The Alchemist
Paulo Coelho
Translated by Alan R. Clarke.
Published 1992. ISBN 0-7225-3293-8.
PART ONE
The boy's name was Santiago. Dusk
was falling as the boy arrived with his
herd at an abandoned church. The roof
had fallen in long ago, and an
enormous sycamore had grown on the
spot where the sacristy had once stood.
He decided to spend the night there. He
saw to it that all the sheep entered
through the ruined gate, and then laid
some planks across it to prevent the
flock from wandering away during the
night. There were no wolves in the
region, but once an animal had strayed
during the night, and the boy had had to
spend the entire next day searching for
it.
He swept the floor with his jacket and
lay down, using the book he had just
finished reading as a pillow. He told
himself that he would have to start
reading thicker books: they lasted
longer, and made more comfortable
pillows.
It was still dark when he awoke, and,
looking up, he could see the stars
through the half-destroyed roof.
I wanted to sleep a little longer, he
thought. He had had the same dream
that night as a week ago, and once
again he had awakened before it ended.
He arose and, taking up his crook,
began to awaken the sheep that still
slept. He had noticed that, as soon as he
awoke, most of his animals also began
to stir. It was as if some mysterious
energy bound his life to that of the
sheep, with whom he had spent the past
two years, leading them through the
countryside in search of food and
water. "They are so used to me that
they know my schedule," he muttered.
Thinking about that for a moment, he
realized that it could be the other way
around: that it was he who had become
accustomed to their schedule.
But there were certain of them who
took a bit longer to awaken. The boy
prodded them, one by one, with his
crook, calling each by name. He had
always believed that the sheep were
able to understand what he said. So
there were times when he read them
parts of his books that had made an
impression on him, or when he would
tell them of the loneliness or the
happiness of a shepherd in the fields.
Sometimes he would comment to them
on the things he had seen in the
villages they passed.
But for the past few days he had spoken
to them about only one thing: the girl,
the daughter of a merchant who lived
in the village they would reach in about
four days. He had been to the village
only once, the year before. The
merchant was the proprietor of a dry
goods shop, and he always demanded
that the sheep be sheared in his
presence, so that he would not be
cheated. A friend had told the boy
about the shop, and he had taken his
sheep there.
*
"I need to sell some wool," the boy told
the merchant.
The shop was busy, and the man asked
the shepherd to wait until the
afternoon. So the boy sat on the steps
of the shop and took a book from his
bag.
"I didn't know shepherds knew how to
read," said a girl's voice behind him.
The girl was typical of the region of
Andalusia, with flowing black hair, and
eyes that vaguely recalled the Moorish
conquerors.
"Well, usually I learn more from my
sheep than from books," he answered.
During the two hours that they talked,
she told him she was the merchant's
daughter, and spoke of life in the
village, where each day was like all the
others. The shepherd told her of the
Andalusian countryside, and related the
news from the other towns where he
had stopped.
It was a pleasant change from talking
to his sheep.
"How did you learn to read?" the girl
asked at one point.
"Like everybody learns," he said. "In
school."
"Well, if you know how to read, why
are you just a shepherd?"
The boy mumbled an answer that
allowed him to avoid responding to her
question. He was sure the girl would
never understand. He went on telling
stories about his travels, and her bright,
Moorish eyes went wide with fear and
surprise. As the time passed, the boy
found himself wishing that the day
would never end, that her father would
stay busy and keep him waiting for
three days. He recognized that he was
feeling something he had never
experienced before: the desire to live in
one place forever. With the girl with
the raven hair, his days would never be
the same again.
But finally the merchant appeared, and
asked the boy to shear four sheep. He
paid for the wool and asked the
shepherd to come back the following
year.
*
And now it was only four days before
he would be back in that same village.
He was excited, and at the same time
uneasy: maybe the girl had already
forgotten him. Lots of shepherds
passed through, selling their wool.
"It doesn't matter," he said to his sheep.
"I know other girls in other places."
But in his heart he knew that it did
matter. And he knew that shepherds,
like seamen and like traveling
salesmen, always found a town where
there was someone who could make
them forget the joys of carefree
wandering.
The day was dawning, and the shepherd
urged his sheep in the direction of the
sun. They never have to make any
decisions, he thought. Maybe that's
why they always stay close to me.
The only things that concerned the
sheep were food and water. As long as
the boy knew how to find the best
pastures in Andalusia, they would be
his friends. Yes, their days were all the
same, with the seemingly endless hours
between sunrise and dusk; and they had
never read a book in their young lives,
and didn't understand when the boy
told them about the sights of the cities.
They were content with just food and
water, and, in exchange, they
generously gave of their wool, their
company, and—once in a while—
their meat.
If I became a monster today, and
decided to kill them, one by one, they
would become aware only after most of
the flock had been slaughtered, thought
the boy. They trust me, and they've
forgotten how to rely on their own
instincts, because I lead them to
nourishment.
The boy was surprised at his thoughts.
Maybe the church, with the sycamore
growing from within, had been
haunted. It had caused him to have the
same dream for a second time, and it
was causing him to feel anger toward
his faithful companions. He drank a bit
from the wine that remained from his
dinner of the night before, and he
gathered his jacket closer to his body.
He knew that a few hours from now,
with the sun at its zenith, the heat
would be so great that he would not be
able to lead his flock across the fields.
It was the time of day when all of
Spain slept during the summer. The
heat lasted until nightfall, and all that
time he had to carry his jacket. But
when he thought to complain about the
burden of its weight, he remembered
that, because he had the jacket, he had
withstood the cold of the dawn.
We have to be prepared for change, he
thought, and he was grateful for the
jacket's weight and warmth.
The jacket had a purpose, and so did
the boy. His purpose in life was to
travel, and, after two years of walking
the Andalusian terrain, he knew all the
cities of the region. He was planning,
on this visit, to explain to the girl how
it was that a simple shepherd knew how
to read. That he had attended a
seminary until he was sixteen. His
parents had wanted him to become a
priest, and thereby a source of pride for
a simple farm family. They worked
hard just to have food and water, like
the sheep. He had studied Latin,
Spanish, and theology. But ever since
he had been a child, he had wanted to
know the world, and this was much
more important to him than knowing
God and learning about man's sins.
One afternoon, on a visit to his family,
he had summoned up the courage to
tell his father that he didn't want to
become a priest. That he wanted to
travel.
*
"People from all over the world have
passed through this village, son," said
his father.
"They come in search of new things,
but when they leave they are basically
the same people they were when they
arrived. They climb the mountain to
see the castle, and they wind up
thinking that the past was better than
what we have now. They have blond
hair, or dark skin, but basically they're
the same as the people who live right
here."
"But I'd like to see the castles in the
towns where they live," the boy
explained.
"Those people, when they see our land,
say that they would like to live here
forever," his father continued.
"Well, I'd like to see their land, and see
how they live," said his son.
"The people who come here have a lot
of money to spend, so they can afford
to travel,"
his father said. "Amongst us, the only
ones who travel are the shepherds."
"Well, then I'll be a shepherd!"
His father said no more. The next day,
he gave his son a pouch that held three
ancient Spanish gold coins.
"I found these one day in the fields. I
wanted them to be a part of your
inheritance. But use them to buy your
flock. Take to the fields, and someday
you'll learn that our countryside is the
best, and our women the most
beautiful."
And he gave the boy his blessing. The
boy could see in his father's gaze a
desire to be able, himself, to travel the
world—a desire that was still alive,
despite his father's having had to bury
it, over dozens of years, under the
burden of struggling for water to drink,
food to eat, and the same place to sleep
every night of his life.
*
The horizon was tinged with red, and
suddenly the sun appeared. The boy
thought back to that conversation with
his father, and felt happy; he had
already seen many castles and met
many women (but none the equal of the
one who awaited him several days
hence).
He owned a jacket, a book that he could
trade for another, and a flock of sheep.
But, most important, he was able every
day to live out his dream. If he were to
tire of the Andalusian fields, he could
sell his sheep and go to sea. By the
time he had had enough of the sea, he
would already have known other cities,
other women, and other chances to be
happy. I couldn't have found God in the
seminary, he thought, as he looked at
the sunrise.
Whenever he could, he sought out a
new road to travel. He had never been
to that ruined church before, in spite of
having traveled through those parts
many times. The world was huge and
inexhaustible; he had only to allow his
sheep to set the route for a while, and
he would discover other interesting
things. The problem is that they don't
even realize that they're walking a new
road every day. They don't see that the
fields are new and the seasons change.
All they think about is food and water.
Maybe we're all that way, the boy
mused. Even me—I haven't thought of
other women since I met the
merchant's daughter. Looking at the
sun, he calculated that he would reach
Tarifa before midday. There, he could
exchange his book for a thicker one,
fill his wine bottle, shave, and have a
haircut; he had to prepare himself for
his meeting with the girl, and he didn't
want to think about the possibility that
some other shepherd, with a larger
flock of sheep, had arrived there before
him and asked for her hand.
It's the possibility of having a dream
come true that makes life interesting,
he thought, as he looked again at the
position of the sun, and hurried his
pace. He had suddenly remembered
that, in Tarifa, there was an old woman
who interpreted dreams.
*
The old woman led the boy to a room
at the back of her house; it was
separated from her living room by a
curtain of colored beads. The room's
furnishings consisted of a table, an
image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and
two chairs.
The woman sat down, and told him to
be seated as well. Then she took both
of his hands in hers, and began quietly
to pray.
It sounded like a Gypsy prayer. The
boy had already had experience on the
road with Gypsies; they also traveled,
but they had no flocks of sheep. People
said that Gypsies spent their lives
tricking others. It was also said that
they had a pact with the devil, and that
they kidnapped children and, taking
them away to their mysterious camps,
made them their slaves. As a child, the
boy had always been frightened to
death that he would be captured by
Gypsies, and this childhood fear
returned when the old woman took his
hands in hers.
But she has the Sacred Heart of Jesus
there, he thought, trying to reassure
himself. He didn't want his hand to
begin trembling, showing the old
woman that he was fearful. He recited
an Our Father silently.
"Very interesting," said the woman,
never taking her eyes from the boy's
hands, and then she fell silent.
The boy was becoming nervous. His
hands began to tremble, and the woman
sensed it.
He quickly pulled his hands away.
"I didn't come here to have you read
my palm," he said, already regretting
having come.
He thought for a moment that it would
be better to pay her fee and leave
without learning a thing, that he was
giving too much importance to his
recurrent dream.
"You came so that you could learn
about your dreams," said the old
woman. "And dreams are the language
of God. When he speaks in our
language, I can interpret what he has
said. But if he speaks in the language
of the soul, it is only you who can
understand.
But, whichever it is, I'm going to
charge you for the consultation."
Another trick, the boy thought. But he
decided to take a chance. A shepherd
always takes his chances with wolves
and with drought, and that's what
makes a shepherd's life exciting.
"I have had the same dream twice," he
said. "I dreamed that I was in a field
with my sheep, when a child appeared
and began to play with the animals. I
don't like people to do that, because the
sheep are afraid of strangers. But
children always seem to be able to play
with them without frightening them. I
don't know why. I don't know how
animals know the age of human
beings."
"Tell me more about your dream," said
the woman. "I have to get back to my
cooking, and, since you don't have
much money, I can't give you a lot of
time."
"The child went on playing with my
sheep for quite a while," continued the
boy, a bit upset. "And suddenly, the
child took me by both hands and
transported me to the Egyptian
pyramids."
He paused for a moment to see if the
woman knew what the Egyptian
pyramids were. But she said nothing.
"Then, at the Egyptian pyramids,"—he
said the last three words slowly, so that
the old woman would understand—"the
child said to me, If you come here, you
will find a hidden treasure.' And, just
as she was about to show me the exact
location, I woke up.
Both times."
The woman was silent for some time.
Then she again took his hands and
studied them carefully.
"I'm not going to charge you anything
now," she said. "But I want one-tenth
of the treasure, if you find it."
The boy laughed—out of happiness. He
was going to be able to save the little
money he had because of a dream
about hidden treasure!
"Well, interpret the dream," he said.
"First, swear to me. Swear that you will
give me one-tenth of your treasure in
exchange for what I am going to tell
you."
The shepherd swore that he would. The
old woman asked him to swear again
while looking at the image of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus.
"It's a dream in the language of the
world," she said. "I can interpret it, but
the interpretation is very difficult.
That's why I feel that I deserve a part
of what you find.
"And this is my interpretation: you
must go to the Pyramids in Egypt. I
have never heard of them, but, if it was
a child who showed them to you, they
exist. There you will find a treasure
that will make you a rich man."
The boy was surprised, and then
irritated. He didn't need to seek out the
old woman for this! But then he
remembered that he wasn't going to
have to pay anything.
"I didn't need to waste my time just for
this," he said.
"I told you that your dream was a
difficult one. It's the simple things in
life that are the most extraordinary;
only wise men are able to understand
them. And since I am not wise, I have
had to learn other arts, such as the
reading of palms."
"Well, how am I going to get to
Egypt?"
"I only interpret dreams. I don't know
how to turn them into reality. That's
why I have to live off what my
daughters provide me with."
"And what if I never get to Egypt?"
"Then I don't get paid. It wouldn't be
the first time."
And the woman told the boy to leave,
saying she had already wasted too
much time with him.
So the boy was disappointed; he
decided that he would never again
believe in dreams. He remembered that
he had a number of things he had to
take care of: he went to the market for
something to eat, he traded his book for
one that was thicker, and he found a
bench in the plaza where he could
sample the new wine he had bought.
The day was hot, and the wine was
refreshing. The sheep were at the gates
of the city, in a stable that belonged to
a friend. The boy knew a lot of people
in the city. That was what made
traveling appeal to him—he always
made new friends, and he didn't need to
spend all of his time with them.
When someone sees the same people
every day, as had happened with him at
the seminary, they wind up becoming a
part of that person's life. And then they
want the person to change. If someone
isn't what others want them to be, the
others become angry.
Everyone seems to have a clear idea of
how other people should lead their
lives, but none about his or her own.
He decided to wait until the sun had
sunk a bit lower in the sky before
following his flock back through the
fields. Three days from now, he would
be with the merchant's daughter.
He started to read the book he had
bought. On the very first page it
described a burial ceremony. And the
names of the people involved were
very difficult to pronounce. If he ever
wrote a book, he thought, he would
present one person at a time, so that the
reader wouldn't have to worry about
memorizing a lot of names.
When he was finally able to
concentrate on what he was reading, he
liked the book better; the burial was on
a snowy day, and he welcomed the
feeling of being cold. As he read on, an
old man sat down at his side and tried
to strike up a conversation.
"What are they doing?" the old man
asked, pointing at the people in the
plaza.
"Working," the boy answered dryly,
making it look as if he wanted to
concentrate on his reading.
Actually, he was thinking about
shearing his sheep in front of the
merchant's daughter, so that she could
see that he was someone who was
capable of doing difficult things. He
had already imagined the scene many
times; every time, the girl became
fascinated when he explained that the
sheep had to be sheared from back to
front. He also tried to remember some
good stories to relate as he sheared the
sheep. Most of them he had read in
books, but he would tell them as if they
were from his personal experience. She
would never know the difference,
because she didn't know how to read.
Meanwhile, the old man persisted in
his attempt to strike up a conversation.
He said that he was tired and thirsty,
and asked if he might have a sip of the
boy's wine. The boy offered his bottle,
hoping that the old man would leave
him alone.
But the old man wanted to talk, and he
asked the boy what book he was
reading. The boy was tempted to be
rude, and move to another bench, but
his father had taught him to be
respectful of the elderly. So he held out
the book to the man—for two reasons:
first, that he, himself, wasn't sure how
to pronounce the title; and second, that
if the old man didn't know how to read,
he would probably feel ashamed and
decide of his own accord to change
benches.
"Hmm…" said the old man, looking at
all sides of the book, as if it were some
strange object. "This is an important
book, but it's really irritating."
The boy was shocked. The old man
knew how to read, and had already read
the book.
And if the book was irritating, as the
old man had said, the boy still had time
to change it for another.
"It's a book that says the same thing
almost all the other books in the world
say,"
continued the old man. "It describes
people's inability to choose their own
destinies. And it ends up saying that
everyone believes the world's greatest
lie."
"What's the world's greatest lie?" the
boy asked, completely surprised.
"It's this: that at a certain point in our
lives, we lose control of what's
happening to us, and our lives become
controlled by fate. That's the world's
greatest lie."
"That's never happened to me," the boy
said. "They wanted me to be a priest,
but I decided to become a shepherd."
"Much better," said the old man.
"Because you really like to travel."
"He knew what I was thinking," the boy
said to himself. The old man,
meanwhile, was leafing through the
book, without seeming to want to
return it at all. The boy noticed that the
man's clothing was strange. He looked
like an Arab, which was not unusual in
those parts. Africa was only a few
hours from Tarifa; one had only to
cross the narrow straits by boat. Arabs
often appeared in the city, shopping
and chanting their strange prayers
several times a day.
"Where are you from?" the boy asked.
"From many places."
"No one can be from many places," the
boy said. "I'm a shepherd, and I have
been to many places, but I come from
only one place—from a city near an
ancient castle. That's where I was
born."
"Well then, we could say that I was
born in Salem."
The boy didn't know where Salem was,
but he didn't want to ask, fearing that
he would appear ignorant. He looked at
the people in the plaza for a while; they
were coming and going, and all of them
seemed to be very busy.
"So, what is Salem like?" he asked,
trying to get some sort of clue.
"It's like it always has been."
No clue yet. But he knew that Salem
wasn't in Andalusia. If it were, he
would already have heard of it.
"And what do you do in Salem?" he
insisted.
"What do I do in Salem?" The old man
laughed. "Well, I'm the king of Salem!"
People say strange things, the boy
thought. Sometimes it's better to be
with the sheep, who don't say anything.
And better still to be alone with one's
books. They tell their incredible stories
at the time when you want to hear
them. But when you're talking to
people, they say some things that are so
strange that you don't know how to
continue the conversation.
"My name is Melchizedek," said the
old man. "How many sheep do you
have?"
"Enough," said the boy. He could see
that the old man wanted to know more
about his life.
"Well, then, we've got a problem. I
can't help you if you feel you've got
enough sheep."
The boy was getting irritated. He
wasn't asking for help. It was the old
man who had asked for a drink of his
wine, and had started the conversation.
"Give me my book," the boy said. "I
have to go and gather my sheep and get
going."
"Give me one-tenth of your sheep,"
said the old man, "and I'll tell you how
to find the hidden treasure."
The boy remembered his dream, and
suddenly everything was clear to him.
The old woman hadn't charged him
anything, but the old man—maybe he
was her husband—was going to find a
way to get much more money in
exchange for information about
something that didn't even exist. The
old man was probably a Gypsy, too.
But before the boy could say anything,
the old man leaned over, picked up a
stick, and began to write in the sand of
the plaza. Something bright reflected
from his chest with such intensity that
the boy was momentarily blinded. With
a movement that was too quick for
someone his age, the man covered
whatever it was with his cape. When
his vision returned to normal, the boy
was able to read what the old man had
written in the sand.
There, in the sand of the plaza of that
small city, the boy read the names of
his father and his mother and the name
of the seminary he had attended. He
read the name of the merchant's
daughter, which he hadn't even known,
and he read things he had never told
anyone.
*
"I'm the king of Salem," the old man
had said.
"Why would a king be talking with a
shepherd?" the boy asked, awed and
embarrassed.
"For several reasons. But let's say that
the most important is that you have
succeeded in discovering your destiny."
The boy didn't know what a person's
"destiny" was.
"It's what you have always wanted to
accomplish. Everyone, when they are
young, knows what their destiny is.
"At that point in their lives, everything
is clear and everything is possible.
They are not afraid to dream, and to
yearn for everything they would like to
see happen to them in their lives. But,
as time passes, a mysterious force
begins to convince them that it will be
impossible for them to realize their
destiny."
None of what the old man was saying
made much sense to the boy. But he
wanted to know what the "mysterious
force" was; the merchant's daughter
would be impressed when he told her
about that!
"It's a force that appears to be negative,
but actually shows you how to realize
your destiny. It prepares your spirit and
your will, because there is one great
truth on this planet: whoever you are,
or whatever it is that you do, when you
really want something, it's because that
desire originated in the soul of the
universe. It's your mission on earth."
"Even when all you want to do is
travel? Or marry the daughter of a
textile merchant?"
"Yes, or even search for treasure. The
Soul of the World is nourished by
people's happiness. And also by
unhappiness, envy, and jealousy. To
realize one's destiny is a person's only
real obligation. All things are one.
"And, when you want something, all
the universe conspires in helping you
to achieve it."
They were both silent for a time,
observing the plaza and the
townspeople. It was the old man who
spoke first.
"Why do you tend a flock of sheep?"
"Because I like to travel."
The old man pointed to a baker
standing in his shop window at one
corner of the plaza.
"When he was a child, that man wanted
to travel, too. But he decided first to
buy his bakery and put some money
aside. When he's an old man, he's going
to spend a month in Africa. He never
realized that people are capable, at any
time in their lives, of doing what they
dream of."
"He should have decided to become a
shepherd," the boy said.
"Well, he thought about that," the old
man said. "But bakers are more
important people than shepherds.
Bakers have homes, while shepherds
sleep out in the open. Parents would
rather see their children marry bakers
than shepherds."
The boy felt a pang in his heart,
thinking about the merchant's daughter.
There was surely a baker in her town.
The old man continued, "In the long
run, what people think about shepherds
and bakers becomes more important
for them than their own destinies."
