten rock. Two
mullahs
in Nain reported that demons appeared to them in their sleep. Exactly one month before the fast of
Ramadan
there was a partial eclipse of the sun, and then the heavens appeared to burn; strange celestial fires were observed.

The worst portent of Allah’s displeasure came from the royal astrologers, who reported with great trepidation that within two months there would be a grand conjunction of the three superior planets, Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars, in the sign of Aquarius. There were disputes about the exact date when this would occur, but no disagreement about its gravity. Even Ibn Sina heard the news gravely, for he knew that Aristotle had written of the menace inherent in the conjunction of Mars and Jupiter.

So it seemed preordained when Qandrasseh summoned Ibn Sina one bright, terrible morning and told him pestilence had broken out in Sh
ī
r
ā
z, the largest city in the territory of Anshan.

“What pestilence?”

“The Death,” the Imam said.

Ibn Sina blanched and hoped the Imam was wrong, for the Death had been absent from Persia for three hundred years. But his mind went directly to the problem. “Soldiers must be ordered down the Spice Road at once, to turn back all caravans and travelers coming from the south. And we must send a medical party to Anshan.”

“We do not gain very much from Anshan in taxes,” the Imam said, but Ibn Sina shook his head.

“It is in our self-interest to contain the disease, for the Death moves readily from place to place.”

By the time he had returned to his own home, Ibn Sina had decided he couldn’t send a group of his own colleagues, for if the plague should reach Ispahan the physicians would be needed in their own territory. Instead, he would select one physician and a party of apprentices.

The emergency should be used to temper the best and the strongest, he decided. After some consideration, Ibn Sina took quill, ink, and paper and wrote:

Hakim
Fadil ibn Parviz, leader
Suleiman-al-Gamal, third-year clerk
Jesse ben Benjamin, first-year clerk
Mirdin Askari, second-year clerk

The party should also contain some of the school’s weakest candidates, in order to give them a single, Allah-sent opportunity to redeem their unfavorable records and go on to become physicians. To this end he added to the list the names:

Omar Nivahend, third-year clerk
Abbas Sefi, third-year clerk
Ali Rashid, first-year clerk
Karim Harun, seventh-year clerk.

When the eight young men were assembled and the Chief Physician told them he was sending them to Anshan to fight the Death, they couldn’t look at him or at one another; it was a form of embarrassment.

“You must each wear arms,” Ibn Sina said, “for it is impossible to determine how people will act when there is a plague.”

There was a long, shuddering sigh from Ali Rashid. He was sixteen years old, a round-cheeked boy with soft eyes, so homesick for his family
in Hamadh
ā
n that he wept day and night and couldn’t apply himself to his studies.

Rob forced himself to concentrate on what Ibn Sina was saying.

“… We cannot tell you how to fight it, for it hasn’t appeared in our lifetimes. But we have a book compiled three centuries ago by physicians who survived plagues in different places. We shall give this book to you. Doubtless it contains many theories and remedies of little value, but among them might be information that will be effective.” Ibn Sina stroked his beard. “Against the possibility that the Death is caused by atmospheric contamination from putrid effluvia, I think you must kindle huge fires of aromatic woods in the vicinity of both the sick and the healthy. The healthy should wash in wine or vinegar and sprinkle their houses with vinegar, and they should sniff camphor and other volatile substances.

“You who will care for the sick should do these things also. You would do well to hold vinegar-soaked sponges to your noses when you approach the afflicted, and to boil all water before drinking, to clarify it and separate off the impurities. And you must manicure your hands daily, for the Qu’ran says the Devil hides beneath the fingernails.”

Ibn Sina cleared his throat. “Those who survive this plague must not return immediately to Ispahan, lest you bring it here. You will go to a house which stands at Ibrahim’s Rock, one day’s distance to the east of the town of Nain, and three days’ east of here. There you will rest for a month before coming home. Is it understood?”

They nodded. “Yes, Master,”
Hakim
Fadil ibn Parviz said tremulously, speaking for all in his new position. Young Ali was weeping silently. Karim Harun’s handsome face was dark with foreboding.

Finally Mirdin Askari spoke up. “My wife and children … I must make arrangements. To be certain they’ll be all right if …”

Ibn Sina nodded. “Those of you with responsibilities have only brief hours to make these arrangements.”

Rob hadn’t known Mirdin was married and a father. The Jewish clerk was private and self-reliant, sure of himself in the classroom as well as in the
maristan.
But now his lips were bloodless, and moved in silent prayer.

Rob J. was as frightened as any at being sent on this errand from which there might be no return, but he struggled for courage. At least he would no longer have to serve as leech at the jail, he told himself.

“One thing more,” Ibn Sina said, gazing at them with a parent’s eyes. “You must keep careful notes, for those who will fight the next plague. And you must leave them where they will be found if something should happen to you.”

* * *

Next morning, as the sun bloodied the tops of the trees they clattered over the bridge across the River of Life, each man on a good horse and leading either a packhorse or a mule.

After a while Rob suggested to Fadil that one man be sent ahead as scout and another ride far back as rear guard. The young
hakim
pretended to consider and then he bawled out the orders.