The old man leafed through the book,
and fell to reading a page he came to.
The boy waited, and then interrupted
the old man just as he himself had been
interrupted. "Why are you telling me
all this?"
"Because you are trying to realize your
destiny. And you are at the point where
you're about to give it all up."
"And that's when you always appear on
the scene?"
"Not always in this way, but I always
appear in one form or another.
Sometimes I appear in the form of a
solution, or a good idea. At other times,
at a crucial moment, I make it easier
for things to happen. There are other
things I do, too, but most of the time
people don't realize I've done them."
The old man related that, the week
before, he had been forced to appear
before a miner, and had taken the form
of a stone. The miner had abandoned
everything to go mining for emeralds.
For five years he had been working a
certain river, and had examined
hundreds of thousands of stones
looking for an emerald. The miner was
about to give it all up, right at the point
when, if he were to examine just one
more stone—just one more—he would
find his emerald. Since the miner had
sacrificed everything to his destiny, the
old man decided to become involved.
He transformed himself into a stone
that rolled up to the miner's foot. The
miner, with all the anger and
frustration of his five fruitless years,
picked up the stone and threw it aside.
But he had thrown it with such force
that it broke the stone it fell upon, and
there, embedded in the broken stone,
was the most beautiful emerald in the
world.
"People learn, early in their lives, what
is their reason for being," said the old
man, with a certain bitterness. "Maybe
that's why they give up on it so early,
too. But that's the way it is."
The boy reminded the old man that he
had said something about hidden
treasure.
"Treasure is uncovered by the force of
flowing water, and it is buried by the
same currents," said the old man. "If
you want to learn about your own
treasure, you will have to give me onetenth of your flock."
"What about one-tenth of my
treasure?"
The old man looked disappointed. "If
you start out by promising what you
don't even have yet, you'll lose your
desire to work toward getting it."
The boy told him that he had already
promised to give one-tenth of his
treasure to the Gypsy.
"Gypsies are experts at getting people
to do that," sighed the old man. "In any
case, it's good that you've learned that
everything in life has its price. This is
what the Warriors of the Light try to
teach."
The old man returned the book to the
boy.
"Tomorrow, at this same time, bring
me a tenth of your flock. And I will tell
you how to find the hidden treasure.
Good afternoon."
And he vanished around the corner of
the plaza.
*
The boy began again to read his book,
but he was no longer able to
concentrate. He was tense and upset,
because he knew that the old man was
right. He went over to the bakery and
bought a loaf of bread, thinking about
whether or not he should tell the baker
what the old man had said about him.
Sometimes it's better to leave things as
they are, he thought to himself, and
decided to say nothing. If he were to
say anything, the baker would spend
three days thinking about giving it all
up, even though he had gotten used to
the way things were. The boy could
certainly resist causing that kind of
anxiety for the baker. So he began to
wander through the city, and found
himself at the gates. There was a small
building there, with a window at which
people bought tickets to Africa. And he
knew that Egypt was in Africa.
"Can I help you?" asked the man
behind the window.
"Maybe tomorrow," said the boy,
moving away. If he sold just one of his
sheep, he'd have enough to get to the
other shore of the strait. The idea
frightened him.
"Another dreamer," said the ticket
seller to his assistant, watching the boy
walk away.
"He doesn't have enough money to
travel."
While standing at the ticket window,
the boy had remembered his flock, and
decided he should go back to being a
shepherd. In two years he had learned
everything about shepherding: he knew
how to shear sheep, how to care for
pregnant ewes, and how to protect the
sheep from wolves. He knew all the
fields and pastures of Andalusia. And
he knew what was the fair price for
every one of his animals.
He decided to return to his friend's
stable by the longest route possible. As
he walked past the city's castle, he
interrupted his return, and climbed the
stone ramp that led to the top of the
wall. From there, he could see Africa in
the distance. Someone had once told
him that it was from there that the
Moors had come, to occupy all of
Spain.
He could see almost the entire city
from where he sat, including the plaza
where he had talked with the old man.
Curse the moment I met that old man,
he thought. He had come to the town
only to find a woman who could
interpret his dream. Neither the woman
nor the old man were at all impressed
by the fact that he was a shepherd.
They were solitary individuals who no
longer believed in things, and didn't
understand that shepherds become
attached to their sheep. He knew
everything about each member of his
flock: he knew which ones were lame,
which one was to give birth two
months from now, and which were the
laziest. He knew how to shear them,
and how to slaughter them. If he ever
decided to leave them, they would
suffer.
The wind began to pick up. He knew
that wind: people called it the levanter,
because on it the Moors had come from
the Levant at the eastern end of the
Mediterranean.
The levanter increased in intensity.
Here I am, between my flock and my
treasure, the boy thought. He had to
choose between something he had
become accustomed to and something
he wanted to have. There was also the
merchant's daughter, but she wasn't as
important as his flock, because she
didn't depend on him. Maybe she didn't
even remember him. He was sure that
it made no difference to her on which
day he appeared: for her, every day was
the same, and when each day is the
same as the next, it's because people
fail to recognize the good things that
happen in their lives every day that the
sun rises.
I left my father, my mother, and the
town castle behind. They have gotten
used to my being away, and so have I.
The sheep will get used to my not
being there, too, the boy thought.
From where he sat, he could observe
the plaza. People continued to come
and go from the baker's shop. A young
couple sat on the bench where he had
talked with the old man, and they
kissed.
"That baker…" he said to himself,
without completing the thought. The
levanter was still getting stronger, and
he felt its force on his face. That wind
had brought the Moors, yes, but it had
also brought the smell of the desert and
of veiled women. It had brought with it
the sweat and the dreams of men who
had once left to search for the
unknown, and for gold and adventure—
and for the Pyramids. The boy felt
jealous of the freedom of the wind, and
saw that he could have the same
freedom. There was nothing to hold
him back except himself. The sheep,
the merchant's daughter, and the fields
of Andalusia were only steps along the
way to his destiny.
The next day, the boy met the old man
at noon. He brought six sheep with
him.
"I'm surprised," the boy said. "My
friend bought all the other sheep
immediately. He said that he had
always dreamed of being a shepherd,
and that it was a good omen."
"That's the way it always is," said the
old man. "It's called the principle of
favorability.
When you play cards the first time, you
are almost sure to win. Beginner's
luck."
"Why is that?"
"Because there is a force that wants
you to realize your destiny; it whets
your appetite with a taste of success."
Then the old man began to inspect the
sheep, and he saw that one was lame.
The boy explained that it wasn't
important, since that sheep was the
most intelligent of the flock, and
produced the most wool.
"Where is the treasure?" he asked.
"It's in Egypt, near the Pyramids."
The boy was startled. The old woman
had said the same thing. But she hadn't
charged him anything.
"In order to find the treasure, you will
have to follow the omens. God has
prepared a path for everyone to follow.
You just have to read the omens that he
left for you."
Before the boy could reply, a butterfly
appeared and fluttered between him
and the old man. He remembered
something his grandfather had once
told him: that butterflies were a good
omen. Like crickets, and like
expectations; like lizards and four-leaf
clovers.
"That's right," said the old man, able to
read the boy's thoughts. "Just as your
grandfather taught you. These are good
omens."
The old man opened his cape, and the
boy was struck by what he saw. The old
man wore a breastplate of heavy gold,
covered with precious stones. The boy
recalled the brilliance he had noticed
on the previous day.
He really was a king! He must be
disguised to avoid encounters with
thieves.
"Take these," said the old man, holding
out a white stone and a black stone that
had been embedded at the center of the
breastplate. "They are called Urim and
Thummim. The black signifies 'yes,'
and the white 'no.' When you are
unable to read the omens, they will
help you to do so. Always ask an
objective question.
"But, if you can, try to make your own
decisions. The treasure is at the
Pyramids; that you already knew. But I
had to insist on the payment of six
sheep because I helped you to make
your decision."
The boy put the stones in his pouch.
From then on, he would make his own
decisions.
"Don't forget that everything you deal
with is only one thing and nothing else.
And don't forget the language of
omens. And, above all, don't forget to
follow your destiny through to its
conclusion.
"But before I go, I want to tell you a
little story.
"A certain shopkeeper sent his son to
learn about the secret of happiness
from the wisest man in the world. The
lad wandered through the desert for
forty days, and finally came upon a
beautiful castle, high atop a mountain.
It was there that the wise man lived.
"Rather than finding a saintly man,
though, our hero, on entering the main
room of the castle, saw a hive of
activity: tradesmen came and went,
people were conversing in the corners,
a small orchestra was playing soft
music, and there was a table covered
with platters of the most delicious food
in that part of the world. The wise man
conversed with everyone, and the boy
had to wait for two hours before it was
his turn to be given the man's attention.
"The wise man listened attentively to
the boy's explanation of why he had
come, but told him that he didn't have
time just then to explain the secret of
happiness. He suggested that the boy
look around the palace and return in
two hours.
" 'Meanwhile, I want to ask you to do
something,' said the wise man, handing
the boy a teaspoon that held two drops
of oil. 'As you wander around, carry
this spoon with you without allowing
the oill to spill.'
"The boy began climbing and
descending the many stairways of the
palace, keeping his eyes fixed on the
spoon. After two hours, he returned to
the room where the wise man was.
" 'Well,' asked the wise man, 'did you
see the Persian tapestries that are
hanging in my dining hall? Did you see
the garden that it took the master
gardener ten years to create?
Did you notice the beautiful
parchments in my library?'
"The boy was embarrassed, and
confessed that he had observed
nothing. His only concern had been not
to spill the oill that the wise man had
entrusted to him.
" 'Then go back and observe the
marvels of my world,' said the wise
man. 'You cannot trust a man if you
don't know his house.'
"Relieved, the boy picked up the spoon
and returned to his exploration of the
palace, this time observing all of the
works of art on the ceilings and the
walls. He saw the gardens, the
mountains all around him, the beauty
of the flowers, and the taste with which
everything had been selected. Upon
returning to the wise man, he related in
detail everything he had seen.
" 'But where are the drops of oill I
entrusted to you?' asked the wise man.
"Looking down at the spoon he held,
the boy saw that the oill was gone.
" 'Well, there is only one piece of
advice I can give you,' said the wisest
of wise men.
'The secret of happiness is to see all the
marvels of the world, and never to
forget the drops of oill on the spoon.' "
The shepherd said nothing. He had
understood the story the old king had
told him. A shepherd may like to
travel, but he should never forget about
his sheep.
The old man looked at the boy and,
with his hands held together, made
several strange gestures over the boy's
head. Then, taking his sheep, he walked
away.
*
At the highest point in Tarifa there is
an old fort, built by the Moors. From
atop its walls, one can catch a glimpse
of Africa. Melchizedek, the king of
Salem, sat on the wall of the fort that
afternoon, and felt the levanter blowing
in his face. The sheep fidgeted nearby,
uneasy with their new owner and
excited by so much change. All they
wanted was food and water.
Melchizedek watched a small ship that
was plowing its way out of the port. He
would never again see the boy, just as
he had never seen Abraham again after
having charged him his one-tenth fee.
That was his work.
The gods should not have desires,
because they don't have destinies. But
the king of Salem hoped desperately
that the boy would be successful.
It's too bad that he's quickly going to
forget my name, he thought. I should
have repeated it for him. Then when he
spoke about me he would say that I am
Melchizedek, the king of Salem.
He looked to the skies, feeling a bit
abashed, and said, "I know it's the
vanity of vanities, as you said, my
Lord. But an old king sometimes has to
take some pride in himself."
*
How strange Africa is, thought the boy.
He was sitting in a bar very much like
the other bars he had seen along the
narrow streets of Tangier. Some men
were smoking from a gigantic pipe that
they passed from one to the other. In
just a few hours he had seen men
walking hand in hand, women with
their faces covered, and priests that
climbed to the tops of towers and
chanted—as everyone about him went
to their knees and placed their
foreheads on the ground.
"A practice of infidels," he said to
himself. As a child in church, he had
always looked at the image of Saint
Santiago Matamoros on his white
horse, his sword unsheathed, and
figures such as these kneeling at his
feet. The boy felt ill and terribly alone.
The infidels had an evil look about
them.
Besides this, in the rush of his travels
he had forgotten a detail, just one
detail, which could keep him from his
treasure for a long time: only Arabic
was spoken in this country.
The owner of the bar approached him,
and the boy pointed to a drink that had
been served at the next table. It turned
out to be a bitter tea. The boy preferred
wine.
But he didn't need to worry about that
right now. What he had to be concerned
about was his treasure, and how he was
going to go about getting it. The sale of
his sheep had left him with enough
money in his pouch, and the boy knew
that in money there was magic;
whoever has money is never really
alone. Before long, maybe in just a few
days, he would be at the Pyramids. An
old man, with a breastplate of gold,
wouldn't have lied just to acquire six
sheep.
The old man had spoken about signs
and omens, and, as the boy was
crossing the strait, he had thought
about omens. Yes, the old man had
known what he was talking about:
during the time the boy had spent in the
fields of Andalusia, he had become
used to learning which path he should
take by observing the ground and the
sky. He had discovered that the
presence of a certain bird meant that a
snake was nearby, and that a certain
shrub was a sign that there was water in
the area. The sheep had taught him
that.
If God leads the sheep so well, he will
also lead a man, he thought, and that
made him feel better. The tea seemed
less bitter.
"Who are you?" he heard a voice ask
him in Spanish.
The boy was relieved. He was thinking
about omens, and someone had
appeared.
"How come you speak Spanish?" he
asked. The new arrival was a young
man in Western dress, but the color of
his skin suggested he was from this
city. He was about the same age and
height as the boy.
"Almost everyone here speaks Spanish.
We're only two hours from Spain."
"Sit down, and let me treat you to
something," said the boy. "And ask for
a glass of wine for me. I hate this tea."
"There is no wine in this country," the
young man said. "The religion here
forbids it."
The boy told him then that he needed to
get to the Pyramids. He almost began
to tell about his treasure, but decided
not to do so. If he did, it was possible
that the Arab would want a part of it as
payment for taking him there. He
remembered what the old man had said
about offering something you didn't
even have yet.
"I'd like you to take me there if you
can. I can pay you to serve as my
guide."
"Do you have any idea how to get
there?" the newcomer asked.
The boy noticed that the owner of the
bar stood nearby, listening attentively
to their conversation. He felt uneasy at
the man's presence. But he had found a
guide, and didn't want to miss out on an
opportunity.
"You have to cross the entire Sahara
desert," said the young man. "And to do
that, you need money. I need to know
whether you have enough."
The boy thought it a strange question.
But he trusted in the old man, who had
said that, when you really want
something, the universe always
conspires in your favor.
He took his money from his pouch and
showed it to the young man. The owner
of the bar came over and looked, as
well. The two men exchanged some
words in Arabic, and the bar owner
seemed irritated.
"Let's get out of here" said the new
arrival. "He wants us to leave."
The boy was relieved. He got up to pay
the bill, but the owner grabbed him and
began to speak to him in an angry
stream of words. The boy was strong,
and wanted to retaliate, but he was in a
foreign country. His new friend pushed
the owner aside, and pulled the boy
outside with him. "He wanted your
money," he said. "Tangier is not like
the rest of Africa. This is a port, and
every port has its thieves."
The boy trusted his new friend. He had
helped him out in a dangerous
situation. He took out his money and
counted it.
"We could get to the Pyramids by
tomorrow," said the other, taking the
money. "But I have to buy two camels."
They walked together through the
narrow streets of Tangier. Everywhere
there were stalls with items for sale.
They reached the center of a large
plaza where the market was held.
There were thousands of people there,
arguing, selling, and buying;
vegetables for sale amongst daggers,
and carpets displayed alongside
tobacco. But the boy never took his eye
off his new friend. After all, he had all
his money. He thought about asking
him to give it back, but decided that
would be unfriendly. He knew nothing
about the customs of the strange land
he was in.
"I'll just watch him," he said to
himself. He knew he was stronger than
his friend.
Suddenly, there in the midst of all that
confusion, he saw the most beautiful
sword he had ever seen. The scabbard
was embossed in silver, and the handle
was black and encrusted with precious
stones. The boy promised himself that,
when he returned from Egypt, he would
buy that sword.
"Ask the owner of that stall how much
the sword costs," he said to his friend.
Then he realized that he had been
distracted for a few moments, looking
at the sword. His heart squeezed, as if
his chest had suddenly compressed it.
He was afraid to look around, because
he knew what he would find. He
continued to look at the beautiful
sword for a bit longer, until he
summoned the courage to turn around.
All around him was the market, with
people coming and going, shouting and
buying, and the aroma of strange
foods… but nowhere could he find his
new companion.
The boy wanted to believe that his
friend had simply become separated
from him by accident. He decided to
stay right there and await his return. As
he waited, a priest climbed to the top of
a nearby tower and began his chant;
everyone in the market fell to their
knees, touched their foreheads to the
ground, and took up the chant. Then,
like a colony of worker ants, they
dismantled their stalls and left.
The sun began its departure, as well.
The boy watched it through its
trajectory for some time, until it was
hidden behind the white houses
surrounding the plaza. He recalled that
when the sun had risen that morning,
he was on another continent, still a
shepherd with sixty sheep, and looking
forward to meeting with a girl. That
morning he had known everything that
was going to happen to him as he
walked through the familiar fields. But
now, as the sun began to set, he was in
a different country, a stranger in a
strange land, where he couldn't even
speak the language. He was no longer a
shepherd, and he had nothing, not even
the money to return and start
everything over.
All this happened between sunrise and
sunset, the boy thought. He was feeling
sorry for himself, and lamenting the
fact that his life could have changed so
suddenly and so drastically.
He was so ashamed that he wanted to
cry. He had never even wept in front of
his own sheep. But the marketplace
was empty, and he was far from home,
so he wept. He wept because God was
unfair, and because this was the way
God repaid those who believed in their
dreams.
When I had my sheep, I was happy, and
I made those around me happy. People
saw me coming and welcomed me, he
thought. But now I'm sad and alone.
I'm going to become bitter and
distrustful of people because one
person betrayed me. I'm going to hate
those who have found their treasure
because I never found mine. And I'm
going to hold on to what little I have,
because I'm too insignificant to
conquer the world.
He opened his pouch to see what was
left of his possessions; maybe there
was a bit left of the sandwich he had
eaten on the ship. But all he found was
the heavy book, his jacket, and the two
stones the old man had given him.
As he looked at the stones, he felt
relieved for some reason. He had
exchanged six sheep for two precious
stones that had been taken from a gold
breastplate. He could sell the stones
and buy a return ticket. But this time
I'll be smarter, the boy thought,
removing them from the pouch so he
could put them in his pocket. This was
a port town, and the only truthful thing
his friend had told him was that port
towns are full of thieves.
Now he understood why the owner of
the bar had been so upset: he was
trying to tell him not to trust that man.
"I'm like everyone else—I see the
world in terms of what I would like to
see happen, not what actually does."
He ran his fingers slowly over the
stones, sensing their temperature and
feeling their surfaces. They were his
treasure. Just handling them made him
feel better. They reminded him of the
old man.
"When you want something, all the
universe conspires in helping you to
achieve it," he had said.
The boy was trying to understand the
truth of what the old man had said.
There he was in the empty
marketplace, without a cent to his
name, and with not a sheep to guard
through the night. But the stones were
proof that he had met with a king—a
king who knew of the boy's past.
"They're called Urim and Thummim,
and they can help you to read the
omens." The boy put the stones back in
the pouch and decided to do an
experiment. The old man had said to
ask very clear questions, and to do that,
the boy had to know what he wanted.
So, he asked if the old man's blessing
was still with him.
He took out one of the stones. It was
"yes."
"Am I going to find my treasure?" he
asked.
He stuck his hand into the pouch, and
felt around for one of the stones. As he
did so, both of them pushed through a
hole in the pouch and fell to the
ground. The boy had never even
noticed that there was a hole in his
pouch. He knelt down to find Urim and
Thummim and put them back in the
pouch. But as he saw them lying there
on the ground, another phrase came to
his mind.
"Learn to recognize omens, and follow
them," the old king had said.
An omen. The boy smiled to himself.
He picked up the two stones and put
them back in his pouch. He didn't
consider mending the hole—the stones
could fall through any time they
wanted. He had learned that there were
certain things one shouldn't ask about,
so as not to flee from one's own
destiny. "I promised that I would make
my own decisions," he said to himself.
But the stones had told him that the old
man was still with him, and that made
him feel more confident. He looked
around at the empty plaza again,
feeling less desperate than before. This
wasn't a strange place; it was a new
one.
After all, what he had always wanted
was just that: to know new places. Even
if he never got to the Pyramids, he had
already traveled farther than any
shepherd he knew. Oh, if they only
knew how different things are just two
hours by ship from where they are, he
thought. Although his new world at the
moment was just an empty
marketplace, he had already seen it
when it was teeming with life, and he
would never forget it. He remembered
the sword. It hurt him a bit to think
about it, but he had never seen one like
it before. As he mused about these
things, he realized that he had to
choose between thinking of himself as
the poor victim of a thief and as an
adventurer in quest of his treasure.
"I'm an adventurer, looking for
treasure," he said to himself.
*
He was shaken into wakefulness by
someone. He had fallen asleep in the
middle of the marketplace, and life in
the plaza was about to resume.
Looking around, he sought his sheep,
and then realized that he was in a new
world. But instead of being saddened,
he was happy. He no longer had to seek
out food and water for the sheep; he
could go in search of his treasure,
instead. He had not a cent in his pocket,
but he had faith. He had decided, the
night before, that he would be as much
an adventurer as the ones he had
admired in books.
He walked slowly through the market.
The merchants were assembling their
stalls, and the boy helped a candy seller
to do his. The candy seller had a smile
on his face: he was happy, aware of
what his life was about, and ready to
begin a day's work. His smile reminded
the boy of the old man—the mysterious
old king he had met. "This candy
merchant isn't making candy so that
later he can travel or marry a
shopkeeper's daughter.
He's doing it because it's what he wants
to do," thought the boy. He realized
that he could do the same thing the old
man had done—sense whether a person
was near to or far from his destiny. Just
by looking at them. It's easy, and yet
I've never done it before, he thought.
When the stall was assembled, the
candy seller offered the boy the first
sweet he had made for the day. The boy
thanked him, ate it, and went on his
way. When he had gone only a short
distance, he realized that, while they
were erecting the stall, one of them had
spoken Arabic and the other Spanish.
And they had understood each other
perfectly well.
There must be a language that doesn't
depend on words, the boy thought. I've
already had that experience with my
sheep, and now it's happening with
people.
He was learning a lot of new things.
Some of them were things that he had
already experienced, and weren't really
new, but that he had never perceived
before. And he hadn't perceived them
because he had become accustomed to
them. He realized: If I can learn to
understand this language without
words, I can learn to understand the
world.
Relaxed and unhurried, he resolved that
he would walk through the narrow
streets of Tangier. Only in that way
would he be able to read the omens. He
knew it would require a lot of patience,
but shepherds know all about patience.
Once again he saw that, in that strange
land, he was applying the same lessons
he had learned with his sheep.
"All things are one," the old man had
said.
*
The crystal merchant awoke with the
day, and felt the same anxiety that he
felt every morning. He had been in the
same place for thirty years: a shop at
the top of a hilly street where few
customers passed. Now it was too late
to change anything—the only thing he
had ever learned to do was to buy and
sell crystal glassware. There had been a
time when many people knew of his
shop: Arab merchants, French and
English geologists, German soldiers
who were always well-heeled. In those
days it had been wonderful to be
selling crystal, and he had thought how
he would become rich, and have
beautiful women at his side as he grew
older.
But, as time passed, Tangier had
changed. The nearby city of Ceuta had
grown faster than Tangier, and business
had fallen off. Neighbors moved away,
and there remained only a few small
shops on the hill. And no one was
going to climb the hill just to browse
through a few small shops.
But the crystal merchant had no choice.
He had lived thirty years of his life
buying and selling crystal pieces, and
now it was too late to do anything else.
He spent the entire morning observing
the infrequent comings and goings in
the street.
He had done this for years, and knew
the schedule of everyone who passed.
But, just before lunchtime, a boy
stopped in front of the shop. He was
dressed normally, but the practiced
eyes of the crystal merchant could see
that the boy had no money to spend.
Nevertheless, the merchant decided to
delay his lunch for a few minutes until
the boy moved on.
*
A card hanging in the doorway
announced that several languages were
spoken in the shop.
The boy saw a man appear behind the
counter.
"I can clean up those glasses in the
window, if you want," said the boy.
"The way they look now, nobody is
going to want to buy them."
The man looked at him without
responding.
"In exchange, you could give me
something to eat."
The man still said nothing, and the boy
sensed that he was going to have to
make a decision. In his pouch, he had
his jacket—he certainly wasn't going to
need it in the desert. Taking the jacket
out, he began to clean the glasses. In
half an hour, he had cleaned all the
glasses in the window, and, as he was
doing so, two customers had entered
the shop and bought some crystal.
When he had completed the cleaning,
he asked the man for something to eat.
"Let's go and have some lunch," said
the crystal merchant.
He put a sign on the door, and they
went to a small café nearby. As they sat
down at the only table in the place, the
crystal merchant laughed.
"You didn't have to do any cleaning,"
he said. "The Koran requires me to feed
a hungry person."
"Well then, why did you let me do it?"
the boy asked.
"Because the crystal was dirty. And
both you and I needed to cleanse our
minds of negative thoughts."
When they had eaten, the merchant
turned to the boy and said, "I'd like you
to work in my shop. Two customers
came in today while you were working,
and that's a good omen."
People talk a lot about omens, thought
the shepherd. But they really don't
know what they're saying. Just as I
hadn't realized that for so many years I
had been speaking a language without
words to my sheep.
"Do you want to go to work for me?"
the merchant asked.
"I can work for the rest of today," the
boy answered. "I'll work all night, until
dawn, and I'll clean every piece of
crystal in your shop. In return, I need
money to get to Egypt tomorrow."
The merchant laughed. "Even if you
cleaned my crystal for an entire year…
even if you earned a good commission
selling every piece, you would still
have to borrow money to get to Egypt.
There are thousands of kilometers of
desert between here and there."
There was a moment of silence so
profound that it seemed the city was
asleep. No sound from the bazaars, no
arguments among the merchants, no
men climbing to the towers to chant.
No hope, no adventure, no old kings or
destinies, no treasure, and no Pyramids.
It was as if the world had fallen silent
because the boy's soul had. He sat
there, staring blankly through the door
of the café, wishing that he had died,
and that everything would end forever
at that moment.
The merchant looked anxiously at the
boy. All the joy he had seen that
morning had suddenly disappeared.
"I can give you the money you need to
get back to your country, my son," said
the crystal merchant.
The boy said nothing. He got up,
adjusted his clothing, and picked up his
pouch.
"I'll work for you," he said.
And after another long silence, he
added, "I need money to buy some
sheep."
PART TWO
The boy had been working for the
crystal merchant for almost a month,
and he could see that it wasn't exactly
the kind of job that would make him
happy. The merchant spent the entire
day mumbling behind the counter,
telling the boy to be careful with the
pieces and not to break anything.
But he stayed with the job because the
merchant, although he was an old
grouch, treated him fairly; the boy
received a good commission for each
piece he sold, and had already been
able to put some money aside. That
morning he had done some calculating:
if he continued to work every day as he
had been, he would need a whole year
to be able to buy some sheep.
"I'd like to build a display case for the
crystal," the boy said to the merchant.
"We could place it outside, and attract
those people who pass at the bottom of
the hill."
"I've never had one before," the
merchant answered. "People will pass
by and bump into it, and pieces will be
broken."
"Well, when I took my sheep through
the fields some of them might have
died if we had come upon a snake. But
that's the way life is with sheep and
with shepherds."
The merchant turned to a customer who
wanted three crystal glasses. He was
selling better than ever… as if time had
turned back to the old days when the
street had been one of Tangier's major
attractions.
"Business has really improved," he said
to the boy, after the customer had left.
"I'm doing much better, and soon you'll
be able to return to your sheep. Why
ask more out of life?"
"Because we have to respond to
omens," the boy said, almost without
meaning to; then he regretted what he
had said, because the merchant had
never met the king.
"It's called the principle of favorability,
beginner's luck. Because life wants you
to achieve your destiny," the old king
had said.
But the merchant understood what the
boy had said. The boy's very presence
in the shop was an omen, and, as time
passed and money was pouring into the
cash drawer, he had no regrets about
having hired the boy. The boy was
being paid more money than he
deserved, because the merchant,
thinking that sales wouldn't amount to
much, had offered the boy a high
commission rate. He had assumed he
would soon return to his sheep.
"Why did you want to get to the
Pyramids?" he asked, to get away from
the business of the display.
"Because I've always heard about
them," the boy answered, saying
nothing about his dream. The treasure
was now nothing but a painful memory,
and he tried to avoid thinking about it.
"I don't know anyone around here who
would want to cross the desert just to
see the Pyramids," said the merchant.
"They're just a pile of stones. You
could build one in your backyard."
"You've never had dreams of travel,"
said the boy, turning to wait on a
customer who had entered the shop.
Two days later, the merchant spoke to
the boy about the display.
"I don't much like change," he said.
"You and I aren't like Hassan, that rich
merchant. If he makes a buying
mistake, it doesn't affect him much.
But we two have to live with our
mistakes."
That's true enough, the boy thought,
ruefully.
"Why did you think we should have the
display?"
"I want to get back to my sheep faster.
We have to take advantage when luck
is on our side, and do as much to help it
as it's doing to help us. It's called the
principle of favorability. Or beginner's
luck."
The merchant was silent for a few
moments. Then he said, "The Prophet
gave us the Koran, and left us just five
obligations to satisfy during our lives.
The most important is to believe only
in the one true God. The others are to
pray five times a day, fast during
Ramadan, and be charitable to the
poor."
He stopped there. His eyes filled with
tears as he spoke of the Prophet. He
was a devout man, and, even with all
his impatience, he wanted to live his
life in accordance with Muslim law.
"What's the fifth obligation?" the boy
asked.
"Two days ago, you said that I had
never dreamed of travel," the merchant
answered.
"The fifth obligation of every Muslim
is a pilgrimage. We are obliged, at
least once in our lives, to visit the holy
city of Mecca.
"Mecca is a lot farther away than the
Pyramids. When I was young, all I
wanted to do was put together enough
money to start this shop. I thought that
someday I'd be rich, and could go to
Mecca. I began to make some money,
but I could never bring myself to leave
someone in charge of the shop; the
crystals are delicate things. At the
same time, people were passing my
shop all the time, heading for Mecca.
Some of them were rich pilgrims,
traveling in caravans with servants and
camels, but most of the people making
the pilgrimage were poorer than I.
"All who went there were happy at
having done so. They placed the
symbols of the pilgrimage on the doors
of their houses. One of them, a cobbler
who made his living mending boots,
said that he had traveled for almost a
year through the desert, but that he got
more tired when he had to walk
through the streets of Tangier buying
his leather."
"Well, why don't you go to Mecca
now?" asked the boy.
"Because it's the thought of Mecca that
keeps me alive. That's what helps me
face these days that are all the same,
these mute crystals on the shelves, and
lunch and dinner at that same horrible
café. I'm afraid that if my dream is
realized, I'll have no reason to go on
living.
"You dream about your sheep and the
Pyramids, but you're different from
me, because you want to realize your
dreams. I just want to dream about
Mecca. I've already imagined a
thousand times crossing the desert,
arriving at the Plaza of the Sacred
Stone, the seven times I walk around it
before allowing myself to touch it. I've
already imagined the people who
would be at my side, and those in front
of me, and the conversations and
prayers we would share. But I'm afraid
that it would all be a disappointment,
so I prefer just to dream about it."
That day, the merchant gave the boy
permission to build the display. Not
everyone can see his dreams come true
in the same way.
*
Two more months passed, and the shelf
brought many customers into the
crystal shop.
The boy estimated that, if he worked
for six more months, he could return to
Spain and buy sixty sheep, and yet
another sixty. In less than a year, he
would have doubled his flock, and he
would be able to do business with the
Arabs, because he was now able to
speak their strange language. Since that
morning in the marketplace, he had
never again made use of Urim and
Thummim, because Egypt was now just
as distant a dream for him as was
Mecca for the merchant. Anyway, the
boy had become happy in his work, and
thought all the time about the day when
he would disembark at Tarifa as a
winner.
"You must always know what it is that
you want," the old king had said. The
boy knew, and was now working
toward it. Maybe it was his treasure to
have wound up in that strange land,
met up with a thief, and doubled the
size of his flock without spending a
cent.
He was proud of himself. He had
learned some important things, like
how to deal in crystal, and about the
language without words… and about
omens. One afternoon he had seen a
man at the top of the hill, complaining
that it was impossible to find a decent
place to get something to drink after
such a climb. The boy, accustomed to
recognizing omens, spoke to the
merchant.
"Let's sell tea to the people who climb
the hill."
"Lots of places sell tea around here,"
the merchant said.
"But we could sell tea in crystal
glasses. The people will enjoy the tea
and want to buy the glasses. I have
been told that beauty is the great
seducer of men."
The merchant didn't respond, but that
afternoon, after saying his prayers and
closing the shop, he invited the boy to
sit with him and share his hookah, that
strange pipe used by the Arabs.
"What is it you're looking for?" asked
the old merchant.
"I've already told you. I need to buy my
sheep back, so I have to earn the money
to do so."
The merchant put some new coals in
the hookah, and inhaled deeply.
"I've had this shop for thirty years. I
know good crystal from bad, and
everything else there is to know about
crystal. I know its dimensions and how
it behaves. If we serve tea in crystal,
the shop is going to expand. And then
I'll have to change my way of life."
"Well, isn't that good?"
"I'm already used to the way things are.
Before you came, I was thinking about
how much time I had wasted in the
same place, while my friends had
moved on, and either went bankrupt or
did better than they had before. It made
me very depressed. Now, I can see that
it hasn't been too bad. The shop is
exactly the size I always wanted it to
be. I don't want to change anything,
because I don't know how to deal with
change. I'm used to the way I am."
The boy didn't know what to say. The
old man continued, "You have been a
real blessing to me. Today, I
understand something I didn't see
before: every blessing ignored becomes
a curse. I don't want anything else in
life. But you are forcing me to look at
wealth and at horizons I have never
known. Now that I have seen them, and
now that I see how immense my
possibilities are, I'm going to feel
worse than I did before you arrived.
Because I know the things I should be
able to accomplish, and I don't want to
do so."
It's good I refrained from saying
anything to the baker in Tarifa, thought
the boy to himself.
They went on smoking the pipe for a
while as the sun began to set. They
were conversing in Arabic, and the boy
was proud of himself for being able to
do so. There had been a time when he
thought that his sheep could teach him
everything he needed to know about the
world. But they could never have
taught him Arabic.
There are probably other things in the
world that the sheep can't teach me,
thought the boy as he regarded the old
merchant. All they ever do, really, is
look for food and water.
And maybe it wasn't that they were
teaching me, but that I was learning
from them.
" Maktub," the merchant said, finally.
"What does that mean?"
"You would have to have been born an
Arab to understand," he answered. "But
in your language it would be something
like 'It is written.' "
And, as he smothered the coals in the
hookah, he told the boy that he could
begin to sell tea in the crystal glasses.
Sometimes, there's just no way to hold
back the river.
*
The men climbed the hill, and they
were tired when they reached the top.
But there they saw a crystal shop that
offered refreshing mint tea. They went
in to drink the tea, which was served in
beautiful crystal glasses.
"My wife never thought of this," said
one, and he bought some crystal—he
was entertaining guests that night, and
the guests would be impressed by the
beauty of the glassware. The other man
remarked that tea was always more
delicious when it was served in crystal,
because the aroma was retained. The
third said that it was a tradition in the
Orient to use crystal glasses for tea
because it had magical powers.
Before long, the news spread, and a
great many people began to climb the
hill to see the shop that was doing
something new in a trade that was so
old. Other shops were opened that
served tea in crystal, but they weren't at
the top of a hill, and they had little
business.
Eventually, the merchant had to hire
two more employees. He began to
import enormous quantities of tea,
along with his crystal, and his shop was
sought out by men and women with a
thirst for things new.
And, in that way, the months passed.
*
The boy awoke before dawn. It had
been eleven months and nine days
since he had first set foot on the
African continent.
He dressed in his Arabian clothing of
white linen, bought especially for this
day. He put his headcloth in place and
secured it with a ring made of camel
skin. Wearing his new sandals, he
descended the stairs silently.
The city was still sleeping. He prepared
himself a sandwich and drank some hot
tea from a crystal glass. Then he sat in
the sun-filled doorway, smoking the
hookah.
He smoked in silence, thinking of
nothing, and listening to the sound of
the wind that brought the scent of the
desert. When he had finished his
smoke, he reached into one of his
pockets, and sat there for a few
moments, regarding what he had
withdrawn.
It was a bundle of money. Enough to
buy himself a hundred and twenty
sheep, a return ticket, and a license to
import products from Africa into his
own country.
He waited patiently for the merchant to
awaken and open the shop. Then the
two went off to have some more tea.
"I'm leaving today," said the boy. "I
have the money I need to buy my
sheep. And you have the money you
need to go to Mecca."
The old man said nothing.
"Will you give me your blessing?"
asked the boy. "You have helped me."
The man continued to prepare his tea,
saying nothing. Then he turned to the
boy.
"I am proud of you," he said. "You
brought a new feeling into my crystal
shop. But you know that I'm not going
to go to Mecca. Just as you know that
you're not going to buy your sheep."
"Who told you that?" asked the boy,
startled.
" Maktub" said the old crystal
merchant.
And he gave the boy his blessing.
*
The boy went to his room and packed
his belongings. They filled three sacks.
As he was leaving, he saw, in the
corner of the room, his old shepherd's
pouch. It was bunched up, and he had
hardly thought of it for a long time. As
he took his jacket out of the pouch,
thinking to give it to someone in the
street, the two stones fell to the floor.
Urim and Thummim.
It made the boy think of the old king,
and it startled him to realize how long
it had been since he had thought of
him. For nearly a year, he had been
working incessantly, thinking only of
putting aside enough money so that he
could return to Spain with pride.
"Never stop dreaming," the old king
had said. "Follow the omens."
The boy picked up Urim and
Thummim, and, once again, had the
strange sensation that the old king was
nearby. He had worked hard for a year,
and the omens were that it was time to
go.
I'm going to go back to doing just what
I did before, the boy thought. Even
though the sheep didn't teach me to
speak Arabic.
But the sheep had taught him
something even more important: that
there was a language in the world that
everyone understood, a language the
boy had used throughout the time that
he was trying to improve things at the
shop. It was the language of
enthusiasm, of things accomplished
with love and purpose, and as part of a
search for something believed in and
desired. Tangier was no longer a
strange city, and he felt that, just as he
had conquered this place, he could
conquer the world.
"When you want something, all the
universe conspires to help you achieve
it," the old king had said.
But the old king hadn't said anything
about being robbed, or about endless
deserts, or about people who know
what their dreams are but don't want to
realize them. The old king hadn't told
him that the Pyramids were just a pile
of stones, or that anyone could build
one in his backyard. And he had
forgotten to mention that, when you
have enough money to buy a flock
larger than the one you had before, you
should buy it.
The boy picked up his pouch and put it
with his other things. He went down the
stairs and found the merchant waiting
on a foreign couple, while two other
customers walked about the shop,
drinking tea from crystal glasses. It
was more activity than usual for this
time of the morning. From where he
stood, he saw for the first time that the
old merchant's hair was very much like
the hair of the old king. He
remembered the smile of the candy
seller, on his first day in Tangier, when
he had nothing to eat and nowhere to
go—that smile had also been like the
old king's smile.
It's almost as if he had been here and
left his mark, he thought. And yet, none
of these people has ever met the old
king. On the other hand, he said that he
always appeared to help those who are
trying to realize their destiny.
He left without saying good-bye to the
crystal merchant. He didn't want to cry
with the other people there. He was
going to miss the place and all the good
things he had learned.
He was more confident in himself,
though, and felt as though he could
conquer the world.
"But I'm going back to the fields that I
know, to take care of my flock again."
He said that to himself with certainty,
but he was no longer happy with his
decision. He had worked for an entire
year to make a dream come true, and
that dream, minute by minute, was
becoming less important. Maybe
because that wasn't really his dream.
Who knows… maybe it's better to be
like the crystal merchant: never go to
Mecca, and just go through life
wanting to do so, he thought, again
trying to convince himself. But as he
held Urim and Thummim in his hand,
they had transmitted to him the
strength and will of the old king. By
coincidence—or maybe it was an
omen, the boy thought—he came to the
bar he had entered on his first day
there. The thief wasn't there, and the
owner brought him a cup of tea.
I can always go back to being a
shepherd, the boy thought. I learned
how to care for sheep, and I haven't
forgotten how that's done. But maybe
I'll never have another chance to get to
the Pyramids in Egypt. The old man
wore a breastplate of gold, and he knew
about my past. He really was a king, a
wise king.
The hills of Andalusia were only two
hours away, but there was an entire
desert between him and the Pyramids.
Yet the boy felt that there was another
way to regard his situation: he was
actually two hours closer to his
treasure… the fact that the two hours
had stretched into an entire year didn't
matter.
I know why I want to get back to my
flock, he thought. I understand sheep;
they're no longer a problem, and they
can be good friends. On the other hand,
I don't know if the desert can be a
friend, and it's in the desert that I have
to search for my treasure. If I don't find
it, I can always go home. I finally have
enough money, and all the time I need.
Why not?
He suddenly felt tremendously happy.
He could always go back to being a
shepherd. He could always become a
crystal salesman again. Maybe the
world had other hidden treasures, but
he had a dream, and he had met with a
king. That doesn't happen to just
anyone!
He was planning as he left the bar. He
had remembered that one of the crystal
merchant's suppliers transported his
crystal by means of caravans that
crossed the desert. He held Urim and
Thummim in his hand; because of
those two stones, he was once again on
the way to his treasure.
"I am always nearby, when someone
wants to realize their destiny," the old
king had told him.
What could it cost to go over to the
supplier's warehouse and find out if the
Pyramids were really that far away?
*
The Englishman was sitting on a bench
in a structure that smelled of animals,
sweat, and dust; it was part warehouse,
part corral. I never thought I'd end up
in a place like this, he thought, as he
leafed through the pages of a chemical
journal. Ten years at the university, and
here I am in a corral.
But he had to move on. He believed in
omens. All his life and all his studies
were aimed at finding the one true
language of the universe. First he had
studied Esperanto, then the world's
religions, and now it was alchemy. He
knew how to speak Esperanto, he
understood all the major religions well,
but he wasn't yet an alchemist. He had
unraveled the truths behind important
questions, but his studies had taken
him to a point beyond which he could
not seem to go. He had tried in vain to
establish a relationship with an
alchemist. But the alchemists were
strange people, who thought only about
themselves, and almost always refused
to help him. Who knows, maybe they
had failed to discover the secret of the
Master Work—the Philosopher's Stone
—and for this reason kept their
knowledge to themselves.