That night Fadil agreed at once when Rob suggested the same system of alternating sentries that had been employed by Kerl Fritta’s caravan.

Seated around a thornbush fire, they were by turns jocular and grim.

“I believe Galen was never so wise as when he considered a physician’s best choice of action during plague,” Suleiman-al-Gamal said darkly. “Galen said a physician should flee the plague, to live to treat another day, and that is exactly what he did himself.”

“I believe the great physician Rhazes said it better,” Karim said.

“Three little words the plague dispel:
Quick, far and late, where’er you dwell.
Start quick, go far and right away,
And your return till late delay.”

Their laughter was too loud.

Suleiman was their first sentry. It should have been no great surprise the following morning when they awoke to discover he had slipped away during the night, taking his horses with him.

It shook them and filled them with gloom. When they made camp the following evening, Fadil named Mirdin Askari to be sentry, a good choice; Askari guarded them well.

But the sentry at their third camp was Omar Nivahend, who emulated Suleiman and fled with his horses during the night.

Fadil called a meeting as soon as the second desertion was discovered.

“It’s no sin to be afraid of the Death, else each of us is eternally damned,” he said. “Nor, if you agree with Galen and Rhazes, is it a sin to flee—though I side with Ibn Sina in thinking a physician should fight pestilence instead of showing it his heels.

“What
is
a sin is to leave your companions unguarded. And it is worse to steal off with a pack animal bearing supplies needed by the sick and the dying.” He gazed at them levelly. “Therefore, I say that if anyone else wishes to leave us, let him go now. And I promise on my honor that he will be allowed to do so without shame or prejudice.”

They could hear each other’s breathing. No one came forward.

Rob spoke up. “Yes, anyone should be allowed to go. But if the departure leaves us sentryless and unguarded, or if he takes with him supplies needed by the patients toward whom we travel, I say we must ride after such a deserter and kill him.”

Again there was a silence.

Mirdin licked his lips. “I agree,” he said.

“Yes,” Fadil said.

“I agree also,” said Abbas Sefi.

“And I,” Ali whispered.

“And I!” said Karim.

Each of them knew it was no empty promise, but a solemn vow.

Two nights later, it was Rob J.’s turn to serve as sentry. They had made camp in a stony defile where moonshine created monsters of the looming rocks. It was a long and lonely night that gave him opportunity to think of sad things he otherwise managed to crowd out of his mind, and he dwelt on his brothers and his sister, and on those who were dead. He had long thoughts about the woman he had allowed to drift through his fingers.

Toward morning he was standing in the shadow of a great rock, not far from the sleeping men, when he became aware that one of them was awake and appeared to be making preparations for leaving.

Karim Harun stole through the encampment, taking care not to disturb the sleepers. When he was clear, he began to run lightly down the trail, and soon he was out of sight.

Harun had neither taken supplies nor left the party unguarded, and Rob made no attempt to stop him. But he felt a bitter disappointment, for he had begun to like the handsome and sardonic clerk who had been a medical student for so many years.

Perhaps an hour later he drew his sword, alerted by the sound of pounding footsteps coming toward him in the gray light. He stood and confronted Karim, who stopped in front of him and gaped at the ready blade, his chest heaving and his face and tunic wet with sweat.

“I saw you leave. I believed you had run away.”

“I did.” Karim fought for breath. “I ran away … and I ran back. I am a runner,” he said, and smiled as Rob J. put away his sword.

Karim ran every morning, returning to them drenched in sweat. Abbas Sefi told comical stories and sang filthy songs and was a cruel mimic.
Hakim
Fadil was a wrestler, and in their camps at night the leader threw them all, having trouble only with Rob and with Karim. Mirdin was the best cook
among them and cheerfully accepted the duty of preparing the evening meals. Young Ali, who had Bedouin blood, was a dazzling horseman and loved nothing better than serving as scout, ranging far ahead of the party; soon his eyes shone with enthusiasm instead of tears and he displayed a youthful energy that endeared him to all.

Their growing companionship was pleasant and the long ride might have been enjoyable except that, in camp and during rest pauses,
Hakim
Fadil read to them from the Plague Book that Ibn Sina had entrusted to him. The book offered hundreds of suggestions by various authorities, all of whom claimed to know how to fight the plague. A man named Lamna of Cairo insisted that an infallible method was to give the patient his own urine to drink, at the same time reciting specified imprecations to Allah (glorified is He!).

Al-Hajar of Baghdad suggested the sucking of an astringent pomegranate or plum at the time of an epidemic, and Ibn Mutillah of Jerusalem strongly recommended the eating of lentils, Indian peas, pumpkin seeds, and red clay. There were so many suggestions that each was made worthless to the bewildered medical party. Ibn Sina had written an addendum to the book, in which he had listed practices that seemed reasonable to him: the lighting of fires to create acrid smoke, washing down walls with limewater, sprinkling vinegar, and giving victims fruit juices to drink. In the end, they agreed to follow the regimen suggested by their teacher and to ignore all other advice.

During a pause in the middle of the eighth day Fadil read from the book that, of every five physicians who had treated the Death during the Cairo plague, four had themselves died of the disease. A quiet melancholy took hold of them as they resumed the ride, as if they had been informed of the sealing of their fate.

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