He had already spent much of the
fortune left to him by his father,
fruitlessly seeking the Philosopher's
Stone. He had spent enormous amounts
of time at the great libraries of the
world, and had purchased all the rarest
and most important volumes on
alchemy. In one he had read that, many
years ago, a famous Arabian alchemist
had visited Europe. It was said that he
was more than two hundred years old,
and that he had discovered the
Philosopher's Stone and the Elixir of
Life. The Englishman had been
profoundly impressed by the story. But
he would never have thought it more
than just a myth, had not a friend of his
—returning from an archaeological
expedition in the desert—told him
about an Arab that was possessed of
exceptional powers.
"He lives at the Al-Fayoum oasis," his
friend had said. "And people say that
he is two hundred years old, and is able
to transform any metal into gold."
The Englishman could not contain his
excitement. He canceled all his
commitments and pulled together the
most important of his books, and now
here he was, sitting inside a dusty,
smelly warehouse. Outside, a huge
caravan was being prepared for a
crossing of the Sahara, and was
scheduled to pass through Al-Fayoum.
I'm going to find that damned
alchemist, the Englishman thought.
And the odor of the animals became a
bit more tolerable.
A young Arab, also loaded down with
baggage, entered, and greeted the
Englishman.
"Where are you bound?" asked the
young Arab.
"I'm going into the desert," the man
answered, turning back to his reading.
He didn't want any conversation at this
point. What he needed to do was
review all he had learned over the
years, because the alchemist would
certainly put him to the test.
The young Arab took out a book and
began to read. The book was written in
Spanish.
That's good, thought the Englishman.
He spoke Spanish better than Arabic,
and, if this boy was going to AlFayoum, there would be someone to
talk to when there were no other
important things to do.
*
"That's strange," said the boy, as he
tried once again to read the burial
scene that began the book. "I've been
trying for two years to read this book,
and I never get past these first few
pages." Even without a king to provide
an interruption, he was unable to
concentrate.
He still had some doubts about the
decision he had made. But he was able
to understand one thing: making a
decision was only the beginning of
things. When someone makes a
decision, he is really diving into a
strong current that will carry him to
places he had never dreamed of when
he first made the decision.
When I decided to seek out my
treasure, I never imagined that I'd wind
up working in a crystal shop, he
thought. And joining this caravan may
have been my decision, but where it
goes is going to be a mystery to me.
Nearby was the Englishman, reading a
book. He seemed unfriendly, and had
looked irritated when the boy had
entered. They might even have become
friends, but the Englishman closed off
the conversation.
The boy closed his book. He felt that he
didn't want to do anything that might
make him look like the Englishman. He
took Urim and Thummim from his
pocket, and began playing with them.
The stranger shouted, "Urim and
Thummim!"
In a flash the boy put them back in his
pocket.
"They're not for sale," he said.
"They're not worth much," the
Englishman answered. "They're only
made of rock crystal, and there are
millions of rock crystals in the earth.
But those who know about such things
would know that those are Urim and
Thummim. I didn't know that they had
them in this part of the world."
"They were given to me as a present by
a king," the boy said.
The stranger didn't answer; instead, he
put his hand in his pocket, and took out
two stones that were the same as the
boy's.
"Did you say a king?" he asked.
"I guess you don't believe that a king
would talk to someone like me, a
shepherd," he said, wanting to end the
conversation.
"Not at all. It was shepherds who were
the first to recognize a king that the
rest of the world refused to
acknowledge. So, it's not surprising
that kings would talk to shepherds."
And he went on, fearing that the boy
wouldn't understand what he was
talking about, "It's in the Bible. The
same book that taught me about Urim
and Thummim. These stones were the
only form of divination permitted by
God. The priests carried them in a
golden breastplate."
The boy was suddenly happy to be
there at the warehouse.
"Maybe this is an omen," said the
Englishman, half aloud.
"Who told you about omens?" The
boy's interest was increasing by the
moment.
"Everything in life is an omen," said
the Englishman, now closing the
journal he was reading. "There is a
universal language, understood by
everybody, but already forgotten.
I am in search of that universal
language, among other things. That's
why I'm here. I have to find a man who
knows that universal language. An
alchemist."
The conversation was interrupted by
the warehouse boss.
"You're in luck, you two," the fat Arab
said. "There's a caravan leaving today
for Al-Fayoum."
"But I'm going to Egypt," the boy said.
"Al-Fayoum is in Egypt," said the
Arab. "What kind of Arab are you?"
"That's a good luck omen," the
Englishman said, after the fat Arab had
gone out. "If I could, I'd write a huge
encyclopedia just about the words luck
and coincidence. It's with those words
that the universal language is written.''
He told the boy it was no coincidence
that he had met him with Urim and
Thummim in his hand. And he asked
the boy if he, too, were in search of the
alchemist.
"I'm looking for a treasure," said the
boy, and he immediately regretted
having said it.
But the Englishman appeared not to
attach any importance to it.
"In a way, so am I," he said.
"I don't even know what alchemy is,"
the boy was saying, when the
warehouse boss called to them to come
outside.
*
"I'm the leader of the caravan," said a
dark-eyed, bearded man. "I hold the
power of life and death for every
person I take with me. The desert is a
capricious lady, and sometimes she
drives men crazy."
There were almost two hundred people
gathered there, and four hundred
animals—
camels, horses, mules, and fowl. In the
crowd were women, children, and a
number of men with swords at their
belts and rifles slung on their
shoulders. The Englishman had several
suitcases filled with books. There was a
babble of noise, and the leader had to
repeat himself several times for
everyone to understand what he was
saying.
"There are a lot of different people
here, and each has his own God. But
the only God I serve is Allah, and in his
name I swear that I will do everything
possible once again to win out over the
desert. But I want each and every one
of you to swear by the God you believe
in that you will follow my orders no
matter what. In the desert,
disobedience means death."
There was a murmur from the crowd.
Each was swearing quietly to his or her
own God.
The boy swore to Jesus Christ. The
Englishman said nothing. And the
murmur lasted longer than a simple
vow would have. The people were also
praying to heaven for protection.
A long note was sounded on a bugle,
and everyone mounted up. The boy and
the Englishman had bought camels, and
climbed uncertainly onto their backs.
The boy felt sorry for the Englishman's
camel, loaded down as he was with the
cases of books.
"There's no such thing as coincidence,"
said the Englishman, picking up the
conversation where it had been
interrupted in the warehouse. "I'm here
because a friend of mine heard of an
Arab who…"
But the caravan began to move, and it
was impossible to hear what the
Englishman was saying. The boy knew
what he was about to describe, though:
the mysterious chain that links one
thing to another, the same chain that
had caused him to become a shepherd,
that had caused his recurring dream,
that had brought him to a city near
Africa, to find a king, and to be robbed
in order to meet a crystal merchant,
and…
The closer one gets to realizing his
destiny, the more that destiny becomes
his true reason for being, thought the
boy.
The caravan moved toward the east. It
traveled during the morning, halted
when the sun was at its strongest, and
resumed late in the afternoon. The boy
spoke very little with the Englishman,
who spent most of his time with his
books.
The boy observed in silence the
progress of the animals and people
across the desert.
Now everything was quite different
from how it was that day they had set
out: then, there had been confusion and
shouting, the cries of children and the
whinnying of animals, all mixed with
the nervous orders of the guides and
the merchants.
But, in the desert, there was only the
sound of the eternal wind, and of the
hoofbeats of the animals. Even the
guides spoke very little to one another.
"I've crossed these sands many times,"
said one of the camel drivers one night.
"But the desert is so huge, and the
horizons so distant, that they make a
person feel small, and as if he should
remain silent."
The boy understood intuitively what he
meant, even without ever having set
foot in the desert before. Whenever he
saw the sea, or a fire, he fell silent,
impressed by their elemental force.
I've learned things from the sheep, and
I've learned things from crystal, he
thought. I can learn something from the
desert, too. It seems old and wise.
The wind never stopped, and the boy
remembered the day he had sat at the
fort in Tarifa with this same wind
blowing in his face. It reminded him of
the wool from his sheep…
his sheep who were now seeking food
and water in the fields of Andalusia, as
they always had.
"They're not my sheep anymore," he
said to himself, without nostalgia.
"They must be used to their new
shepherd, and have probably already
forgotten me. That's good.
Creatures like the sheep, that are used
to traveling, know about moving on."
He thought of the merchant's daughter,
and was sure that she had probably
married.
Perhaps to a baker, or to another
shepherd who could read and could tell
her exciting stories—after all, he
probably wasn't the only one. But he
was excited at his intuitive
understanding of the camel driver's
comment: maybe he was also learning
the universal language that deals with
the past and the present of all people.
"Hunches," his mother used to call
them. The boy was beginning to
understand that intuition is really a
sudden immersion of the soul into the
universal current of life, where the
histories of all people are connected,
and we are able to know everything,
because it's all written there.
" Maktub," the boy said, remembering
the crystal merchant.
The desert was all sand in some
stretches, and rocky in others. When
the caravan was blocked by a boulder,
it had to go around it; if there was a
large rocky area, they had to make a
major detour. If the sand was too fine
for the animals' hooves, they sought a
way where the sand was more
substantial. In some places, the ground
was covered with the salt of dried-up
lakes. The animals balked at such
places, and the camel drivers were
forced to dismount and unburden their
charges. The drivers carried the freight
themselves over such treacherous
footing, and then reloaded the camels.
If a guide were to fall ill or die, the
camel drivers would draw lots and
appoint a new one.
But all this happened for one basic
reason: no matter how many detours
and adjustments it made, the caravan
moved toward the same compass point.
Once obstacles were overcome, it
returned to its course, sighting on a star
that indicated the location of the oasis.
When the people saw that star shining
in the morning sky, they knew they
were on the right course toward water,
palm trees, shelter, and other people. It
was only the Englishman who was
unaware of all this; he was, for the
most part, immersed in reading his
books.
The boy, too, had his book, and he had
tried to read it during the first few days
of the journey. But he found it much
more interesting to observe the caravan
and listen to the wind. As soon as he
had learned to know his camel better,
and to establish a relationship with
him, he threw the book away. Although
the boy had developed a superstition
that each time he opened the book he
would learn something important, he
decided it was an unnecessary burden.
He became friendly with the camel
driver who traveled alongside him. At
night, as they sat around the fire, the
boy related to the driver his adventures
as a shepherd.
During one of these conversations, the
driver told of his own life.
"I used to live near Ell Cairum," he
said. "I had my orchard, my children,
and a life that would change not at all
until I died. One year, when the crop
was the best ever, we all went to
Mecca, and I satisfied the only unmet
obligation in my life. I could die
happily, and that made me feel good.
"One day, the earth began to tremble,
and the Nile overflowed its banks. It
was something that I thought could
happen only to others, never to me. My
neighbors feared they would lose all
their olive trees in the flood, and my
wife was afraid that we would lose our
children. I thought that everything I
owned would be destroyed.
"The land was ruined, and I had to find
some other way to earn a living. So
now I'm a camel driver. But that
disaster taught me to understand the
word of Allah: people need not fear the
unknown if they are capable of
achieving what they need and want.
"We are afraid of losing what we have,
whether it's our life or our possessions
and property. But this fear evaporates
when we understand that our life
stories and the history of the world
were written by the same hand."
Sometimes, their caravan met with
another. One always had something
that the other needed—as if everything
were indeed written by one hand. As
they sat around the fire, the camel
drivers exchanged information about
windstorms, and told stories about the
desert.
At other times, mysterious, hooded
men would appear; they were Bedouins
who did surveillance along the caravan
route. They provided warnings about
thieves and barbarian tribes. They
came in silence and departed the same
way, dressed in black garments that
showed only their eyes. One night, a
camel driver came to the fire where the
Englishman and the boy were sitting.
"There are rumors of tribal wars," he
told them.
The three fell silent. The boy noted that
there was a sense of fear in the air,
even though no one said anything.
Once again he was experiencing the
language without words… the
universal language.
The Englishman asked if they were in
danger.
"Once you get into the desert, there's
no going back," said the camel driver.
"And, when you can't go back, you
have to worry only about the best way
of moving forward. The rest is up to
Allah, including the danger."
And he concluded by saying the
mysterious word: " Maktub."
"You should pay more attention to the
caravan," the boy said to the
Englishman, after the camel driver had
left. "We make a lot of detours, but
we're always heading for the same
destination."
"And you ought to read more about the
world," answered the Englishman.
"Books are like caravans in that
respect."
The immense collection of people and
animals began to travel faster. The
days had always been silent, but now,
even the nights—when the travelers
were accustomed to talking around the
fires—had also become quiet. And, one
day, the leader of the caravan made the
decision that the fires should no longer
be lighted, so as not to attract attention
to the caravan.
The travelers adopted the practice of
arranging the animals in a circle at
night, sleeping together in the center as
protection against the nocturnal cold.
And the leader posted armed sentinels
at the fringes of the group.
The Englishman was unable to sleep
one night. He called to the boy, and
they took a walk along the dunes
surrounding the encampment. There
was a full moon, and the boy told the
Englishman the story of his life.
The Englishman was fascinated with
the part about the progress achieved at
the crystal shop after the boy began
working there.
"That's the principle that governs all
things," he said. "In alchemy, it's called
the Soul of the World. When you want
something with all your heart, that's
when you are closest to the Soul of the
World. It's always a positive force."
He also said that this was not just a
human gift, that everything on the face
of the earth had a soul, whether
mineral, vegetable, or animal—or even
just a simple thought.
"Everything on earth is being
continuously transformed, because the
earth is alive… and it has a soul. We
are part of that soul, so we rarely
recognize that it is working for us. But
in the crystal shop you probably
realized that even the glasses were
collaborating in your success."
The boy thought about that for a while
as he looked at the moon and the
bleached sands.
"I have watched the caravan as it
crossed the desert," he said. "The
caravan and the desert speak the same
language, and it's for that reason that
the desert allows the crossing. It's
going to test the caravan's every step to
see if it's in time, and, if it is, we will
make it to the oasis."
"If either of us had joined this caravan
based only on personal courage, but
without understanding that language,
this journey would have been much
more difficult."
They stood there looking at the moon.
"That's the magic of omens," said the
boy. "I've seen how the guides read the
signs of the desert, and how the soul of
the caravan speaks to the soul of the
desert."
The Englishman said, "I'd better pay
more attention to the caravan."
"And I'd better read your books," said
the boy.
*
They were strange books. They spoke
about mercury, salt, dragons, and
kings, and he didn't understand any of
it. But there was one idea that seemed
to repeat itself throughout all the
books: all things are the manifestation
of one thing only.
In one of the books he learned that the
most important text in the literature of
alchemy contained only a few lines,
and had been inscribed on the surface
of an emerald.
"It's the Emerald Tablet," said the
Englishman, proud that he might teach
something to the boy.
"Well, then, why do we need all these
books?" the boy asked.
"So that we can understand those few
lines," the Englishman answered,
without appearing really to believe
what he had said.
The book that most interested the boy
told the stories of the famous
alchemists. They were men who had
dedicated their entire lives to the
purification of metals in their
laboratories; they believed that, if a
metal were heated for many years, it
would free itself of all its individual
properties, and what was left would be
the Soul of the World. This Soul of the
World allowed them to understand
anything on the face of the earth,
because it was the language with which
all things communicated. They called
that discovery the Master Work—it
was part liquid and part solid.
"Can't you just observe men and omens
in order to understand the language?"
the boy asked.
"You have a mania for simplifying
everything," answered the Englishman,
irritated.
"Alchemy is a serious discipline. Every
step has to be followed exactly as it
was followed by the masters."
The boy learned that the liquid part of
the Master Work was called the Elixir
of Life, and that it cured all illnesses; it
also kept the alchemist from growing
old. And the solid part was called the
Philosopher's Stone.
"It's not easy to find the Philosopher's
Stone," said the Englishman. "The
alchemists spent years in their
laboratories, observing the fire that
purified the metals. They spent so
much time close to the fire that
gradually they gave up the vanities of
the world. They discovered that the
purification of the metals had led to a
purification of themselves."
The boy thought about the crystal
merchant. He had said that it was a
good thing for the boy to clean the
crystal pieces, so that he could free
himself from negative thoughts. The
boy was becoming more and more
convinced that alchemy could be
learned in one's daily life.
"Also," said the Englishman, "the
Philosopher's Stone has a fascinating
property. A small sliver of the stone
can transform large quantities of metal
into gold."
Having heard that, the boy became
even more interested in alchemy. He
thought that, with some patience, he'd
be able to transform everything into
gold. He read the lives of the various
people who had succeeded in doing so:
Helvétius, Elias, Fulcanelli, and Geber.
They were fascinating stories: each of
them lived out his destiny to the end.
They traveled, spoke with wise men,
performed miracles for the
incredulous, and owned the
Philosopher's Stone and the Elixir of
Life.
But when the boy wanted to learn how
to achieve the Master Work, he became
completely lost. There were just
drawings, coded instructions, and
obscure texts.
*
"Why do they make things so
complicated?" he asked the
Englishman one night. The boy had
noticed that the Englishman was
irritable, and missed his books.
"So that those who have the
responsibility for understanding can
understand," he said.
"Imagine if everyone went around
transforming lead into gold. Gold
would lose its value.
"It's only those who are persistent, and
willing to study things deeply, who
achieve the Master Work. That's why
I'm here in the middle of the desert. I'm
seeking a true alchemist who will help
me to decipher the codes."
"When were these books written?" the
boy asked.
"Many centuries ago."
"They didn't have the printing press in
those days," the boy argued. "There
was no way for everybody to know
about alchemy. Why did they use such
strange language, with so many
drawings?"
The Englishman didn't answer him
directly. He said that for the past few
days he had been paying attention to
how the caravan operated, but that he
hadn't learned anything new. The only
thing he had noticed was that talk of
war was becoming more and more
frequent.
*
Then one day the boy returned the
books to the Englishman. "Did you
learn anything?"
the Englishman asked, eager to hear
what it might be. He needed someone
to talk to so as to avoid thinking about
the possibility of war.
"I learned that the world has a soul, and
that whoever understands that soul can
also understand the language of things.
I learned that many alchemists realized
their destinies, and wound up
discovering the Soul of the World, the
Philosopher's Stone, and the Elixir of
Life.
"But, above all, I learned that these
things are all so simple that they could
be written on the surface of an
emerald."
The Englishman was disappointed. The
years of research, the magic symbols,
the strange words and the laboratory
equipment… none of this had made an
impression on the boy.
His soul must be too primitive to
understand those things, he thought.
He took back his books and packed
them away again in their bags.
"Go back to watching the caravan," he
said. "That didn't teach me anything,
either."
The boy went back to contemplating
the silence of the desert, and the sand
raised by the animals. "Everyone has
his or her own way of learning things,"
he said to himself. "His way isn't the
same as mine, nor mine as his. But
we're both in search of our destinies,
and I respect him for that."
*
The caravan began to travel day and
night. The hooded Bedouins reappeared
more and more frequently, and the
camel driver—who had become a good
friend of the boy's—
explained that the war between the
tribes had already begun. The caravan
would be very lucky to reach the oasis.
The animals were exhausted, and the
men talked among themselves less and
less. The silence was the worst aspect
of the night, when the mere groan of a
camel—which before had been nothing
but the groan of a camel—now
frightened everyone, because it might
signal a raid.
The camel driver, though, seemed not
to be very concerned with the threat of
war.
"I'm alive," he said to the boy, as they
ate a bunch of dates one night, with no
fires and no moon. "When I'm eating,
that's all I think about. If I'm on the
march, I just concentrate on marching.
If I have to fight, it will be just as good
a day to die as any other.
"Because I don't live in either my past
or my future. I'm interested only in the
present. If you can concentrate always
on the present, you'll be a happy man.
You'll see that there is life in the
desert, that there are stars in the
heavens, and that tribesmen fight
because they are part of the human
race. Life will be a party for you, a
grand festival, because life is the
moment we're living right now."
Two nights later, as he was getting
ready to bed down, the boy looked for
the star they followed every night. He
thought that the horizon was a bit lower
than it had been, because he seemed to
see stars on the desert itself.
"It's the oasis," said the camel driver.
"Well, why don't we go there right
now?" the boy asked.
"Because we have to sleep."
*
The boy awoke as the sun rose. There,
in front of him, where the small stars
had been the night before, was an
endless row of date palms, stretching
across the entire desert.
"We've done it!" said the Englishman,
who had also awakened early.
But the boy was quiet. He was at home
with the silence of the desert, and he
was content just to look at the trees. He
still had a long way to go to reach the
pyramids, and someday this morning
would just be a memory. But this was
the present moment—the party the
camel driver had mentioned—and he
wanted to live it as he did the lessons
of his past and his dreams of the future.
Although the vision of the date palms
would someday be just a memory, right
now it signified shade, water, and a
refuge from the war. Yesterday, the
camel's groan signaled danger, and now
a row of date palms could herald a
miracle.
The world speaks many languages, the
boy thought.
*
The times rush past, and so do the
caravans, thought the alchemist, as he
watched the hundreds of people and
animals arriving at the oasis. People
were shouting at the new arrivals, dust
obscured the desert sun, and the
children of the oasis were bursting with
excitement at the arrival of the
strangers. The alchemist saw the tribal
chiefs greet the leader of the caravan,
and converse with him at length.
But none of that mattered to the
alchemist. He had already seen many
people come and go, and the desert
remained as it was. He had seen kings
and beggars walking the desert sands.
The dunes were changed constantly by
the wind, yet these were the same sands
he had known since he was a child. He
always enjoyed seeing the happiness
that the travelers experienced when,
after weeks of yellow sand and blue
sky, they first saw the green of the date
palms. Maybe God created the desert
so that man could appreciate the date
trees, he thought.
He decided to concentrate on more
practical matters. He knew that in the
caravan there was a man to whom he
was to teach some of his secrets. The
omens had told him so. He didn't know
the man yet, but his practiced eye
would recognize him when he
appeared.
He hoped that it would be someone as
capable as his previous apprentice.
I don't know why these things have to
be transmitted by word of mouth, he
thought. It wasn't exactly that they
were secrets; God revealed his secrets
easily to all his creatures.
He had only one explanation for this
fact: things have to be transmitted this
way because they were made up from
the pure life, and this kind of life
cannot be captured in pictures or
words.
Because people become fascinated with
pictures and words, and wind up
forgetting the Language of the World.
*
The boy couldn't believe what he was
seeing: the oasis, rather than being just
a well surrounded by a few palm trees
—as he had seen once in a geography
book—was much larger than many
towns back in Spain. There were three
hundred wells, fifty thousand date
trees, and innumerable colored tents
spread among them.
"It looks like The Thousand and One
Nights," said the Englishman,
impatient to meet with the alchemist.
They were surrounded by children,
curious to look at the animals and
people that were arriving. The men of
the oasis wanted to know if they had
seen any fighting, and the women
competed with one another for access
to the cloth and precious stones
brought by the merchants. The silence
of the desert was a distant dream; the
travelers in the caravan were talking
incessantly, laughing and shouting, as
if they had emerged from the spiritual
world and found themselves once again
in the world of people. They were
relieved and happy.
They had been taking careful
precautions in the desert, but the camel
driver explained to the boy that oases
were always considered to be neutral
territories, because the majority of the
inhabitants were women and children.
There were oases throughout the desert,
but the tribesmen fought in the desert,
leaving the oases as places of refuge.
With some difficulty, the leader of the
caravan brought all his people together
and gave them his instructions. The
group was to remain there at the oasis
until the conflict between the tribes
was over. Since they were visitors, they
would have to share living space with
those who lived there, and would be
given the best accommodations. That
was the law of hospitality. Then he
asked that everyone, including his own
sentinels, hand over their arms to the
men appointed by the tribal chieftains.
"Those are the rules of war," the leader
explained. "The oases may not shelter
armies or troops."
To the boy's surprise, the Englishman
took a chrome-plated revolver out of
his bag and gave it to the men who
were collecting the arms.
"Why a revolver?" he asked.
"It helped me to trust in people," the
Englishman answered.
Meanwhile, the boy thought about his
treasure. The closer he got to the
realization of his dream, the more
difficult things became. It seemed as if
what the old king had called
"beginner's luck" were no longer
functioning. In his pursuit of the
dream, he was being constantly
subjected to tests of his persistence and
courage. So he could not be hasty, nor
impatient. If he pushed forward
impulsively, he would fail to see the
signs and omens left by God along his
path.
God placed them along my path. He
had surprised himself with the thought.
Until then, he had considered the
omens to be things of this world. Like
eating or sleeping, or like seeking love
or finding a job. He had never thought
of them in terms of a language used by
God to indicate what he should do.
"Don't be impatient," he repeated to
himself. "It's like the camel driver said:
'Eat when it's time to eat. And move
along when it's time to move along.' "
That first day, everyone slept from
exhaustion, including the Englishman.
The boy was assigned a place far from
his friend, in a tent with five other
young men of about his age.
They were people of the desert, and
clamored to hear his stories about the
great cities.
The boy told them about his life as a
shepherd, and was about to tell them of
his experiences at the crystal shop
when the Englishman came into the
tent.
"I've been looking for you all
morning," he said, as he led the boy
outside. "I need you to help me find out
where the alchemist lives."
First, they tried to find him on their
own. An alchemist would probably live
in a manner that was different from
that of the rest of the people at the
oasis, and it was likely that in his tent
an oven was continuously burning.
They searched everywhere, and found
that the oasis was much larger than
they could have imagined; there were
hundreds of tents.
"We've wasted almost the entire day,"
said the Englishman, sitting down with
the boy near one of the wells.
"Maybe we'd better ask someone," the
boy suggested.
The Englishman didn't want to tell
others about his reasons for being at
the oasis, and couldn't make up his
mind. But, finally, he agreed that the
boy, who spoke better Arabic than he,
should do so. The boy approached a
woman who had come to the well to fill
a goatskin with water.
"Good afternoon, ma'am. I'm trying to
find out where the alchemist lives here
at the oasis."
The woman said she had never heard of
such a person, and hurried away. But
before she fled, she advised the boy
that he had better not try to converse
with women who were dressed in
black, because they were married
women. He should respect tradition.
The Englishman was disappointed. It
seemed he had made the long journey
for nothing.
The boy was also saddened; his friend
was in pursuit of his destiny. And,
when someone was in such pursuit, the
entire universe made an effort to help
him succeed—that's what the old king
had said. He couldn't have been wrong.
"I had never heard of alchemists
before," the boy said. "Maybe no one
here has, either."
The Englishman's eyes lit up. "That's
it! Maybe no one here knows what an
alchemist is!
Find out who it is who cures the
people's illnesses!"
Several women dressed in black came
to the well for water, but the boy would
speak to none of them, despite the
Englishman's insistence. Then a man
approached.
"Do you know someone here who cures
people's illnesses?" the boy asked.
"Allah cures our illnesses," said the
man, clearly frightened of the
strangers. "You're looking for witch
doctors." He spoke some verses from
the Koran, and moved on.
Another man appeared. He was older,
and was carrying a small bucket. The
boy repeated his question.
"Why do you want to find that sort of
person?" the Arab asked.
"Because my friend here has traveled
for many months in order to meet with
him," the boy said.
"If such a man is here at the oasis, he
must be the very powerful one," said
the old man after thinking for a few
moments. "Not even the tribal
chieftains are able to see him when
they want to. Only when he consents.
"Wait for the end of the war. Then
leave with the caravan. Don't try to
enter into the life of the oasis," he said,
and walked away.
But the Englishman was exultant. They
were on the right track.
Finally, a young woman approached
who was not dressed in black. She had
a vessel on her shoulder, and her head
was covered by a veil, but her face was
uncovered. The boy approached her to
ask about the alchemist.
At that moment, it seemed to him that
time stood still, and the Soul of the
World surged within him. When he
looked into her dark eyes, and saw that
her lips were poised between a laugh
and silence, he learned the most
important part of the language that all
the world spoke—the language that
everyone on earth was capable of
understanding in their heart. It was
love. Something older than humanity,
more ancient than the desert.
Something that exerted the same force
whenever two pairs of eyes met, as had
theirs here at the well. She smiled, and
that was certainly an omen—the omen
he had been awaiting, without even
knowing he was, for all his life. The
omen he had sought to find with his
sheep and in his books, in the crystals
and in the silence of the desert.
It was the pure Language of the World.
It required no explanation, just as the
universe needs none as it travels
through endless time. What the boy felt
at that moment was that he was in the
presence of the only woman in his life,
and that, with no need for words, she
recognized the same thing. He was
more certain of it than of anything in
the world.
He had been told by his parents and
grandparents that he must fall in love
and really know a person before
becoming committed. But maybe
people who felt that way had never
learned the universal language.
Because, when you know that language,
it's easy to understand that someone in
the world awaits you, whether it's in
the middle of the desert or in some
great city. And when two such people
encounter each other, and their eyes
meet, the past and the future become
unimportant. There is only that
moment, and the incredible certainty
that everything under the sun has been
written by one hand only. It is the hand
that evokes love, and creates a twin
soul for every person in the world.
Without such love, one's dreams would
have no meaning.
Maktub, thought the boy.
The Englishman shook the boy: "Come
on, ask her!"
The boy stepped closer to the girl, and
when she smiled, he did the same.
"What's your name?" he asked.
"Fatima," the girl said, averting her
eyes.
"That's what some women in my
country are called."
"It's the name of the Prophet's
daughter," Fatima said. "The invaders
carried the name everywhere." The
beautiful girl spoke of the invaders
with pride.
The Englishman prodded him, and the
boy asked her about the man who cured
people's illnesses.
"That's the man who knows all the
secrets of the world," she said. "He
communicates with the genies of the
desert."
The genies were the spirits of good and
evil. And the girl pointed to the south,
indicating that it was there the strange
man lived. Then she filled her vessel
with water and left.
The Englishman vanished, too, gone to
find the alchemist. And the boy sat
there by the well for a long time,
remembering that one day in Tarifa the
levanter had brought to him the
perfume of that woman, and realizing
that he had loved her before he even
knew she existed. He knew that his
love for her would enable him to
discover every treasure in the world.
The next day, the boy returned to the
well, hoping to see the girl. To his
surprise, the Englishman was there,
looking out at the desert,
"I waited all afternoon and evening," he
said. "He appeared with the first stars
of evening.
I told him what I was seeking, and he
asked me if I had ever transformed lead
into gold. I told him that was what I
had come here to learn.
"He told me I should try to do so.
That's all he said: 'Go and try.' "
The boy didn't say anything. The poor
Englishman had traveled all this way,
only to be told that he should repeat
what he had already done so many
times.
"So, then try," he said to the
Englishman.
"That's what I'm going to do. I'm going
to start now."
As the Englishman left, Fatima arrived
and filled her vessel with water.
"I came to tell you just one thing," the
boy said. "I want you to be my wife. I
love you."
The girl dropped the container, and the
water spilled.
"I'm going to wait here for you every
day. I have crossed the desert in search
of a treasure that is somewhere near the
Pyramids, and for me, the war seemed
a curse. But now it's a blessing,
because it brought me to you."
"The war is going to end someday," the
girl said.
The boy looked around him at the date
palms. He reminded himself that he
had been a shepherd, and that he could
be a shepherd again. Fatima was more
important than his treasure.
"The tribesmen are always in search of
treasure," the girl said, as if she had
guessed what he was thinking. "And the
women of the desert are proud of their
tribesmen."
She refilled her vessel and left.
The boy went to the well every day to
meet with Fatima. He told her about his
life as a shepherd, about the king, and
about the crystal shop. They became
friends, and except for the fifteen
minutes he spent with her, each day
seemed that it would never pass. When
he had been at the oasis for almost a
month, the leader of the caravan called
a meeting of all of the people traveling
with him.
"We don't know when the war will end,
so we can't continue our journey," he
said. "The battles may last for a long
time, perhaps even years. There are
powerful forces on both sides, and the
war is important to both armies. It's not
a battle of good against evil. It's a war
between forces that are fighting for the
balance of power, and, when that type
of battle begins, it lasts longer than
others—because Allah is on both
sides."
The people went back to where they
were living, and the boy went to meet
with Fatima that afternoon. He told her
about the morning's meeting. "The day
after we met," Fatima said, "you told
me that you loved me. Then, you taught
me something of the universal
language and the Soul of the World.
Because of that, I have become a part
of you."
The boy listened to the sound of her
voice, and thought it to be more
beautiful than the sound of the wind in
the date palms.
"I have been waiting for you here at
this oasis for a long time. I have
forgotten about my past, about my
traditions, and the way in which men of
the desert expect women to behave.
Ever since I was a child, I have
dreamed that the desert would bring me
a wonderful present. Now, my present
has arrived, and it's you."
The boy wanted to take her hand. But
Fatima's hands held to the handles of
her jug.
"You have told me about your dreams,
about the old king and your treasure.
And you've told me about omens. So
now, I fear nothing, because it was
those omens that brought you to me.
And I am a part of your dream, a part
of your destiny, as you call it.
"That's why I want you to continue
toward your goal. If you have to wait
until the war is over, then wait. But if
you have to go before then, go on in
pursuit of your dream. The dunes are
changed by the wind, but the desert
never changes. That's the way it will be
with our love for each other.
" Maktub," she said. "If I am really a
part of your dream, you'll come back
one day."
The boy was sad as he left her that day.
He thought of all the married shepherds
he had known. They had a difficult
time convincing their wives that they
had to go off into distant fields. Love
required them to stay with the people
they loved.
He told Fatima that, at their next
meeting.
"The desert takes our men from us, and
they don't always return," she said.
"We know that, and we are used to it.
Those who don't return become a part
of the clouds, a part of the animals that
hide in the ravines and of the water that
comes from the earth. They become a
part of everything… they become the
Soul of the World.
"Some do come back. And then the
other women are happy because they
believe that their men may one day
return, as well. I used to look at those
women and envy them their happiness.
Now, I too will be one of the women
who wait.
"I'm a desert woman, and I'm proud of
that. I want my husband to wander as
free as the wind that shapes the dunes.
And, if I have to, I will accept the fact
that he has become a part of the clouds,
and the animals and the water of the
desert."
The boy went to look for the
Englishman. He wanted to tell him
about Fatima. He was surprised when
he saw that the Englishman had built
himself a furnace outside his tent. It
was a strange furnace, fueled by
firewood, with a transparent flask
heating on top. As the Englishman
stared out at the desert, his eyes
seemed brighter than they had when he
was reading his books.
"This is the first phase of the job," he
said. "I have to separate out the sulfur.
To do that successfully, I must have no
fear of failure. It was my fear of failure
that first kept me from attempting the
Master Work. Now, I'm beginning what
I could have started ten years ago. But
I'm happy at least that I didn't wait
twenty years."
He continued to feed the fire, and the
boy stayed on until the desert turned
pink in the setting sun. He felt the urge
to go out into the desert, to see if its
silence held the answers to his
questions.
He wandered for a while, keeping the
date palms of the oasis within sight. He
listened to the wind, and felt the stones
beneath his feet. Here and there, he
found a shell, and realized that the
desert, in remote times, had been a sea.
He sat on a stone, and allowed himself
to become hypnotized by the horizon.
He tried to deal with the concept of
love as distinct from possession, and
couldn't separate them. But Fatima was
a woman of the desert, and, if anything
could help him to understand, it was
the desert.
As he sat there thinking, he sensed
movement above him. Looking up, he
saw a pair of hawks flying high in the
sky.
He watched the hawks as they drifted
on the wind. Although their flight
appeared to have no pattern, it made a
certain kind of sense to the boy. It was
just that he couldn't grasp what it
meant. He followed the movement of
the birds, trying to read something into
it.
Maybe these desert birds could explain
to him the meaning of love without
ownership.
He felt sleepy. In his heart, he wanted
to remain awake, but he also wanted to
sleep. "I am learning the Language of
the World, and everything in the world
is beginning to make sense to me…
even the flight of the hawks," he said to
himself. And, in that mood, he was
grateful to be in love. When you are in
love, things make even more sense, he
thought.
Suddenly, one of the hawks made a
flashing dive through the sky, attacking
the other. As it did so, a sudden,
fleeting image came to the boy: an
army, with its swords at the ready,
riding into the oasis. The vision
vanished immediately, but it had
shaken him. He had heard people speak
of mirages, and had already seen some
himself: they were desires that,
because of their intensity, materialized
over the sands of the desert. But he
certainly didn't desire that an army
invade the oasis.
He wanted to forget about the vision,
and return to his meditation. He tried
again to concentrate on the pink shades
of the desert, and its stones. But there
was something there in his heart that
wouldn't allow him to do so.
"Always heed the omens," the old king
had said. The boy recalled what he had
seen in the vision, and sensed that it
was actually going to occur.
He rose, and made his way back toward
the palm trees. Once again, he
perceived the many languages in the
things about him: this time, the desert
was safe, and it was the oasis that had
become dangerous.
The camel driver was seated at the base
of a palm tree, observing the sunset. He
saw the boy appear from the other side
of the dunes.
"An army is coming," the boy said. "I
had a vision."
"The desert fills men's hearts with
visions," the camel driver answered.
But the boy told him about the hawks:
that he had been watching their flight
and had suddenly felt himself to have
plunged to the Soul of the World.
The camel driver understood what the
boy was saying. He knew that any
given thing on the face of the earth
could reveal the history of all things.
One could open a book to any page, or
look at a person's hand; one could turn
a card, or watch the flight of the
birds…
whatever the thing observed, one could
find a connection with his experience
of the moment. Actually, it wasn't that
those things, in themselves, revealed
anything at all; it was just that people,
looking at what was occurring around
them, could find a means of
penetration to the Soul of the World.
The desert was full of men who earned
their living based on the ease with
which they could penetrate to the Soul
of the World. They were known as
seers, and they were held in fear by
women and the elderly. Tribesmen
were also wary of consulting them,
because it would be impossible to be
effective in battle if one knew that he
was fated to die. The tribesmen
preferred the taste of battle, and the
thrill of not knowing what the outcome
would be; the future was already
written by Allah, and what he had
written was always for the good of
man. So the tribesmen lived only for
the present, because the present was
full of surprises, and they had to be
aware of many things: Where was the
enemy's sword?
Where was his horse? What kind of
blow should one deliver next in order
to remain alive?
The camel driver was not a fighter, and
he had consulted with seers. Many of
them had been right about what they
said, while some had been wrong.
Then, one day, the oldest seer he had
ever sought out (and the one most to be
feared) had asked why the camel driver
was so interested in the future.
"Well… so I can do things," he had
responded. "And so I can change those
things that I don't want to happen."
"But then they wouldn't be a part of
your future," the seer had said.
"Well, maybe I just want to know the
future so I can prepare myself for
what's coming."
"If good things are coming, they will
be a pleasant surprise," said the seer.
"If bad things are, and you know in
advance, you will suffer greatly before
they even occur."
"I want to know about the future
because I'm a man," the camel driver
had said to the seer.
"And men always live their lives based
on the future."
The seer was a specialist in the casting
of twigs; he threw them on the ground,
and made interpretations based on how
they fell. That day, he didn't make a
cast. He wrapped the twigs in a piece of
cloth and put them back in his bag.
"I make my living forecasting the
future for people," he said. "I know the
science of the twigs, and I know how to
use them to penetrate to the place
where all is written. There, I can read
the past, discover what has already
been forgotten, and understand the
omens that are here in the present.
"When people consult me, it's not that
I'm reading the future; I am guessing at
the future.
The future belongs to God, and it is
only he who reveals it, under
extraordinary circumstances. How do I
guess at the future? Based on the
omens of the present. The secret is here
in the present. If you pay attention to
the present, you can improve upon it.
And, if you improve on the present,
what comes later will also be better.
Forget about the future, and live each
day according to the teachings,
confident that God loves his children.
Each day, in itself, brings with it an
eternity."
The camel driver had asked what the
circumstances were under which God
would allow him to see the future.
"Only when he, himself, reveals it. And
God only rarely reveals the future.
When he does so, it is for only one
reason: it's a future that was written so
as to be altered."
God had shown the boy a part of the
future, the camel driver thought. Why
was it that he wanted the boy to serve
as his instrument?
"Go and speak to the tribal chieftains,"
said the camel driver. "Tell them about
the armies that are approaching."
"They'll laugh at me."
"They are men of the desert, and the
men of the desert are used to dealing
with omens."
"Well, then, they probably already
know."
"They're not concerned with that right
now. They believe that if they have to
know about something Allah wants
them to know, someone will tell them
about it. It has happened many times
before. But, this time, the person is
you."
The boy thought of Fatima. And he
decided he would go to see the chiefs
of the tribes.
*
The boy approached the guard at the
front of the huge white tent at the
center of the oasis.
"I want to see the chieftains. I've
brought omens from the desert."
Without responding, the guard entered
the tent, where he remained for some
time. When he emerged, it was with a
young Arab, dressed in white and gold.
The boy told the younger man what he
had seen, and the man asked him to
wait there. He disappeared into the
tent.
Night fell, and an assortment of
fighting men and merchants entered
and exited the tent.
One by one, the campfires were
extinguished, and the oasis fell as quiet
as the desert.
Only the lights in the great tent
remained. During all this time, the boy
thought about Fatima, and he was still
unable to understand his last
conversation with her.
Finally, after hours of waiting, the
guard bade the boy enter. The boy was
astonished by what he saw inside.
Never could he have imagined that,
there in the middle of the desert, there
existed a tent like this one. The ground
was covered with the most beautiful
carpets he had ever walked upon, and
from the top of the structure hung
lamps of hand-wrought gold, each with
a lighted candle. The tribal chieftains
were seated at the back of the tent in a
semicircle, resting upon richly
embroidered silk cushions. Servants
came and went with silver trays laden
with spices and tea. Other servants
maintained the fires in the hookahs.
The atmosphere was suffused with the
sweet scent of smoke.
There were eight chieftains, but the boy
could see immediately which of them
was the most important: an Arab
dressed in white and gold, seated at the
center of the semicircle.
At his side was the young Arab the boy
had spoken with earlier.
"Who is this stranger who speaks of
omens?" asked one of the chieftains,
eyeing the boy.
"It is I," the boy answered. And he told
what he had seen.
"Why would the desert reveal such
things to a stranger, when it knows that
we have been here for generations?"
said another of the chieftains.
"Because my eyes are not yet
accustomed to the desert," the boy said.
"I can see things that eyes habituated to
the desert might not see."
And also because I know about the
Soul of the World, he thought to
himself.
"The oasis is neutral ground. No one
attacks an oasis," said a third chieftain.
"I can only tell you what I saw. If you
don't want to believe me, you don't
have to do anything about it."
The men fell into an animated
discussion. They spoke in an Arabic
dialect that the boy didn't understand,
but, when he made to leave, the guard
told him to stay. The boy became
fearful; the omens told him that
something was wrong. He regretted
having spoken to the camel driver
about what he had seen in the desert.
Suddenly, the elder at the center smiled
almost imperceptibly, and the boy felt
better. The man hadn't participated in
the discussion, and, in fact, hadn't said
a word up to that point.
But the boy was already used to the
Language of the World, and he could
feel the vibrations of peace throughout
the tent. Now his intuition was that he
had been right in coming.
The discussion ended. The chieftains
were silent for a few moments as they
listened to what the old man was
saying. Then he turned to the boy: this
time his expression was cold and
distant.
"Two thousand years ago, in a distant
land, a man who believed in dreams
was thrown into a dungeon and then
sold as a slave," the old man said, now
in the dialect the boy understood. "Our
merchants bought that man, and
brought him to Egypt. All of us know
that whoever believes in dreams also
knows how to interpret them."
The elder continued, "When the
pharaoh dreamed of cows that were
thin and cows that were fat, this man
I'm speaking of rescued Egypt from
famine. His name was Joseph. He, too,
was a stranger in a strange land, like
you, and he was probably about your
age."
He paused, and his eyes were still
unfriendly.
"We always observe the Tradition. The
Tradition saved Egypt from famine in
those days, and made the Egyptians the
wealthiest of peoples. The Tradition
teaches men how to cross the desert,
and how their children should marry.
The Tradition says that an oasis is
neutral territory, because both sides
have oases, and so both are
vulnerable."
No one said a word as the old man
continued.
"But the Tradition also says that we
should believe the messages of the
desert. Everything we know was taught
to us by the desert."
The old man gave a signal, and
everyone stood. The meeting was over.
The hookahs were extinguished, and
the guards stood at attention. The boy
made ready to leave, but the old man
spoke again:
"Tomorrow, we are going to break the
agreement that says that no one at the
oasis may carry arms. Throughout the
entire day we will be on the lookout for
our enemies. When the sun sets, the
men will once again surrender their
arms to me. For every ten dead men
among our enemies, you will receive a
piece of gold.
"But arms cannot be drawn unless they
also go into battle. Arms are as
capricious as the desert, and, if they are
not used, the next time they might not
function. If at least one of them hasn't
been used by the end of the day
tomorrow, one will be used on you."
When the boy left the tent, the oasis
was illuminated only by the light of the
full moon.
He was twenty minutes from his tent,
and began to make his way there.
He was alarmed by what had happened.
He had succeeded in reaching through
to the Soul of the World, and now the
price for having done so might be his
life. It was a frightening bet. But he
had been making risky bets ever since
the day he had sold his sheep to pursue
his destiny. And, as the camel driver
had said, to die tomorrow was no worse
than dying on any other day. Every day
was there to be lived or to mark one's
departure from this world. Everything
depended on one word: " Maktub."
Walking along in the silence, he had no
regrets. If he died tomorrow, it would
be because God was not willing to
change the future. He would at least
have died after having crossed the
strait, after having worked in a crystal
shop, and after having known the
silence of the desert and Fatima's eyes.
He had lived every one of his days
intensely since he had left home so
long ago. If he died tomorrow, he
would already have seen more than
other shepherds, and he was proud of
that.
Suddenly he heard a thundering sound,
and he was thrown to the ground by a
wind such as he had never known. The
area was swirling in dust so intense
that it hid the moon from view. Before
him was an enormous white horse,
rearing over him with a frightening
scream.
When the blinding dust had settled a
bit, the boy trembled at what he saw.
Astride the animal was a horseman
dressed completely in black, with a
falcon perched on his left shoulder. He
wore a turban and his entire face,
except for his eyes, was covered with a
black kerchief. He appeared to be a
messenger from the desert, but his
presence was much more powerful than
that of a mere messenger.
The strange horseman drew an
enormous, curved sword from a
scabbard mounted on his saddle. The
steel of its blade glittered in the light
of the moon.
"Who dares to read the meaning of the
flight of the hawks?" he demanded, so
loudly that his words seemed to echo
through the fifty thousand palm trees
of Al-Fayoum.
"It is I who dared to do so," said the
boy. He was reminded of the image of
Santiago Matamoros, mounted on his
white horse, with the infidels beneath
his hooves. This man looked exactly
the same, except that now the roles
were reversed.
"It is I who dared to do so," he
repeated, and he lowered his head to
receive a blow from the sword. "Many
lives will be saved, because I was able
to see through to the Soul of the
World."
The sword didn't fall. Instead, the
stranger lowered it slowly, until the
point touched the boy's forehead. It
drew a droplet of blood.
The horseman was completely
immobile, as was the boy. It didn't
even occur to the boy to flee. In his
heart, he felt a strange sense of joy: he
was about to die in pursuit of his
destiny. And for Fatima. The omens
had been true, after all. Here he was,
face-to-face with his enemy, but there
was no need to be concerned about
dying—the Soul of the World awaited
him, and he would soon be a part of it.
And, tomorrow, his enemy would also
be apart of that Soul.
The stranger continued to hold the
sword at the boy's forehead. "Why did
you read the flight of the birds?"
"I read only what the birds wanted to
tell me. They wanted to save the oasis.
Tomorrow all of you will die, because
there are more men at the oasis than
you have."
The sword remained where it was.
"Who are you to change what Allah has
willed?"
"Allah created the armies, and he also
created the hawks. Allah taught me the
language of the birds. Everything has
been written by the same hand," the
boy said, remembering the camel
driver's words.
The stranger withdrew the sword from
the boy's forehead, and the boy felt
immensely relieved. But he still
couldn't flee.
"Be careful with your
prognostications," said the stranger.
"When something is written, there is no
way to change it."
"All I saw was an army," said the boy.
"I didn't see the outcome of the battle."
The stranger seemed satisfied with the
answer. But he kept the sword in his
hand. "What is a stranger doing in a
strange land?"
"I am following my destiny. It's not
something you would understand."
The stranger placed his sword in its
scabbard, and the boy relaxed.
"I had to test your courage," the
stranger said. "Courage is the quality
most essential to understanding the
Language of the World."
The boy was surprised. The stranger
was speaking of things that very few
people knew about.
"You must not let up, even after having
come so far," he continued. "You must
love the desert, but never trust it
completely. Because the desert tests all
men: it challenges every step, and kills
those who become distracted."
What he said reminded the boy of the
old king.
"If the warriors come here, and your
head is still on your shoulders at
sunset, come and find me," said the
stranger.
The same hand that had brandished the
sword now held a whip. The horse
reared again, raising a cloud of dust.
"Where do you live?" shouted the boy,
as the horseman rode away.
The hand with the whip pointed to the
south.
The boy had met the alchemist.
*
Next morning, there were two thousand
armed men scattered throughout the
palm trees at Al-Fayoum. Before the
sun had reached its high point, five
hundred tribesmen appeared on the
horizon. The mounted troops entered
the oasis from the north; it appeared to
be a peaceful expedition, but they all
carried arms hidden in their robes.
When they reached the white tent at the
center of Al-Fayoum, they withdrew
their scimitars and rifles. And they
attacked an empty tent.
The men of the oasis surrounded the
horsemen from the desert and within
half an hour all but one of the intruders
were dead. The children had been kept
at the other side of a grove of palm
trees, and saw nothing of what had
happened. The women had remained in
their tents, praying for the safekeeping
of their husbands, and saw nothing of
the battle, either.
Were it not for the bodies there on the
ground, it would have appeared to be a
normal day at the oasis.
The only tribesman spared was the
commander of the battalion. That
afternoon, he was brought before the
tribal chieftains, who asked him why
he had violated the Tradition.
The commander said that his men had
been starving and thirsty, exhausted
from many days of battle, and had
decided to take the oasis so as to be
able to return to the war.
The tribal chieftain said that he felt
sorry for the tribesmen, but that the
Tradition was sacred. He condemned
the commander to death without honor.
Rather than being killed by a blade or a
bullet, he was hanged from a dead palm
tree, where his body twisted in the
desert wind.
The tribal chieftain called for the boy,
and presented him with fifty pieces of
gold. He repeated his story about
Joseph of Egypt, and asked the boy to
become the counselor of the oasis.
*
When the sun had set, and the first
stars made their appearance, the boy
started to walk to the south. He
eventually sighted a single tent, and a
group of Arabs passing by told the boy
that it was a place inhabited by genies.
But the boy sat down and waited.
Not until the moon was high did the
alchemist ride into view. He carried
two dead hawks over his shoulder.
"I am here," the boy said.
"You shouldn't be here," the alchemist
answered. "Or is it your destiny that
brings you here?"
"With the wars between the tribes, it's
impossible to cross the desert. So I
have come here."
The alchemist dismounted from his
horse, and signaled that the boy should
enter the tent with him. It was a tent
like many at the oasis. The boy looked
around for the ovens and other
apparatus used in alchemy, but saw
none. There were only some books in a
pile, a small cooking stove, and the
carpets, covered with mysterious
designs.
"Sit down. We'll have something to
drink and eat these hawks," said the
alchemist.
The boy suspected that they were the
same hawks he had seen on the day
before, but he said nothing. The
alchemist lighted the fire, and soon a
delicious aroma filled the tent. It was
better than the scent of the hookahs.
"Why did you want to see me?" the boy
asked.
"Because of the omens," the alchemist
answered. "The wind told me you
would be coming, and that you would
need help."
"It's not I the wind spoke about. It's the
other foreigner, the Englishman. He's
the one that's looking for you."
"He has other things to do first. But
he's on the right track. He has begun to
try to understand the desert."
"And what about me?"
"When a person really desires
something, all the universe conspires to
help that person to realize his dream,"
said the alchemist, echoing the words
of the old king. The boy understood.
Another person was there to help him
toward his destiny.
"So you are going to instruct me?"
"No. You already know all you need to
know. I am only going to point you in
the direction of your treasure."
"But there's a tribal war," the boy
reiterated.
"I know what's happening in the
desert."
"I have already found my treasure. I
have a camel, I have my money from
the crystal shop, and I have fifty gold
pieces. In my own country, I would be
a rich man."
"But none of that is from the
Pyramids," said the alchemist.
"I also have Fatima. She is a treasure
greater than anything else I have won."
"She wasn't found at the Pyramids,
either."
They ate in silence. The alchemist
opened a bottle and poured a red liquid
into the boy's cup. It was the most
delicious wine he had ever tasted.
"Isn't wine prohibited here?" the boy
asked
"It's not what enters men's mouths
that's evil," said the alchemist. "It's
what comes out of their mouths that
is."
The alchemist was a bit daunting, but,
as the boy drank the wine, he relaxed.
After they finished eating they sat
outside the tent, under a moon so
brilliant that it made the stars pale.
"Drink and enjoy yourself," said the
alchemist, noticing that the boy was
feeling happier.
"Rest well tonight, as if you were a
warrior preparing for combat.
Remember that wherever your heart is,
there you will find your treasure.
You've got to find the treasure, so that
everything you have learned along the
way can make sense.
"Tomorrow, sell your camel and buy a
horse. Camels are traitorous: they walk
thousands of paces and never seem to
tire. Then suddenly, they kneel and die.
But horses tire bit by bit. You always
know how much you can ask of them,
and when it is that they are about to
die."
*
The following night, the boy appeared
at the alchemist's tent with a horse. The
alchemist was ready, and he mounted
his own steed and placed the falcon on
his left shoulder. He said to the boy,
"Show me where there is life out in the
desert. Only those who can see such
signs of life are able to find treasure."
They began to ride out over the sands,
with the moon lighting their way. I
don't know if I'll be able to find life in
the desert, the boy thought. I don't
know the desert that well yet.
He wanted to say so to the alchemist,
but he was afraid of the man. They
reached the rocky place where the boy
had seen the hawks in the sky, but now
there was only silence and the wind.
"I don't know how to find life in the
desert," the boy said. "I know that there
is life here, but I don't know where to
look."
"Life attracts life," the alchemist
answered.
And then the boy understood. He
loosened the reins on his horse, who
galloped forward over the rocks and
sand. The alchemist followed as the
boy's horse ran for almost half an hour.
They could no longer see the palms of
the oasis—only the gigantic moon
above them, and its silver reflections
from the stones of the desert. Suddenly,
for no apparent reason, the boy's horse
began to slow.
"There's life here," the boy said to the
alchemist. "I don't know the language
of the desert, but my horse knows the
language of life."
They dismounted, and the alchemist
said nothing. Advancing slowly, they
searched among the stones. The
alchemist stopped abruptly, and bent to
the ground. There was a hole there
among the stones. The alchemist put
his hand into the hole, and then his
entire arm, up to his shoulder.
Something was moving there, and the
alchemist's eyes—the boy could see
only his eyes-squinted with his effort.
His arm seemed to be battling with
whatever was in the hole. Then, with a
motion that startled the boy, he
withdrew his arm and leaped to his
feet. In his hand, he grasped a snake by
the tail.
The boy leapt as well, but away from
the alchemist. The snake fought
frantically, making hissing sounds that
shattered the silence of the desert. It
was a cobra, whose venom could kill a
person in minutes.
"Watch out for his venom," the boy
said. But even though the alchemist
had put his hand in the hole, and had
surely already been bitten, his
expression was calm. "The alchemist is
two hundred years old," the
Englishman had told him. He must
know how to deal with the snakes of
the desert.
The boy watched as his companion
went to his horse and withdrew a
scimitar. With its blade, he drew a
circle in the sand, and then he placed
the snake within it. The serpent relaxed
immediately.
"Not to worry," said the alchemist. "He
won't leave the circle. You found life in
the desert, the omen that I needed."
"Why was that so important?"
"Because the Pyramids are surrounded
by the desert."
The boy didn't want to talk about the
Pyramids. His heart was heavy, and he
had been melancholy since the
previous night. To continue his search
for the treasure meant that he had to
abandon Fatima.
"I'm going to guide you across the
desert," the alchemist said.
"I want to stay at the oasis," the boy
answered. "I've found Fatima, and, as
far as I'm concerned, she's worth more
than treasure."
"Fatima is a woman of the desert," said
the alchemist. "She knows that men
have to go away in order to return. And
she already has her treasure: it's you.
Now she expects that you will find
what it is you're looking for."
"Well, what if I decide to stay?"
"Let me tell you what will happen.
You'll be the counselor of the oasis.
You have enough gold to buy many
sheep and many camels. You'll marry
Fatima, and you'll both be happy for a
year. You'll learn to love the desert,
and you'll get to know every one of the
fifty thousand palms. You'll watch
them as they grow, demonstrating how
the world is always changing. And
you'll get better and better at
understanding omens, because the
desert is the best teacher there is.
"Sometime during the second year,
you'll remember about the treasure.
The omens will begin insistently to
speak of it, and you'll try to ignore
them. You'll use your knowledge for
the welfare of the oasis and its
inhabitants. The tribal chieftains will
appreciate what you do. And your
camels will bring you wealth and
power.
"During the third year, the omens will
continue to speak of your treasure and
your destiny.
You'll walk around, night after night, at
the oasis, and Fatima will be unhappy
because she'll feel it was she who
interrupted your quest. But you will
love her, and she'll return your love.
You'll remember that she never asked
you to stay, because a woman of the
desert knows that she must await her
man. So you won't blame her. But
many times you'll walk the sands of the
desert, thinking that maybe you could
have left… that you could have trusted
more in your love for Fatima. Because
what kept you at the oasis was your
own fear that you might never come
back. At that point, the omens will tell
you that your treasure is buried forever.
"Then, sometime during the fourth
year, the omens will abandon you,
because you've stopped listening to
them. The tribal chieftains will see
that, and you'll be dismissed from your
position as counselor. But, by then,
you'll be a rich merchant, with many
camels and a great deal of
merchandise. You'll spend the rest of
your days knowing that you didn't
pursue your destiny, and that now it's
too late.
"You must understand that love never
keeps a man from pursuing his destiny.
If he abandons that pursuit, it's because
it wasn't true love… the love that
speaks the Language of the World."
The alchemist erased the circle in the
sand, and the snake slithered away
among the rocks.
The boy remembered the crystal
merchant who had always wanted to go
to Mecca, and the Englishman in
search of the alchemist. He thought of
the woman who had trusted in the
desert. And he looked out over the
desert that had brought him to the
woman he loved.
They mounted their horses, and this
time it was the boy who followed the
alchemist back to the oasis. The wind
brought the sounds of the oasis to
them, and the boy tried to hear Fatima's
voice.
But that night, as he had watched the
cobra within the circle, the strange
horseman with the falcon on his
shoulder had spoken of love and
treasure, of the women of the desert
and of his destiny.
"I'm going with you," the boy said. And
he immediately felt peace in his heart.
"We'll leave tomorrow before sunrise,"
was the alchemist's only response.
*
The boy spent a sleepless night. Two
hours before dawn, he awoke one of the
boys who slept in his tent, and asked
him to show him where Fatima lived.
They went to her tent, and the boy gave
his friend enough gold to buy a sheep.
Then he asked his friend to go to into
the tent where Fatima was sleeping,
and to awaken her and tell her that he
was waiting outside. The young Arab
did as he was asked, and was given
enough gold to buy yet another sheep.
"Now leave us alone," said the boy to
the young Arab. The Arab returned to
his tent to sleep, proud to have helped
the counselor of the oasis, and happy at
having enough money to buy himself
some sheep.
Fatima appeared at the entrance to the
tent. The two walked out among the
palms. The boy knew that it was a
violation of the Tradition, but that
didn't matter to him now.
"I'm going away," he said. "And I want
you to know that I'm coming back. I
love you because…"
"Don't say anything," Fatima
interrupted. "One is loved because one
is loved. No reason is needed for
loving."
But the boy continued, "I had a dream,
and I met with a king. I sold crystal and
crossed the desert. And, because the
tribes declared war, I went to the well,
seeking the alchemist.
So, I love you because the entire
universe conspired to help me find
you."
The two embraced. It was the first time
either had touched the other.
"I'll be back," the boy said.
"Before this, I always looked to the
desert with longing," said Fatima.
"Now it will be with hope. My father
went away one day, but he returned to
my mother, and he has always come
back since then."
They said nothing else. They walked a
bit farther among the palms, and then
the boy left her at the entrance to her
tent.
"I'll return, just as your father came
back to your mother," he said.
He saw that Fatima's eyes were filled
with tears.
"You're crying?"
"I'm a woman of the desert," she said,
averting her face. "But above all, I'm a
woman."
Fatima went back to her tent, and,
when daylight came, she went out to do
the chores she had done for years. But
everything had changed. The boy was
no longer at the oasis, and the oasis
would never again have the same
meaning it had had only yesterday. It
would no longer be a place with fifty
thousand palm trees and three hundred
wells, where the pilgrims arrived,
relieved at the end of their long
journeys. From that day on, the oasis
would be an empty place for her.
From that day on, it was the desert that
would be important. She would look to
it every day, and would try to guess
which star the boy was following in
search of his treasure.
She would have to send her kisses on
the wind, hoping that the wind would
touch the boy's face, and would tell
him that she was alive. That she was
waiting for him, a woman awaiting a
courageous man in search of his
treasure. From that day on, the desert
would represent only one thing to her:
the hope for his return.
*
"Don't think about what you've left
behind," the alchemist said to the boy
as they began to ride across the sands
of the desert. "Everything is written in
the Soul of the World, and there it will
stay forever."
"Men dream more about coming home
than about leaving," the boy said. He
was already reaccustomed to desert's
silence.
"If what one finds is made of pure
matter, it will never spoil. And one can
always come back. If what you had
found was only a moment of light, like
the explosion of a star, you would find
nothing on your return."
The man was speaking the language of
alchemy. But the boy knew that he was
referring to Fatima.
It was difficult not to think about what
he had left behind. The desert, with its
endless monotony, put him to
dreaming. The boy could still see the
palm trees, the wells, and the face of
the woman he loved. He could see the
Englishman at his experiments, and the
camel driver who was a teacher without
realizing it. Maybe the alchemist has
never been in love, the boy thought.
The alchemist rode in front, with the
falcon on his shoulder. The bird knew
the language of the desert well, and
whenever they stopped, he flew off in
search of game. On the first day he
returned with a rabbit, and on the
second with two birds.
At night, they spread their sleeping
gear and kept their fires hidden. The
desert nights were cold, and were
becoming darker and darker as the
phases of the moon passed. They went
on for a week, speaking only of the
precautions they needed to follow in
order to avoid the battles between the
tribes. The war continued, and at times
the wind carried the sweet, sickly smell
of blood. Battles had been fought
nearby, and the wind reminded the boy
that there was the language of omens,
always ready to show him what his
eyes had failed to observe.
On the seventh day, the alchemist
decided to make camp earlier than
usual. The falcon flew off to find game,
and the alchemist offered his water
container to the boy.
"You are almost at the end of your
journey," said the alchemist. "I
congratulate you for having pursued
your destiny."
"And you've told me nothing along the
way," said the boy. "I thought you were
going to teach me some of the things
you know. A while ago, I rode through
the desert with a man who had books
on alchemy. But I wasn't able to learn
anything from them."
"There is only one way to learn," the
alchemist answered. "It's through
action. Everything you need to know
you have learned through your journey.
You need to learn only one thing
more."
The boy wanted to know what that was,
but the alchemist was searching the
horizon, looking for the falcon.
"Why are you called the alchemist?"
"Because that's what I am."
"And what went wrong when other
alchemists tried to make gold and were
unable to do so?"
"They were looking only for gold," his
companion answered. "They were
seeking the treasure of their destiny,
without wanting actually to live out the
destiny."
"What is it that I still need to know?"
the boy asked.
But the alchemist continued to look to
the horizon. And finally the falcon
returned with their meal. They dug a
hole and lit their fire in it, so that the
light of the flames would not be seen.
"I'm an alchemist simply because I'm
an alchemist," he said, as he prepared
the meal. "I learned the science from
my grandfather, who learned from his
father, and so on, back to the creation
of the world. In those times, the Master
Work could be written simply on an
emerald. But men began to reject
simple things, and to write tracts,
interpretations, and philosophical
studies. They also began to feel that
they knew a better way than others had.
Yet the Emerald Tablet is still alive
today."
"What was written on the Emerald
Tablet?" the boy wanted to know.
The alchemist began to draw in the
sand, and completed his drawing in less
than five minutes. As he drew, the boy
thought of the old king, and the plaza
where they had met that day; it seemed
as if it had taken place years and years
ago.
"This is what was written on the
Emerald Tablet," said the alchemist,
when he had finished.
The boy tried to read what was written
in the sand.
"It's a code," said the boy, a bit
disappointed. "It looks like what I saw
in the Englishman's books."
"No," the alchemist answered. "It's like
the flight of those two hawks; it can't
be understood by reason alone. The
Emerald Tablet is a direct passage to
the Soul of the World.
"The wise men understood that this
natural world is only an image and a
copy of paradise.
The existence of this world is simply a
guarantee that there exists a world that
is perfect.
God created the world so that, through
its visible objects, men could
understand his spiritual teachings and
the marvels of his wisdom. That's what
I mean by action."
"Should I understand the Emerald
Tablet?" the boy asked.
"Perhaps, if you were in a laboratory of
alchemy, this would be the right time
to study the best way to understand the
Emerald Tablet. But you are in the
desert. So immerse yourself in it. The
desert will give you an understanding
of the world; in fact, anything on the
face of the earth will do that. You don't
even have to understand the desert: all
you have to do is contemplate a simple
grain of sand, and you will see in it all
the marvels of creation."
"How do I immerse myself in the
desert?"
"Listen to your heart. It knows all
things, because it came from the Soul
of the World, and it will one day return
there."
*
They crossed the desert for another two
days in silence. The alchemist had
become much more cautious, because
they were approaching the area where
the most violent battles were being
waged. As they moved along, the boy
tried to listen to his heart.
It was not easy to do; in earlier times,
his heart had always been ready to tell
its story, but lately that wasn't true.
There had been times when his heart
spent hours telling of its sadness, and
at other times it became so emotional
over the desert sunrise that the boy had
to hide his tears. His heart beat fastest
when it spoke to the boy of treasure,
and more slowly when the boy stared
entranced at the endless horizons of the
desert. But his heart was never quiet,
even when the boy and the alchemist
had fallen into silence.
"Why do we have to listen to our
hearts?" the boy asked, when they had
made camp that day.
"Because, wherever your heart is, that
is where you'll find your treasure."
"But my heart is agitated," the boy
said. "It has its dreams, it gets
emotional, and it's become passionate
over a woman of the desert. It asks
things of me, and it keeps me from
sleeping many nights, when I'm
thinking about her."
"Well, that's good. Your heart is alive.
Keep listening to what it has to say."
During the next three days, the two
travelers passed by a number of armed
tribesmen, and saw others on the
horizon. The boy's heart began to speak
of fear. It told him stories it had heard
from the Soul of the World, stories of
men who sought to find their treasure
and never succeeded. Sometimes it
frightened the boy with the idea that he
might not find his treasure, or that he
might die there in the desert. At other
times, it told the boy that it was
satisfied: it had found love and riches.
"My heart is a traitor," the boy said to
the alchemist, when they had paused to
rest the horses. "It doesn't want me to
go on."
"That makes sense," the alchemist
answered. "Naturally it's afraid that, in
pursuing your dream, you might lose
everything you've won."
"Well, then, why should I listen to my
heart?"
"Because you will never again be able
to keep it quiet. Even if you pretend not
to have heard what it tells you, it will
always be there inside you, repeating to
you what you're thinking about life and
about the world."
"You mean I should listen, even if it's
treasonous?"
"Treason is a blow that comes
unexpectedly. If you know your heart
well, it will never be able to do that to
you. Because you'll know its dreams
and wishes, and will know how to deal
with them.
"You will never be able to escape from
your heart. So it's better to listen to
what it has to say. That way, you'll
never have to fear an unanticipated
blow."
The boy continued to listen to his heart
as they crossed the desert. He came to
understand its dodges and tricks, and to
accept it as it was. He lost his fear, and
forgot about his need to go back to the
oasis, because, one afternoon, his heart
told him that it was happy.
"Even though I complain sometimes,"
it said, "it's because I'm the heart of a
person, and people's hearts are that
way. People are afraid to pursue their
most important dreams, because they
feel that they don't deserve them, or
that they'll be unable to achieve them.
We, their hearts, become fearful just
thinking of loved ones who go away
forever, or of moments that could have
been good but weren't, or of treasures
that might have been found but were
forever hidden in the sands. Because,
when these things happen, we suffer
terribly."
"My heart is afraid that it will have to
suffer," the boy told the alchemist one
night as they looked up at the moonless
sky.
"Tell your heart that the fear of
suffering is worse than the suffering
itself. And that no heart has ever
suffered when it goes in search of its
dreams, because every second of the
search is a second's encounter with God
and with eternity."
"Every second of the search is an
encounter with God," the boy told his
heart. "When I have been truly
searching for my treasure, every day
has been luminous, because I've known
that every hour was a part of the dream
that I would find it. When I have been
truly searching for my treasure, I've
discovered things along the way that I
never would have seen had I not had
the courage to try things that seemed
impossible for a shepherd to achieve."
So his heart was quiet for an entire
afternoon. That night, the boy slept
deeply, and, when he awoke, his heart
began to tell him things that came from
the Soul of the World. It said that all
people who are happy have God within
them. And that happiness could be
found in a grain of sand from the
desert, as the alchemist had said.
Because a grain of sand is a moment of
creation, and the universe has taken
millions of years to create it.
"Everyone on earth has a treasure that
awaits him," his heart said. "We,
people's hearts, seldom say much about
those treasures, because people no
longer want to go in search of them.
We speak of them only to children.
Later, we simply let life proceed, in its
own direction, toward its own fate. But,
unfortunately, very few follow the path
laid out for them—the path to their
destinies, and to happiness. Most
people see the world as a threatening
place, and, because they do, the world
turns out, indeed, to be a threatening
place.
"So, we, their hearts, speak more and
more softly. We never stop speaking
out, but we begin to hope that our
words won't be heard: we don't want
people to suffer because they don't
follow their hearts."
"Why don't people's hearts tell them to
continue to follow their dreams?" the
boy asked the alchemist.
"Because that's what makes a heart
suffer most, and hearts don't like to
suffer."
From then on, the boy understood his
heart. He asked it, please, never to stop
speaking to him. He asked that, when
he wandered far from his dreams, his
heart press him and sound the alarm.
The boy swore that, every time he
heard the alarm, he would heed its
message.
That night, he told all of this to the
alchemist. And the alchemist
understood that the boy's heart had
returned to the Soul of the World.
"So what should I do now?" the boy
asked.
"Continue in the direction of the
Pyramids," said the alchemist. "And
continue to pay heed to the omens.
Your heart is still capable of showing
you where the treasure is."
"Is that the one thing I still needed to
know?"
"No," the alchemist answered. "What
you still need to know is this: before a
dream is realized, the Soul of the
World tests everything that was learned
along the way. It does this not because
it is evil, but so that we can, in addition
to realizing our dreams, master the
lessons we've learned as we've moved
toward that dream. That's the point at
which most people give up. It's the
point at which, as we say in the
language of the desert, one
'dies of thirst just when the palm trees
have appeared on the horizon.'
"Every search begins with beginner's
luck. And every search ends with the
victor's being severely tested."
The boy remembered an old proverb
from his country. It said that the
darkest hour of the night came just
before the dawn.
*
On the following day, the first clear
sign of danger appeared. Three armed
tribesmen approached, and asked what
the boy and the alchemist were doing
there.
"I'm hunting with my falcon," the
alchemist answered.
"We're going to have to search you to
see whether you're armed," one of the
tribesmen said.
The alchemist dismounted slowly, and
the boy did the same.
"Why are you carrying money?" asked
the tribesman, when he had searched
the boy's bag.
"I need it to get to the Pyramids," he
said.
The tribesman who was searching the
alchemist's belongings found a small
crystal flask filled with a liquid, and a
yellow glass egg that was slightly
larger than a chicken's egg.
"What are these things?" he asked.
"That's the Philosopher's Stone and the
Elixir of Life. It's the Master Work of
the alchemists. Whoever swallows that
elixir will never be sick again, and a
fragment from that stone turns any
metal into gold."
The Arabs laughed at him, and the
alchemist laughed along. They thought
his answer was amusing, and they
allowed the boy and the alchemist to
proceed with all of their belongings.
"Are you crazy?" the boy asked the
alchemist, when they had moved on.
"What did you do that for?"
"To show you one of life's simple
lessons," the alchemist answered.
"When you possess great treasures
within you, and try to tell others of
them, seldom are you believed."
They continued across the desert. With
every day that passed, the boy's heart
became more and more silent. It no
longer wanted to know about things of
the past or future; it was content
simply to contemplate the desert, and
to drink with the boy from the Soul of
the World. The boy and his heart had
become friends, and neither was
capable now of betraying the other.
When his heart spoke to him, it was to
provide a stimulus to the boy, and to
give him strength, because the days of
silence there in the desert were
wearisome. His heart told the boy what
his strongest qualities were: his
courage in having given up his sheep
and in trying to live out his destiny,
and his enthusiasm during the time he
had worked at the crystal shop.
And his heart told him something else
that the boy had never noticed: it told
the boy of dangers that had threatened
him, but that he had never perceived.
His heart said that one time it had
hidden the rifle the boy had taken from
his father, because of the possibility
that the boy might wound himself. And
it reminded the boy of the day when he
had been ill and vomiting out in the
fields, after which he had fallen into a
deep sleep. There had been two thieves
farther ahead who were planning to
steal the boy's sheep and murder him.
But, since the boy hadn't passed by,
they had decided to move on, thinking
that he had changed his route.
"Does a man's heart always help him?"
the boy asked the alchemist.
"Mostly just the hearts of those who
are trying to realize their destinies. But
they do help children, drunkards, and
the elderly, too."
"Does that mean that I'll never run into
danger?"
"It means only that the heart does what
it can," the alchemist said.
One afternoon, they passed by the
encampment of one of the tribes. At
each corner of the camp were Arabs
garbed in beautiful white robes, with
arms at the ready. The men were
smoking their hookahs and trading
stories from the battlefield. No one
paid any attention to the two travelers.
"There's no danger," the boy said, when
they had moved on past the
encampment.
The alchemist sounded angry: "Trust in
your heart, but never forget that you're
in the desert. When men are at war
with one another, the Soul of the World
can hear the screams of battle. No one
fails to suffer the consequences of
everything under the sun."
All things are one, the boy thought.
And then, as if the desert wanted to
demonstrate that the alchemist was
right, two horsemen appeared from
behind the travelers.
"You can't go any farther," one of them
said. "You're in the area where the
tribes are at war."
"I'm not going very far," the alchemist
answered, looking straight into the eyes
of the horsemen. They were silent for a
moment, and then agreed that the boy
and the alchemist could move along.
The boy watched the exchange with
fascination. "You dominated those
horsemen with the way you looked at
them," he said.
"Your eyes show the strength of your
soul," answered the alchemist.
That's true, the boy thought. He had
noticed that, in the midst of the
multitude of armed men back at the
encampment, there had been one who
stared fixedly at the two. He had been
so far away that his face wasn't even
visible. But the boy was certain that he
had been looking at them.
Finally, when they had crossed the
mountain range that extended along the
entire horizon, the alchemist said that
they were only two days from the
Pyramids.
"If we're going to go our separate ways
soon," the boy said, "then teach me
about alchemy."
"You already know about alchemy. It is
about penetrating to the Soul of the
World, and discovering the treasure
that has been reserved for you."
"No, that's not what I mean. I'm talking
about transforming lead into gold."
The alchemist fell as silent as the
desert, and answered the boy only after
they had stopped to eat.
"Everything in the universe evolved,"
he said. "And, for wise men, gold is the
metal that evolved the furthest. Don't
ask me why; I don't know why. I just
know that the Tradition is always right.
"Men have never understood the words
of the wise. So gold, instead of being
seen as a symbol of evolution, became
the basis for conflict."
"There are many languages spoken by
things," the boy said. "There was a time
when, for me, a camel's whinnying was
nothing more than whinnying. Then it
became a signal of danger. And,
finally, it became just a whinny again."
But then he stopped. The alchemist
probably already knew all that.
"I have known true alchemists," the
alchemist continued. "They locked
themselves in their laboratories, and
tried to evolve, as gold had. And they
found the Philosopher's Stone, because
they understood that when something
evolves, everything around that thing
evolves as well.
"Others stumbled upon the stone by
accident. They already had the gift, and
their souls were readier for such things
than the souls of others. But they don't
count. They're quite rare.
"And then there were the others, who
were interested only in gold. They
never found the secret. They forgot that
lead, copper, and iron have their own
destinies to fulfill. And anyone who
interferes with the destiny of another
thing never will discover his own."
The alchemist's words echoed out like
a curse. He reached over and picked up
a shell from the ground.
"This desert was once a sea," he said.
"I noticed that," the boy answered.
The alchemist told the boy to place the
shell over his ear. He had done that
many times when he was a child, and
had heard the sound of the sea.
"The sea has lived on in this shell,
because that's its destiny. And it will
never cease doing so until the desert is
once again covered by water."
They mounted their horses, and rode
out in the direction of the Pyramids of
Egypt.
*
The sun was setting when the boy's
heart sounded a danger signal. They
were surrounded by gigantic dunes, and
the boy looked at the alchemist to see
whether he had sensed anything. But he
appeared to be unaware of any danger.
Five minutes later, the boy saw two
horsemen waiting ahead of them.
Before he could say anything to the
alchemist, the two horsemen had
become ten, and then a hundred. And
then they were everywhere in the
dunes.
They were tribesmen dressed in blue,
with black rings surrounding their
turbans. Their faces were hidden
behind blue veils, with only their eyes
showing.
Even from a distance, their eyes
conveyed the strength of their souls.
And their eyes spoke of death.
*
The two were taken to a nearby
military camp. A soldier shoved the
boy and the alchemist into a tent where
the chief was holding a meeting with
his staff.
"These are the spies," said one of the
men.
"We're just travelers," the alchemist
answered.
"You were seen at the enemy camp
three days ago. And you were talking
with one of the troops there."
"I'm just a man who wanders the desert
and knows the stars," said the
alchemist. "I have no information
about troops or about the movement of
the tribes. I was simply acting as a
guide for my friend here."
"Who is your friend?" the chief asked.
"An alchemist," said the alchemist. "He
understands the forces of nature. And
he wants to show you his extraordinary
powers."
The boy listened quietly. And fearfully.
"What is a foreigner doing here?"
asked another of the men.
"He has brought money to give to your
tribe," said the alchemist, before the
boy could say a word. And seizing the
boy's bag, the alchemist gave the gold
coins to the chief.
The Arab accepted them without a
word. There was enough there to buy a
lot of weapons.
"What is an alchemist?" he asked,
finally.
"It's a man who understands nature and
the world. If he wanted to, he could
destroy this camp just with the force of
the wind."
The men laughed. They were used to
the ravages of war, and knew that the
wind could not deliver them a fatal
blow. Yet each felt his heart beat a bit
faster. They were men of the desert,
and they were fearful of sorcerers.
"I want to see him do it," said the chief.
"He needs three days," answered the
alchemist. "He is going to transform
himself into the wind, just to
demonstrate his powers. If he can't do
so, we humbly offer you our lives, for
the honor of your tribe."
"You can't offer me something that is
already mine," the chief said,
arrogantly. But he granted the travelers
three days.
The boy was shaking with fear, but the
alchemist helped him out of the tent.
"Don't let them see that you're afraid,"
the alchemist said. "They are brave
men, and they despise cowards."
But the boy couldn't even speak. He
was able to do so only after they had
walked through the center of the camp.
There was no need to imprison them:
the Arabs simply confiscated their
horses. So, once again, the world had
demonstrated its many languages: the
desert only moments ago had been
endless and free, and now it was an
impenetrable wall.
"You gave them everything I had!" the
boy said. "Everything I've saved in my
entire life!"
"Well, what good would it be to you if
you had t6 die?" the alchemist
answered. "Your money saved us for
three days. It's not often that money
saves a person's life."
But the boy was too frightened to listen
to words of wisdom. He had no idea
how he was going to transform himself
into the wind. He wasn't an alchemist!
The alchemist asked one of the soldiers
for some tea, and poured some on the
boy's wrists.
A wave of relief washed over him, and
the alchemist muttered some words
that the boy didn't understand.
"Don't give in to your fears," said the
alchemist, in a strangely gentle voice.
"If you do, you won't be able to talk to
your heart."
"But I have no idea how to turn myself
into the wind."
"If a person is living out his destiny, he
knows everything he needs to know.
There is only one thing that makes a
dream impossible to achieve: the fear
of failure."
"I'm not afraid of failing. It's just that I
don't know how to turn myself into the
wind."
"Well, you'll have to learn; your life
depends on it."
"But what if I can't?"
"Then you'll die in the midst of trying
to realize your destiny. That's a lot
better than dying like millions of other
people, who never even knew what
their destinies were.
"But don't worry," the alchemist
continued. "Usually the threat of death
makes people a lot more aware of their
lives."
*
The first day passed. There was a major
battle nearby, and a number of
wounded were brought back to the
camp. The dead soldiers were replaced
by others, and life went on.
Death doesn't change anything, the boy
thought.
"You could have died later on," a
soldier said to the body of one of his
companions. "You could have died
after peace had been declared. But, in
any case, you were going to die."
At the end of the day, the boy went
looking for the alchemist, who had
taken his falcon out into the desert.
"I still have no idea how to turn myself
into the wind," the boy repeated.
"Remember what I told you: the world
is only the visible aspect of God. And
that what alchemy does is to bring
spiritual perfection into contact with
the material plane."
"What are you doing?"
"Feeding my falcon."
"If I'm not able to turn myself into the
wind, we're going to die," the boy said.
"Why feed your falcon?"
"You're the one who may die," the
alchemist said. "I already know how to
turn myself into the wind."
*
On the second day, the boy climbed to
the top of a cliff near the camp. The
sentinels allowed him to go; they had
already heard about the sorcerer who
could turn himself into the wind, and
they didn't want to go near him. In any
case, the desert was impassable.
He spent the entire afternoon of the
second day looking out over the desert,
and listening to his heart. The boy
knew the desert sensed his fear. They
both spoke the same language.
*
On the third day, the chief met with his
officers. He called the alchemist to the
meeting and said, "Let's go see the boy
who turns himself into the wind."
"Let's," the alchemist answered.
The boy took them to the cliff where he
had been on the previous day. He told
them all to be seated.
"It's going to take a while," the boy
said.
"We're in no hurry," the chief
answered. "We are men of the desert."
The boy looked out at the horizon.
There were mountains in the distance.
And there were dunes, rocks, and plants
that insisted on living where survival
seemed impossible. There was the
desert that he had wandered for so
many months; despite all that time, he
knew only a small part of it. Within
that small part, he had found an
Englishman, caravans, tribal wars, and
an oasis with fifty thousand palm trees
and three hundred wells.
"What do you want here today?" the
desert asked him. "Didn't you spend
enough time looking at me yesterday?"
"Somewhere you are holding the
person I love," the boy said. "So, when
I look out over your sands, I am also
looking at her. I want to return to her,
and I need your help so that I can turn
myself into the wind."
"What is love?" the desert asked.
"Love is the falcon's flight over your
sands. Because for him, you are a green
field, from which he always returns
with game. He knows your rocks, your
dunes, and your mountains, and you are
generous to him."
"The falcon's beak carries bits of me,
myself," the desert said. "For years, I
care for his game, feeding it with the
little water that I have, and then I show
him where the game is.
And, one day, as I enjoy the fact that
his game thrives on my surface, the
falcon dives out of the sky, and takes
away what I've created."
"But that's why you created the game in
the first place," the boy answered. "To
nourish the falcon. And the falcon then
nourishes man. And, eventually, man
will nourish your sands, where the
game will once again flourish. That's
how the world goes."
"So is that what love is?"
"Yes, that's what love is. It's what
makes the game become the falcon, the
falcon become man, and man, in his
turn, the desert. It's what turns lead into
gold, and makes the gold return to the
earth."
"I don't understand what you're talking
about," the desert said.
"But you can at least understand that
somewhere in your sands there is a
woman waiting for me. And that's why
I have to turn myself into the wind."
The desert didn't answer him for a few
moments.
Then it told him, "I'll give you my
sands to help the wind to blow, but,
alone, I can't do anything. You have to
ask for help from the wind."
A breeze began to blow. The tribesmen
watched the boy from a distance,
talking among themselves in a
language that the boy couldn't
understand.
The alchemist smiled.
The wind approached the boy and
touched his face. It knew of the boy's
talk with the desert, because the winds
know everything. They blow across the
world without a birthplace, and with no
place to die.
"Help me," the boy said. "One day you
carried the voice of my loved one to
me."
"Who taught you to speak the language
of the desert and the wind?"
"My heart," the boy answered.
The wind has many names. In that part
of the world, it was called the sirocco,
because it brought moisture from the
oceans to the east. In the distant land
the boy came from, they called it the
levanter, because they believed that it
brought with it the sands of the desert,
and the screams of the Moorish wars.
Perhaps, in the places beyond the
pastures where his sheep lived, men
thought that the wind came from
Andalusia. But, actually, the wind
came from no place at all, nor did it go
to any place; that's why it was stronger
than the desert. Someone might one
day plant trees in the desert, and even
raise sheep there, but never would they
harness the wind.
"You can't be the wind," the wind said.
"We're two very different things."
"That's not true," the boy said. "I
learned the alchemist's secrets in my
travels. I have inside me the winds, the
deserts, the oceans, the stars, and
everything created in the universe. We
were all made by the same hand, and
we have the same soul. I want to be
like you, able to reach every corner of
the world, cross the seas, blow away
the sands that cover my treasure, and
carry the voice of the woman I love."
"I heard what you were talking about
the other day with the alchemist," the
wind said.
"He said that everything has its own
destiny. But people can't turn
themselves into the wind."
"Just teach me to be the wind for a few
moments," the boy said. "So you and I
can talk about the limitless
possibilities of people and the winds."
The wind's curiosity was aroused,
something that had never happened
before. It wanted to talk about those
things, but it didn't know how to turn a
man into the wind. And look how many
things the wind already knew how to
do! It created deserts, sank ships, felled
entire forests, and blew through cities
filled with music and strange noises. It
felt that it had no limits, yet here was a
boy saying that there were other things
the wind should be able to do.
"This is what we call love," the boy
said, seeing that the wind was close to
granting what he requested. "When you
are loved, you can do anything in
creation. When you are loved, there's
no need at all to understand what's
happening, because everything happens
within you, and even men can turn
themselves into the wind. As long as
the wind helps, of course."
The wind was a proud being, and it was
becoming irritated with what the boy
was saying.
It commenced to blow harder, raising
the desert sands. But finally it had to
recognize that, even making its way
around the world, it didn't know how to
turn a man into the wind.
And it knew nothing about love.
"In my travels around the world, I've
often seen people speaking of love and
looking toward the heavens," the wind
said, furious at having to acknowledge
its own limitations.
"Maybe it's better to ask heaven."
"Well then, help me do that," the boy
said. "Fill this place with a sandstorm
so strong that it blots out the sun. Then
I can look to heaven without blinding
myself."
So the wind blew with all its strength,
and the sky was filled with sand. The
sun was turned into a golden disk.
At the camp, it was difficult to see
anything. The men of the desert were
already familiar with that wind. They
called it the simum, and it was worse
than a storm at sea. Their horses cried
out, and all their weapons were filled
with sand.
On the heights, one of the commanders
turned to the chief and said, "Maybe we
had better end this!"
They could barely see the boy. Their
faces were covered with the blue
cloths, and their eyes showed fear.
"Let's stop this," another commander
said.
"I want to see the greatness of Allah,"
the chief said, with respect. "I want to
see how a man turns himself into the
wind."
But he made a mental note of the
names of the two men who had
expressed their fear. As soon as the
wind stopped, he was going to remove
them from their commands, because
true men of the desert are not afraid.
"The wind told me that you know about
love " the boy said to the sun. "If you
know about love, you must also know
about the Soul of the World, because
it's made of love."
"From where I am," the sun said, "I can
see the Soul of the World. It
communicates with my soul, and
together we cause the plants to grow
and the sheep to seek out shade. From
where I am—and I'm a long way from
the earth—I learned how to love. I
know that if I came even a little bit
closer to the earth, everything there
would die, and the Soul of the World
would no longer exist. So we
contemplate each other, and we want
each other, and I give it life and
warmth, and it gives me my reason for
living."
"So you know about love," the boy
said.
"And I know the Soul of the World,
because we have talked at great length
to each other during this endless trip
through the universe. It tells me that its
greatest problem is that, up until now,
only the minerals and vegetables
understand that all things are one. That
there's no need for iron to be the same
as copper, or copper the same as gold.
Each performs its own exact function
as a unique being, and everything
would be a symphony of peace if the
hand that wrote all this had stopped on
the fifth day of creation.
"But there was a sixth day," the sun
went on.
"You are wise, because you observe
everything from a distance," the boy
said. "But you don't know about love. If
there hadn't been a sixth day, man
would not exist; copper would always
be just copper, and lead just lead. It's
true that everything has its destiny, but
one day that destiny will be realized.
So each thing has to transform itself
into something better, and to acquire a
new destiny, until, someday, the Soul
of the World becomes one thing only."
The sun thought about that, and
decided to shine more brightly. The
wind, which was enjoying the
conversation, started to blow with
greater force, so that the sun would not
blind the boy.
"This is why alchemy exists," the boy
said. "So that everyone will search for
his treasure, find it, and then want to be
better than he was in his former life.
Lead will play its role until the world
has no further need for lead; and then
lead will have to turn itself into gold.
"That's what alchemists do. They show
that, when we strive to become better
than we are, everything around us
becomes better, too."
"Well, why did you say that I don't
know about love?" the sun asked the
boy.
"Because it's not love to be static like
the desert, nor is it love to roam the
world like the wind. And it's not love to
see everything from a distance, like
you do. Love is the force that
transforms and improves the Soul of
the World. When I first reached
through to it, I thought the Soul of the
World was perfect. But later, I could
see that it was like other aspects of
creation, and had its own passions and
wars. It is we who nourish the Soul of
the World, and the world we live in
will be either better or worse,
depending on whether we become
better or worse. And that's where the
power of love comes in. Because when
we love, we always strive to become
better than we are."
"So what do you want of me?" the sun
asked.
"I want you to help me turn myself into
the wind," the boy answered.
"Nature knows me as the wisest being
in creation," the sun said. "But I don't
know how to turn you into the wind."
"Then, whom should I ask?"
The sun thought for a minute. The wind
was listening closely, and wanted to
tell every corner of the world that the
sun's wisdom had its limitations. That
it was unable to deal with this boy who
spoke the Language of the World.
"Speak to the hand that wrote all," said
the sun.
The wind screamed with delight, and
blew harder than ever. The tents were
being blown from their ties to the
earth, and the animals were being freed
from their tethers. On the cliff, the men
clutched at each other as they sought to
keep from being blown away.
The boy turned to the hand that wrote
all. As he did so, he sensed that the
universe had fallen silent, and he
decided not to speak.
A current of love rushed from his heart,
and the boy began to pray. It was a
prayer that he had never said before,
because it was a prayer without words
or pleas. His prayer didn't give thanks
for his sheep having found new
pastures; it didn't ask that the boy be
able to sell more crystal; and it didn't
beseech that the woman he had met
continue to await his return. In the
silence, the boy understood that the
desert, the wind, and the sun were also
trying to understand the signs written
by the hand, and were seeking to follow
their paths, and to understand what had
been written on a single emerald. He
saw that omens were scattered
throughout the earth and in space, and
that there was no reason or significance
attached to their appearance; he could
see that not the deserts, nor the winds,
nor the sun, nor people knew why they
had been created. But that the hand had
a reason for all of this, and that only
the hand could perform miracles, or
transform the sea into a desert… or a
man into the wind. Because only the
hand understood that it was a larger
design that had moved the universe to
the point at which six days of creation
had evolved into a Master Work.
The boy reached through to the Soul of
the World, and saw that it was a part of
the Soul of God. And he saw that the
Soul of God was his own soul. And that
he, a boy, could perform miracles.
*
The simum blew that day as it had
never blown before. For generations
thereafter, the Arabs recounted the
legend of a boy who had turned himself
into the wind, almost destroying a
military camp, in defiance of the most
powerful chief in the desert.
When the simum ceased to blow,
everyone looked to the place where the
boy had been.
But he was no longer there; he was
standing next to a sand-covered
sentinel, on the far side of the camp.
The men were terrified at his sorcery.
But there were two people who were
smiling: the alchemist, because he had
found his perfect disciple, and the
chief, because that disciple had
understood the glory of God.
The following day, the general bade the
boy and the alchemist farewell, and
provided them with an escort party to
accompany them as far as they chose.
*
They rode for the entire day. Toward
the end of the afternoon, they came
upon a Coptic monastery. The
alchemist dismounted, and told the
escorts they could return to the camp.
"From here on, you will be alone," the
alchemist said. "You are only three
hours from the Pyramids."
"Thank you," said the boy. "You taught
me the Language of the World."
"I only invoked what you already
knew."
The alchemist knocked on the gate of
the monastery. A monk dressed in
black came to the gates. They spoke for
a few minutes in the Coptic tongue, and
the alchemist bade the boy enter.
"I asked him to let me use the kitchen
for a while," the alchemist smiled.
They went to the kitchen at the back of
the monastery. The alchemist lighted
the fire, and the monk brought him
some lead, which the alchemist placed
in an iron pan. When the lead had
become liquid, the alchemist took from
his pouch the strange yellow egg. He
scraped from it a sliver as thin as a
hair, wrapped it in wax, and added it to
the pan in which the lead had melted.
The mixture took on a reddish color,
almost the color of blood. The
alchemist removed the pan from the
fire, and set it aside to cool. As he did
so, he talked with the monk about the
tribal wars.
"I think they're going to last for a long
time," he said to the monk.
The monk was irritated. The caravans
had been stopped at Giza for some
time, waiting for the wars to end. "But
God's will be done," the monk said.
"Exactly," answered the alchemist.
When the pan had cooled, the monk
and the boy looked at it, dazzled. The
lead had dried into the shape of the
pan, but it was no longer lead. It was
gold.
"Will I learn to do that someday?" the
boy asked.
"This was my destiny, not yours," the
alchemist answered. "But I wanted to
show you that it was possible."
They returned to the gates of the
monastery. There, the alchemist
separated the disk into four parts.
"This is for you," he said, holding one
of the parts out to the monk. "It's for
your generosity to the pilgrims."
"But this payment goes well beyond
my generosity," the monk responded.
"Don't say that again. Life might be
listening, and give you less the next
time."
The alchemist turned to the boy. "This
is for you. To make up for what you
gave to the general."
The boy was about to say that it was
much more than he had given the
general. But he kept quiet, because he
had heard what the alchemist said to
the monk.
"And this is for me," said the
alchemist, keeping one of the parts.
"Because I have to return to the desert,
where there are tribal wars."
He took the fourth part and handed it to
the monk.
"This is for the boy. If he ever needs
it."
"But I'm going in search of my
treasure," the boy said. "I'm very close
to it now."
"And I'm certain you'll find it," the
alchemist said.
"Then why this?"
"Because you have already lost your
savings twice. Once to the thief, and
once to the general. I'm an old,
superstitious Arab, and I believe in our
proverbs. There's one that says,
'Everything that happens once can
never happen again. But everything
that happens twice will surely happen a
third time.' " They mounted their
horses.
*
"I want to tell you a story about
dreams," said the alchemist.
The boy brought his horse closer.
"In ancient Rome, at the time of
Emperor Tiberius, there lived a good
man who had two sons. One was in the
military, and had been sent to the most
distant regions of the empire.
The other son was a poet, and delighted
all of Rome with his beautiful verses.
"One night, the father had a dream. An
angel appeared to him, and told him
that the words of one of his sons would
be learned and repeated throughout the
world for all generations to come. The
father woke from his dream grateful
and crying, because life was generous,
and had revealed to him something any
father would be proud to know.
"Shortly thereafter, the father died as
he tried to save a child who was about
to be crushed by the wheels of a
chariot. Since he had lived his entire
life in a manner that was correct and
fair, he went directly to heaven, where
he met the angel that had appeared in
his dream.
" 'You were always a good man,' the
angel said to him. 'You lived your life
in a loving way, and died with dignity.
I can now grant you any wish you
desire.'
" 'Life was good to me,' the man said.
'When you appeared in my dream, I felt
that all my efforts had been rewarded,
because my son's poems will be read
by men for generations to come. I don't
want anything for myself. But any
father would be proud of the fame
achieved by one whom he had cared for
as a child, and educated as he grew up.
Sometime in the distant future, I would
like to see my son's words.'
"The angel touched the man's shoulder,
and they were both projected far into
the future.
They were in an immense setting,
surrounded by thousands of people
speaking a strange language.
"The man wept with happiness.
" 'I knew that my son's poems were
immortal,' he said to the angel through
his tears. 'Can you please tell me which
of my son's poems these people are
repeating?'
"The angel came closer to the man,
and, with tenderness, led him to a
bench nearby, where they sat down.
"'The verses of your son who was the
poet were very popular in Rome,' the
angel said.
'Everyone loved them and enjoyed
them. But when the reign of Tiberius
ended, his poems were forgotten. The
words you're hearing now are those of
your son in the military.'
"The man looked at the angel in
surprise.
" 'Your son went to serve at a distant
place, and became a centurion. He was
just and good. One afternoon, one of
his servants fell ill, and it appeared that
he would die. Your son had heard of a
rabbi who was able to cure illnesses,
and he rode out for days and days in
search of this man. Along the way, he
learned that the man he was seeking
was the Son of God. He met others who
had been cured by him, and they
instructed your son in the man's
teachings. And so, despite the fact that
he was a Roman centurion, he
converted to their faith. Shortly
thereafter, he reached the place where
the man he was looking for was
visiting.'
" 'He told the man that one of his
servants was gravely ill, and the rabbi
made ready to go to his house with
him. But the centurion was a man of
faith, and, looking into the eyes of the
rabbi, he knew that he was surely in the
presence of the Son of God.'
" 'And this is what your son said,' the
angel told the man. 'These are the
words he said to the rabbi at that point,
and they have never been forgotten:
"My Lord, I am not worthy that you
should come under my roof. But only
speak a word and my servant will be
healed." "'
The alchemist said, "No matter what he
does, every person on earth plays a
central role in the history of the world.
And normally he doesn't know it."
The boy smiled. He had never
imagined that questions about life
would be of such importance to a
shepherd.
"Good-bye," the alchemist said.
"Good-bye," said the boy.
*
The boy rode along through the desert
for several hours, listening avidly to
what his heart had to say. It was his
heart that would tell him where his
treasure was hidden.
"Where your treasure is, there also will
be your heart," the alchemist had told
him.
But his heart was speaking of other
things. With pride, it told the story of a
shepherd who had left his flock to
follow a dream he had on two different
occasions. It told of destiny, and of the
many men who had wandered in search
of distant lands or beautiful women,
confronting the people of their times
with their preconceived notions. It
spoke of journeys, discoveries, books,
and change.
As he was about to climb yet another
dune, his heart whispered, "Be aware of
the place where you are brought to
tears. That's where I am, and that's
where your treasure is."
The boy climbed the dune slowly. A
full moon rose again in the starry sky:
it had been a month since he had set
forth from the oasis. The moonlight
cast shadows through the dunes,
creating the appearance of a rolling
sea; it reminded the boy of the day
when that horse had reared in the
desert, and he had come to know the
alchemist. And the moon fell on the
desert's silence, and on a man's journey
in search of treasure.
When he reached the top of the dune,
his heart leapt. There, illuminated by
the light of the moon and the
brightness of the desert, stood the
solemn and majestic Pyramids of
Egypt.
The boy fell to his knees and wept. He
thanked God for making him believe in
his destiny, and for leading him to
meet a king, a merchant, an
Englishman, and an alchemist. And
above all for his having met a woman
of the desert who had told him that
love would never keep a man from his
destiny.
If he wanted to, he could now return to
the oasis, go back to Fatima, and live
his life as a simple shepherd. After all,
the alchemist continued to live in the
desert, even though he understood the
Language of the World, and knew how
to transform lead into gold. He didn't
need to demonstrate his science and art
to anyone. The boy told himself that,
on the way toward realizing his own
destiny, he had learned all he needed to
know, and had experienced everything
he might have dreamed of.
But here he was, at the point of finding
his treasure, and he reminded himself
that no project is completed until its
objective has been achieved. The boy
looked at the sands around him, and
saw that, where his tears had fallen, a
scarab beetle was scuttling through the
sand. During his time in the desert, he
had learned that, in Egypt, the scarab
beetles are a symbol of God.
Another omen! The boy began to dig
into the dune. As he did so, he thought
of what the crystal merchant had once
said: that anyone could build a pyramid
in his backyard. The boy could see now
that he couldn't do so if he placed stone
upon stone for the rest of his life.
Throughout the night, the boy dug at
the place he had chosen, but found
nothing. He felt weighted down by the
centuries of time since the Pyramids
had been built. But he didn't stop. He
struggled to continue digging as he
fought the wind, which often blew the
sand back into the excavation. His
hands were abraded and exhausted, but
he listened to his heart. It had told him
to dig where his tears fell.
As he was attempting to pull out the
rocks he encountered, he heard
footsteps. Several figures approached
him. Their backs were to the
moonlight, and the boy could see
neither their eyes nor their faces.
"What are you doing here?" one of the
figures demanded.
Because he was terrified, the boy didn't
answer. He had found where his
treasure was, and was frightened at
what might happen.
"We're refugees from the tribal wars,
and we need money," the other figure
said. "What are you hiding there?"
"I'm not hiding anything," the boy
answered.
But one of them seized the boy and
yanked him back out of the hole.
Another, who was searching the boy's
bags, found the piece of gold.
"There's gold here," he said.
The moon shone on the face of the
Arab who had seized him, and in the
man's eyes the boy saw death.
"He's probably got more gold hidden in
the ground."
They made the boy continue digging,
but he found nothing. As the sun rose,
the men began to beat the boy. He was
bruised and bleeding, his clothing was
torn to shreds, and he felt that death
was near.
"What good is money to you if you're
going to die? It's not often that money
can save someone's life," the alchemist
had said. Finally, the boy screamed at
the men, "I'm digging for treasure!"
And, although his mouth was bleeding
and swollen, he told his attackers that
he had twice dreamed of a treasure
hidden near the Pyramids of Egypt.
The man who appeared to be the leader
of the group spoke to one of the others:
"Leave him. He doesn't have anything
else. He must have stolen this gold."
The boy fell to the sand, nearly
unconscious. The leader shook him and
said, "We're leaving."
But before they left, he came back to
the boy and said, "You're not going to
die. You'll live, and you'll learn that a
man shouldn't be so stupid. Two years
ago, right here on this spot, I had a
recurrent dream, too. I dreamed that I
should travel to the fields of Spain and
look for a ruined church where
shepherds and their sheep slept. In my
dream, there was a sycamore growing
out of the ruins of the sacristy, and I
was told that, if I dug at the roots of the
sycamore, I would find a hidden
treasure. But I'm not so stupid as to
cross an entire desert just because of a
recurrent dream."
And they disappeared.
The boy stood up shakily, and looked
once more at the Pyramids. They
seemed to laugh at him, and he laughed
back, his heart bursting with joy.
Because now he knew where his
treasure was.
EPILOGUE
The boy reached the small, abandoned
church just as night was falling. The
sycamore was still there in the sacristy,
and the stars could still be seen through
the half-destroyed roof. He
remembered the time he had been there
with his sheep; it had been a peaceful
night… except for the dream.
Now he was here not with his flock, but
with a shovel.
He sat looking at the sky for a long
time. Then he took from his knapsack a
bottle of wine, and drank some. He
remembered the night in the desert
when he had sat with the alchemist, as
they looked at the stars and drank wine
together. He thought of the many roads
he had traveled, and of the strange way
God had chosen to show him his
treasure. If he hadn't believed in the
significance of recurrent dreams, he
would not have met the Gypsy woman,
the king, the thief, or… "Well, it's a
long list. But the path was written in
the omens, and there was no way I
could go wrong," he said to himself.
He fell asleep, and when he awoke the
sun was already high. He began to dig
at the base of the sycamore.
"You old sorcerer," the boy shouted up
to the sky. "You knew the whole story.
You even left a bit of gold at the
monastery so I could get back to this
church. The monk laughed when he
saw me come back in tatters. Couldn't
you have saved me from that?"
"No," he heard a voice on the wind say.
"If I had told you, you wouldn't have
seen the Pyramids. They're beautiful,
aren't they?"
The boy smiled, and continued digging.
Half an hour later, his shovel hit
something solid.
An hour later, he had before him a
chest of Spanish gold coins. There were
also precious stones, gold masks
adorned with red and white feathers,
and stone statues embedded with
jewels. The spoils of a conquest that
the country had long ago forgotten, and
that some conquistador had failed to
tell his children about.
The boy took out Urim and Thummim
from his bag. He had used the two
stones only once, one morning when he
was at a marketplace. His life and his
path had always provided him with
enough omens.
He placed Urim and Thummim in the
chest. They were also a part of his new
treasure, because they were a reminder
of the old king, whom he would never
see again.
It's true; life really is generous to those
who pursue their destiny, the boy
thought. Then he remembered that he
had to get to Tarifa so he could give
one-tenth of his treasure to the Gypsy
woman, as he had promised. Those
Gypsies are really smart, he thought.
Maybe it was because they moved
around so much.
The wind began to blow again. It was
the levanter, the wind that came from
Africa. It didn't bring with it the smell
of the desert, nor the threat of Moorish
invasion. Instead, it brought the scent
of a perfume he knew well, and the
touch of a kiss—a kiss that came from
far away, slowly, slowly, until it rested
on his lips.
The boy smiled. It was the first time
she had done that.
"I'm coming, Fatima," he said.